Organization sustainability strategies among small nonprofit organizations in metropolitan Atlanta, 2017
King, Ivis Renee
2010-2019
The primary purpose of this study is to explore financial management strategies among administrators of small nonprofit social services organizations. This study addresses the gap in empirical literature with a specific focus on small nonprofit organizations. This study avers that the available literature on social service organizations is fundamentally flawed. It argues for a reevaluation of the available literature based on apparent errors in methodology and research design. The literature reveals that nonprofit organizational empirical research excludes small nonprofit organizations and disproportionately presents a representation of large- and medium-sized nonprofit organizations as the norm for social service organizational financial operations. Previous studies that explore nonprofit organizational sustainability select organizations with annual revenues or assets at a minimum of $100,000. Furthermore, the empirical research excludes small non-profit organizations by designand offers findings that include generalizations that are erroneously attributable to all nonprofit organizations. This dissertation outlines the aforementioned errors in the first two chapters. In order to appropriately investigate the aforementioned, this study draws upon the Afrocentric Perspective to supplement the dominate focus of the available literature on small nonprofit financial management. In chapter three, this study explains the studys design rationale and presents this studys significance to the field of social work administration. Additionally, chapter three elucidates this studys contributions to nonprofit social service organizational research and knowledge. The research questions consider possible correlations between small nonprofit organizations sustainability strategies and social work mangers education and experience. The studys research questions also consider how financial management strategies affect organizational sustainability. The research design notation O occurs through the developed questionnaire titled Nonprofit Organization Sustainability Survey. Statistical procedures examined grouped questions by themed content and computed the group variables scales: financial management, business experience, educational influence, organization sustainability strategies, entrepreneur activities, and budget planning. More than two-thirds of respondents reported that they had experiences with establishing a nonprofit organization; however, they are more comfortable working with clients than conducting financial management tasks. Additionally, while nearly all of the respondents believed that they can secure funding for the organization, 60% reported that their organization had challenges with securing funding. KEY TERMS: afrocentric social work, social work administration, nonprofit financial management, Organization Development, Other Public Affairs, Public Policy and Public Administration, Public Administration, Public Affairs, Public Policy and Public Administration, Social Policy, Social Welfare, Social Work
text
application/pdf
2017-05-22
dissertation
Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)
Clark Atlanta University
Social Work
Lyle, Richard Harper, Roslyn A. White, Gerry
Georgia--Atlanta
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12322/cau.td:2017_king_ivis_renee