What is the difference between a nonprofit and a for-profit organization?

It is a deceptively straightforward question... but before responding with the obvious answer, consider the following.

• Regardless of tax status, all businesses need money—regularly, consistently, usually in increasing quantities over their lives.

• Both nonprofits and for-profits will often provide goods or services in exchange for that money, whether through an entertainment-centered fundraiser, or through providing entertainment media.

• Both want desperately to retain whoever gives them money and encourage donations again in the future.

• Both live or die by convincing people—groups, other organizations, individuals, etc.—to give them money, through marketing.

Ultimately, the difference is that nonprofits don't keep whatever is left over; for-profit companies try to maximize the leftovers to distribute among owners.

Given all that they have in common, then crafting a successful nonprofit business strategy should end up looking an awful lot like crafting a for-profit business strategy, incorporating...

  • Well-defined goals with a clear, unifying mission
  • An honest, critical self-assessment
  • A set of tools, measures, and standards for conducting future/ongoing assessments
  • Identifying and understanding the competition
  • A target audience or market from whom to solicit business/contributions
  • A quality marketing strategy, which integrates and supports all the foundational elements of the overall business plan

Despite the many shared features, nonprofits frequently eschew the successful, proven strategies of the for-profit sector to develop a marketing plan from scratch. That misses some great opportunities to learn, copy, and adapt for-profit lessons to achieve non-profit goals.

The Customer Comes First

If Wal-Mart tried to gain your business by telling you how much its shareholders would like a bump in profits, do you think you would be more or less likely to shop there?

It is tempting as a nonprofit to advertise the beneficiaries ahead of everything else—they are, after all, the whole reason the organization exists. But even though at-risk youths, the chronically ill, or even rescued puppies are all more likely to inspire empathy and interest than a company's shareholders, leading with them in marketing materials makes the same mistake as the Wal-Mart example: always put your customers first.

You don't necessarily need to rewrite your mission or abandon your principles as a nonprofit, but it does mean that your marketing message could benefit from focusing on the people spending their money, rather than the people or projects receiving it.

Get Feedback

Customer feedback is huge in for-profit businesses. Customer service depends on data to personalize everything that customers are going to see, and bring value to the experience. Why don't more nonprofits incorporate feedback?

Rather than telling their audience members how they should feel, nonprofits would do better to ask how they do feel—about everything from logos to donor prizes to the best time of year to get donations.

Nonprofits would do well to ask, "Why do our donors contribute to our organization? How can we market directly to that impulse?"

Corporations learned a long time ago that listening to customers is the only way to really know what customers want and don't want, like and don't like. Likewise, nonprofits need to put more energy into their feedback collection (or in some cases, just start it) to better serve donors.

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Nonprofits, Start Acting and Thinking Like For-Profits

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

image of Edgar Wilson

Edgar Wilson is a freelance writer and marketing consultant, splitting his time between his home in the Pacific Northwest and New England.

Twitter: @edgartwilson

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