Why do nonprofits lose momentum after creating an inspiring vision or strategic plan? Doug Paul, Founder and CEO of Impact Co., explains how nonprofit operational systems, leadership clarity, performance measures, and consistent workplace rhythms turn ambition into measurable results.
After working with approximately 1,300 nonprofit organizations, Doug and his colleagues studied the organizations that were consistently succeeding. They identified eight connected areas that distinguished them: vision, strategy, development, metrics, culture, people, systems, and rhythms.
The central lesson is direct: “Nonprofits don’t rise to the level of their vision. They fall to the level of their systems.”
Doug explains why organizations can have memorable mission statements and well-designed strategic plans yet still miss deadlines, struggle with accountability, operate reactively, and fail to follow through. These are not always motivation problems. Often, they are evidence of systems that unintentionally produce last-minute scrambles and workplace frustration.
The conversation also examines why business frameworks cannot simply be dropped into nonprofit organizations without adaptation. Systems designed primarily to create profit may not fully support organizations whose ultimate outcome is mission impact.
Doug outlines how successful nonprofits create an attainable 3 to 5 year vision, distinguish strategy from goals, build a modern revenue playbook, track both lead and lag measures, align donors and stakeholders, and document repeatable processes. He also shares that organizations intentional about culture-building can experience a 43% increase in productivity!!
Strong systems do not remove the human element. They help people succeed. As Doug explains, “I just don’t think heart and passion can bridge that gap.”
This episode offers nonprofit executives, managers, fundraisers, and board members a clearer way to diagnose stalled momentum—and begin releasing the organizational brakes.
Key Takeaways:
Define an attainable three-to-five-year vision rather than relying only on a distant aspirational goal.
Separate strategy from goals and connect strategy to a specific winning action plan.
Track lead measures early enough to influence lagging organizational results.
Treat workplace culture as a measurable leadership discipline, not an accidental outcome.
Align staff, donors, board members, executives, and community stakeholders around one direction.
Build documented processes and calendar rhythms that repeatedly produce mission outcomes.