Nonprofit revenue growth requires more than another campaign, gala, or grant application. John Abrahamson, CFO and COO of Action Council, shares how nonprofits can connect earned revenue, contributed revenue, program priorities, financial literacy, and organizational culture within one stronger business strategy.
Action Council provides infrastructure and fiscal sponsorship for approximately 30 smaller organizations delivering healthcare, education, and other community services in Monterey County. Drawing from this work—and his leadership experience with organizations including the National Geographic Society and Monterey Bay Aquarium—John challenges the siloed approach that often separates finance, fundraising, programming, and earned revenue.
His recommendation is direct: examine every activity according to its required resources and measurable contribution to the mission.
“You can actually have higher impact by doing fewer programs that have the most impact toward your stated mission,” John tells us.
The conversation explores how mission creep develops, why finance leaders must understand what happens beyond the spreadsheet, and how financial literacy can reduce fear across departments.
The discussion also introduces the “Bubba Gump Effect”—the idea that organizations may face greater danger by tying themselves to the shore and waiting for conditions to improve than by moving directly into change. Using Blue Ocean Strategy principles, John encourages nonprofit leaders to question inherited business models and explore revenue opportunities outside crowded, familiar territory.
Another major lesson is the difference between plate cost and true cost. A fundraising gala may appear profitable until staff time, insurance, technology, facilities, operational disruption, and missed opportunities are included. As John asks, was the squeeze worth the juice?
Ultimately, disciplined financial decisions depend on trust, communication, and consistent leadership. “It’s sometimes more compassionate to say no than it is to say yes and not be able to fully fulfill.”
Key Takeaways:
* Integrate earned and contributed revenue into one organizational strategy.
* Compare each program’s resource requirements with its contribution to mission.
* Include labor, overhead, disruption, and opportunity cost when evaluating events.
* Build financial literacy before asking employees to accept difficult decisions.
* Use periods of change to reconsider legacy processes and revenue models.
* Earn organizational trust through consistent, visible leadership behavior.