Washington, DC

Vice President of Programs, Public Welfare Foundation

The Organization

Vice President of Programs
Public Welfare Foundation
Washington, DC

 

About Public Welfare Foundation

For over seventy years, Public Welfare Foundation has supported efforts to advance justice and opportunity for people in need.

Today, the Foundation’s efforts focus on catalyzing a transformative approach to justice that is community-led, restorative, and racially just through investments in criminal justice and youth justice reforms. Public Welfare Foundation is the only foundation in the country that is singularly focused on youth and criminal justice reforms.

For more information on Public Welfare Foundation, please visit the Foundation’s website at www.publicwelfare.org.

 

The Opportunity

Public Welfare Foundation seeks a strategic and committed leader to serve as Vice President of Programs. Working in collaboration with the Foundation President and Program Team, the Vice President of Programs will play a critical role in implementing the strategic vision and direction of PWF’s grantmaking. The Vice President of Programs will provide leadership and management for the Program Team related to its grantmaking initiatives, as well as the Foundation’s role in the broader philanthropic space. As a key member of the senior team, the Vice President of Programs will provide organizational oversight of the Program’s team and will be a deep thought partner and collaborator to the Foundation’s President & CEO and Chief Financial and Administrative Officer.

This is a full-time position located in Washington, D.C. While the team is fully remote until fall 2021, there will be an expectation for a regular in-office presence after that point. When safe and appropriate, this position will include approximately 30 percent of U.S.-based travel.

Candidate Profile

The Vice President of Programs will bring experience in and a passion for effective and forward-thinking grantmaking. They will have a multi-faceted background, with experience that includes philanthropy, as well as “on the ground” work in organizing or advocacy, social services, organizational leadership, or other areas that have given first-hand professional or personal insight to the challenges faced by communities impacted by the criminal justice system.

While no candidate will bring every qualification desired for the Vice President of Programs role, the list below encapsulates the key skills, qualities, and experiences that would best prepare someone to serve in this senior leadership position. Given the Foundation’s current staff expertise in criminal justice and youth justice, there is not a requirement that the Vice President of Programs brings that specific professional background.

Compensation & Benefits

For this role, Public Welfare Foundation offers a competitive salary and excellent benefits that will be discussed directly with interested candidates.

How To Apply

Public Welfare Foundation has engaged Koya Partners to help in this hire. Please submit a compelling cover letter and resume to Melissa Madzel and Shelby Woods through Koya’s website at: https://talent-profile.koyapartners.com/search/4394 or email pwfprogramssearch@koyapartners.com. While there is not a firm deadline for applications, please submit materials as soon as possible.

All inquiries and discussions will be considered strictly confidential.

Public Welfare Foundation is an equal opportunity employer.

Diversity and equal opportunity employment reflect the core values of the Public Welfare Foundation. Employment opportunities at Public Welfare Foundation are based on individual capabilities and qualifications without regard to race, color, citizenship, religion, gender, pregnancy, sexual orientation, age, national origin, marital status, disability, veteran status or any other protected characteristic as established under law.

Furthermore, applicants who have been impacted by the criminal justice system may apply.

About Koya Partners

Koya Partners, a part of the Diversified Search Group, is a leading executive search and strategic advising firm dedicated to connecting exceptionally talented people with mission-driven clients. Our founding philosophy—The Right Person in the Right Place Can Change the World—guides our work as we partner with nonprofits & NGOs, institutions of higher education, responsible businesses, and social enterprises in local communities and around the world.

For more information about Koya Partners, visit www.koyapartners.com.

Troy, MI

Fellow, Detroit Program, The Kresge Foundation

The Organization

The Kresge Foundation is one of the top 20 largest private foundations in the U.S. Our staff of over 100 employees works to expand opportunities in America’s cities for people with low incomes. We do this through grantmaking and social investing nationally in arts and culture, education, environment, health, human services and placed-based work in Detroit, Memphis, New Orleans, and other parts of the country.

Our state-of-the-art headquarters maintains an array of energy-efficient, water-conserving and health-promoting features. The foundation also operates an office in Detroit’s Midtown district.

About the Detroit Program

We place our highest priority on neighborhood-based, resident-led organizations, seeking to join with them in strategies for tomorrow’s transformations. It is imperative that the city’s resurgence be broadly inclusive of neighborhoods and their residents, the city’s heart and soul.

We do so by investing our resources in these areas:

·       Early Childhood Development

Along with our partners, we are reimagining the city’s neighborhoods by putting the essential building blocks in place that will support the healthy development of young children and prepare them for educational success.

·       Robust Arts & Culture in the city and region

We support metro Detroit arts and culture at multiple levels, from operating support to organizations of various sizes, to support for neighborhood-based efforts and projects in the city of Detroit, to unrestricted financial support for individual creators. We actively promote the power of arts and culture to enhance identity, connectedness and opportunity.

·       Community Development/Neighborhood Development

We support an array of activities and investments that make transformative changes to improve the conditions and prospects of residents. We particularly seek to bolster – through project and operating support – a range of community development organizations best positioned to involve the voice of residents in neighborhood-level change.

·       Civic Capacity

We aim to build the beliefs, knowledge and skills necessary for residents, their nonprofit organizations and representative government bodies to work together to enhance the collective ability of Detroiters to self-direct their future. This includes support for citywide organization networks and intermediaries, the development of resident leaders and the elevation of community voice.

·       Layered Support

Combining the right resources at the right time in the right place has proven catalytic possibilities when there is a strong neighborhood steward organization with deep connections to residents. Stewards are key in connecting these layered resources to amplify the strengths and enhance the unique character of the neighborhood. Today we seek to extend and adapt these lessons in Live6 (Livernois-McNichols), in Eastern Market, in Jefferson Chalmers and in the New Center and North End.

We deploy multiple forms of capital – grants, loans, deposits, equity and guarantees – to advance our goals.  Further information about the Detroit Program’s work can be found on Kresge’s website.

About the position

The Fellow will support the Detroit Program in advancing its goal to promote and expand long-term, equitable opportunity in Kresge’s hometown for its residents. The fellow will gain experience and insight into place-base philanthropy, community development and strategies to incorporate racial equity into a philanthropic strategy. This position provides a valuable career development opportunity for an emerging professional as well as added capacity to both the Detroit Program and Place-based Practice (which includes the Detroit Program and the American Cities Program) to fulfill its commitment of providing resources to and elevating voices of Detroit residents, leaders, and nonprofit organizations.

The fellowship is a two-year appointment and is open to those who have completed a minimum of bachelor’s level training and at least two years of relevant experience.

Primary responsibilities

·       Leading a body of work (such as strategic initiatives and/or refinement of investment strategies) during the term of the fellowship on a topic to be determined jointly by the fellow and the Detroit team.

·       Providing operational support and contributing to the coordination and execution of team programmatic processes and projects, including facilitation of the team’s strategy and operational meetings to inform team strategy development, grantmaking initiatives, coordinating project management systems and processes, and tracking of strategic goals and objectives, etc.

·       Providing project management support for special projects or initiatives undertaken by the team, including internal and external communications, tracking of progress and outcomes, developing materials etc.

·       Supporting team members to coordinate with internal partners as well as nonprofit and philanthropic partners external to the foundation to align on practices and strategies that support the Detroit nonprofit ecosystem across a range of issue areas.

·       Supporting the team’s iterative journey of embedding racial equity in its grantmaking processes.

·       Assisting in the team’s review of grant requests and operational management of its portfolio of grants.

·       Synthesizing reports from grantees to identify key lessons that should be highlighted, shared and applied to our strategies.

·       Conducting research and analysis of qualitative and quantitative data to identify key lessons and practices that should be highlighted, shared and applied to the team’s strategies.

·       Developing clear, concise written communications (including memos and briefs) for a range of internal and external audiences.

·       Interface and work in partnership with American Cities Practice, communications and social investments colleagues that support the Detroit team.

Qualifications

·       Minimum of bachelor’s degree equivalent.

·       Minimum of two years of experience on relevant programmatic issues.

·       Strong project-management skills that includes end-to-end project initiation, planning, development, and execution.

·       An ability to operationalize team strategies.

·       Ability to collaborate effectively with a range of partners internally and externally, from other Kresge program teams to Detroit community members to partner organization executives.

·       A learning orientation that enables one to recognize patterns, identify key lessons and co-develop creative solutions in partnership with team members.

·       Experience in synthesizing large amounts of information.

·       Experience with data analysis, visualization and presentation. Familiarity and experience using PowerPoint and Excel.

·       A demonstrated commitment to equity, diversity and inclusion.

·       Ability to manage and balance personal workflow.

·       Strong written, oral and interpersonal communication skills.

How To Apply

Application deadline for this position is 11:59pm EST on April 11, 2021.

https://workforcenow.adp.com/mascsr/default/mdf/recruitment/recruitment.html?cid=87274f4c-cc7a-4ce9-97ab-d86186933f96&ccId=19000101_000001&jobId=337733&source=CC2&lang=en_US

Please be sure to include:

·       Resume or curriculum vitae

·       Cover letter / essay describing:

o   How your skills and experience would contribute to the success of the Detroit team.

o   What you find compelling about this opportunity.

o   How this fellowship would advance your career development plans.

·       Two letters of recommendation

Kresge is proud to be an Equal Employment Opportunity and Affirmative Action employer and strongly encourages applications from people of color, persons with disabilities, women, and LGBT applicants. We do not discriminate based upon race, religion, color, national origin, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, age, status as a protected veteran, status as an individual with a disability or other applicable legally protected characteristics.

Please note: Due to the coronavirus pandemic, all Kresge staff are working remotely, and our Troy and Detroit offices remain closed until further notice. Kresge staff will not be traveling or attending in-person meetings during this time. Thank you for your understanding.

New York City, New York

Managing Director, Jerome L. Greene Foundation

The Organization

The Jerome L. Greene Foundation identifies and invests in opportunities that enrich and advance people’s lives in New York City and beyond. Since its creation in 1978 by Jerry Greene, real estate attorney, philanthropist, and consummate New Yorker, the Foundation has developed into a core institution in New York, working to expand access to the arts, education, and medicine and advance racial equity.

The Foundation continues to be run by family, with Christina McInerny as President & CEO. Under her leadership the foundation has honed its focus to include:

·       Advancing programs that increase access to education and the arts

·       Investing in social justice initiatives that protect voter rights and ensure reproductive freedom, among others

·       Creating high-impact collaborative partnerships with organizations such as the New York Community Trust, to bring performing arts to underrepresented audiences throughout New York, and the Echoing Green Foundation, to support racial equity work

·       Supporting exhibitions at key cultural institutions such as the Jewish Museum, The Morgan Library, Museum of the City of New York, and the Whitney Museum

·       Expanding scholarship giving for students to pursue training with more than 1,500 scholarships awarded since the Foundation was created and a new grant to support Greene Public Service Scholars at Columbia Law School

·       Since inception the Foundation has distributed over $500 million to its non-profit partners, who continue to expand access and opportunities in the arts, medicine, education, and social justice.

For more information, please visit jlgreene.org.

Position Overview

The Jerome L. Greene Foundation is seeking a Managing Director who will have responsibility for grants management and oversight of the Foundation’s office and administration. This is a new leadership position for the Foundation that is based in New York and reports to and works closely with the President & CEO of the Foundation.

Candidate Profile

The Managing Director will bring the expertise required to ensure that the Foundation has grants management and operational oversight of the highest caliber and is structured to continue achieving its mission and goals.

Strong candidates will be able to take on oversight of a significant grantmaking program and provide input into strategic growth, offer creative ideas and initiatives while understanding the Foundation has a clear history and direction in place, and manage details of the business aspects of the institution while staying focused on overall objectives.

Compensation & Benefits

Competitive benefits package includes full medical coverage for employees and 50% coverage for spouses and dependents, as well a 401(k)-retirement account. Foundation staff currently operate under flexible work week and a paid time off policy that includes generous vacation days, holidays, sick days, and office closure for one month during the summer.

The Managing Director’s compensation will be commensurate with skills and experience.

How To Apply

The Jerome L. Greene Foundation is seeking a Managing Director who will have responsibility for grants management and oversight of the Foundation’s office and administration. This is a new leadership position for the Foundation that is based in New York and reports to and works closely with the President & CEO of the Foundation.

Candidate Profile

The Managing Director will bring the expertise required to ensure that the Foundation has grants management and operational oversight of the highest caliber and is structured to continue achieving its mission and goals.

Strong candidates will be able to take on oversight of a significant grantmaking program and provide input into strategic growth, offer creative ideas and initiatives while understanding the Foundation has a clear history and direction in place, and manage details of the business aspects of the institution while staying focused on overall objectives.

Compensation & Benefits

Competitive benefits package includes full medical coverage for employees and 50% coverage for spouses and dependents, as well a 401(k)-retirement account. Foundation staff currently operate under flexible work week and a paid time off policy that includes generous vacation days, holidays, sick days, and office closure for one month during the summer.

The Managing Director’s compensation will be commensurate with skills and experience.

The Jerome L. Greene Foundation has engaged Koya Partners to help in this hire. Please submit a compelling cover letter and resume to Turner Delano here.

The Jerome L. Greene Foundation is an equal opportunity employer fully committed to creating an environment and team that represents a variety of backgrounds, perspectives, styles, and experiences. The Jerome L. Greene Foundation does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, national origin, religion, sex, disability, age, sexual orientation, military status, veteran status, genetic information, gender identity, or any other characteristic protected by applicable federal, state, or local law. We encourage all to express interest.

About Koya Partners

Koya Partners, a member of the Diversified Search Group, is a leading executive search and strategic advising firm dedicated to connecting exceptionally talented people with mission-driven clients. Our founding philosophy—The Right Person in the Right Place Can Change the World—guides our work as we partner with nonprofits & NGOs, institutions of higher education, responsible businesses, and social enterprises in local communities and around the world.

At Koya, we don’t just accept difference—we celebrate it, support it, and thrive on it for the benefit of our team, our clients, and the communities we serve.

Koya is an equal opportunity employer fully committed to creating an environment and team that represents a variety of backgrounds, perspectives, styles, and experiences. We encourage all to apply because we believe a diversity of voices leads to better discussions, decisions, and outcomes for everyone. Koya does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, national origin, religion, sex, disability, age, sexual orientation, military status, veteran status, genetic information, gender identity, or any other characteristic protected by applicable federal, state, or local law.

For more information about Koya Partners, visit www.koyapartners.com.

Distributed Organization – This position is ideally based in the U.S. Gulf South (Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi, or Alabama)

Gulf South Program Officer, Hive Fund for Climate and Gender Justice

The Organization

The Hive Fund for Climate and Gender Justice raises funds and makes grants to organizations working at the intersection of climate, gender, and racial justice crises in the U.S. that have historically lacked access to funding. Founded in September 2019, we spent our first year cultivating community and co-creating values and practices that position us well to bring on our first full-time team members to work with the founding co-directors. This is an exciting time for a collaborative partner with relevant lived experience in the South to take our work to the next level.

The Hive Fund supports groups advocating for strong policies; building social movements to intensify public demand for change; facilitating civic engagement to build political power and hold decision-makers accountable; and conducting creative communications efforts to move hearts, minds, and imaginations. The Hive Fund supports grantee partners with significant amounts of multi-year general support and trust in their expertise. A majority of our funding is awarded to groups in the South, where pollution levels are higher and philanthropic funding levels are lower than elsewhere in the country.

We approach grant-making differently, with a vision of resources rooted in abundance, not scarcity, and a recognition that relationships, trust, and integrity are essential and invaluable assets to propel social change. As a re-granting organization, the Hive Fund is in relationship with funders and grantee partners: we operate in a space between movements and money that is rich with the possibility of individual, organizational and systemic transformation. We move toward a more equitable and just future, in part, by unlocking resources and returning them to the communities from which they were extracted. We are accountable to and make all major decisions in consultation with key advisors, participatory working groups, and grantee partners. We foster collaborative relationships with funding partners and allies to challenge and change harmful practices in the philanthropic sector that reflect and reinforce white supremacy and misogyny.

More information about the Hive Fund can be found at www.hivefund.org.

Position Overview

In this newly created position that the selected candidate will help shape, the Gulf South Program Officer will manage an annual grant-making portfolio of approximately $6M focused in the Gulf South, anchored in Texas and Louisiana with consideration for additional future grant-making in Mississippi and/or Alabama dependent on fundraising.

Oil, gas, and petrochemical pollution in Texas and Louisiana is expected to increase dramatically over the next 15 years, threatening to nullify all the global warming emission reductions achieved in the U.S. power sector over the last two decades. Groups in the region have asked for support in a just transition toward a cleaner, healthier, safer, and more equitable future. Working within a participatory decision-making structure, the program officer will work with co-directors, grantee partners, allied funders, and others to support an ecosystem of grantee partners.  This ecosystem will work to achieve collective goals of reducing harmful pollution and building a healthier and more just society.

The Gulf South Program Officer will support grantee partners by making multi-year general operating and healing justice and holistic security grants; helping to craft compelling stories of collective progress and impact; and connecting grantee partners with other donors and potential supporters. The ideal candidate for this role is an entrepreneurial self-starter and inclusive bridge-builder who approaches new situations with humility and faces challenges with courage and humor.

ESSENTIAL JOB FUNCTIONS

Grant Strategy & Partnerships
– Build trusting relationships with grantee partners, advisory group members, regional stakeholders, and others to co-create grant-making strategies, goals, and objectives consistent with the Hive Fund’s mission, values, and theory of change.
– Serve as the lead facilitator, consensus-builder, researcher, writer, and peer review manager of semi-annual Hive Fund strategy memos and grant docket recommendations.
– Work with consultants, practitioners, and other experts to identify opportunities to provide supplemental Healing Justice and Holistic Security grants.
– Identify potential new Gulf South grantee partners and help grow the number from 11 to approximately 20 over the next two years.
– Collaborate with grantee partners to support the development of grantee-driven ways to track progress and collect data and stories.
– Support grantees as needed with capacity-building, introductions to other funders, and connection to additional resources.
– Facilitate connections and partnerships across the region to support an emerging regional ecosystem. Partner with the Hive Fund’s Atlantic Coast Program Officer to identify and lift up learnings across regions.

Grants Management
– Ensure adherence to the highest standards of integrity in managing internal grant-making procedures, including acquisition and management of appropriate documentation, maintaining detailed grant budgets and tracking, data entry, compliance, and processing of grant reports and renewals.
– Work with Hive Fund leadership and consultants to design new grant-making programs and areas of specialization as needed.

Funder Engagement
– Support Hive Fund’s fundraising by providing timely and accurate data and stories of impact and contributing to grant writing and funder reporting.
– Contribute content to the Learning Lab, an online hub where we share insights, ideas, challenges and learnings from our grantee and funder communities.
– Work closely with funders in the Gulf South Region and across the country to promote the expertise and strategies of grantee partners and the Hive Fund to shift philanthropic practices and increase giving to those on the frontlines.
– Participate and play a leadership role in networks with aligned funders, including regional associations of grant-makers and issue-specific funder tables.

QUALIFICATIONS & CHARACTERISTICS
Core – Ideally, the program officer will have a mix of these core experiences and skills to support their ability to thrive in the role:
– Lived and work experience relevant to climate, gender, and racial justice in the Gulf South, particularly Texas and Louisiana (as well as Mississippi, and/or Alabama), reflected in a clear commitment to the mission of the Hive Fund.
– 7+ years of grant-making, grant-seeking, nonprofit and/or philanthropic experience preferred, ideally within the climate, gender, and racial justice landscapes.
– Familiarity with power-building strategies, policy advocacy, and systems change work.
– Highly collaborative work style with outstanding relationship-building skills, experience contributing to a positive organizational culture, and the ability to operate as a peer and thought partner to the co-directors, grantee partners, funding partners, and external constituents with the highest levels of integrity.
– Outstanding oral and written communications skills, along with strong facilitation skills and experience leading participatory, inclusive, and collective decision-making processes across a diversity of backgrounds and approaches.
– Proven project management abilities to ensure priorities are clearly understood by internal and external stakeholders and that grant-making programs advance on time and on budget.
– Strong emotional intelligence, humility, and commitment to supporting the expertise of grantee partners, community-based leaders, and inclusive and participatory decision-making processes.

Preferred – Preferably, the program officer will also have some of these desired experiences and skills to enhance their thought partnership in the role:
– Ability to develop a long-term vision and understand the role of grant-making in moving it forward. A thinker and a doer who understands the role philanthropy can play in achieving climate, gender, and racial justice.
– Content knowledge in climate, gender, and/or racial justice as a generalist, or an expert in a specific approach (e.g., civic engagement or economic development).
– Ability to learn new areas and approaches quickly and pull in outside expertise as needed.
– Entrepreneurial spirit filled with ingenuity, inventiveness, flexibility, and the ability to help build something innovative from the ground up, both ideating and executing.

WORK ENVIRONMENT, SCHEDULE & TRAVEL

The Gulf South Program Officer will be an employee of the Hive Fund’s fiscal sponsor, the Windward Fund. This is a full-time salaried position with comprehensive benefits. As a distributed organization, our team members currently work remotely embedded in key regions across the U.S. and will mainly work from home or in co-working spaces post-COVID. The Hive Fund will provide necessary office equipment and supplies for remote work and work in co-working spaces. Approximately 25-30% travel, mainly regional, is required to support an intentionally distributed workplace, to build trust and relationships by meeting grantee partners in their communities, and to attend conferences and other learning and networking events. Reasonable accommodations will be made for individuals with disabilities, caregiving responsibilities, and those who reside in rural areas.

COMPENSATION & BENEFITS
The Hive Fund’s compensation practices support staff in thriving and are part of living into the just, equitable world we are actively creating. These practices are guided by the Hive Fund’s six core values, especially transparency, equity, and healing & security. The salary range for this position is $125,000 – $165,000, commensurate with qualifications, plus access to professional development resources, and the competitive benefits package provided to all Windward Fund employees including health coverage, retirement benefits, paid sick leave, vacation and holidays.

How To Apply

The Hive Fund is partnering with Walker and Associates Consulting – a Black woman owned and led strategic consultancy. Email a cover letter, resume and a short (1-2 page) writing sample by April 1, 2021 to hivefund@walkeraac.com. We invite you to lift up relevant qualifications not specified in this announcement that might make you ideal for this role in your cover letter. Use the subject line “Gulf South Program Officer.” One combined PDF file is preferred. Candidate review begins immediately. Beginning in April, advancing candidates may be invited to participate in two rounds of interviews with a diverse set of Hive Fund staff and partners. Finalists may also be asked to respond to an advanced assignment related to a real-time challenge that the program officer would face in this role. We hope to have a new program officer joining our team by late spring or early summer.

COMMITMENT TO EQUAL EMPLOYMENT
In alignment with our core values and approach, Hive Fund is an equal opportunity employer committed to a diverse, collaborative, and sustainable work environment. We believe that White supremacy, misogyny, and economic systems that make pollution profitable are intimately intertwined. Addressing the climate crisis at a scale and in the time needed to avert disaster will require transforming the systems of power governing who pollutes, who profits, and whose lives are valued. We therefore recruit and hire with the understanding of systemic oppression and of the lived reality of people with marginalized identities and strongly encourage all to apply, especially Black, Indigenous and People of Color; lesbian, bisexual, queer, trans and gender non-conforming people; intersex people; people with disabilities; and formerly incarcerated people. We do not discriminate based upon race, color, national origin, ancestry, sex, gender identity, sexual orientation, sexual identity, age, religion, creed, disability (actual or perceived), medical condition including genetic characteristics, marital status, domestic partnership status, citizenship, military service, height, weight, HIV/AIDS status, or any other characteristic protected by state or federal law or local ordinance.

Distributed Organization – This position is ideally based on the U.S. Atlantic Coast (Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina, or Florida)

Atlantic Coast Program Officer, Hive Fund for Climate and Gender Justice

The Organization

The Hive Fund for Climate and Gender Justice raises funds and makes grants to organizations working at the intersection of climate, gender, and racial justice crises in the U.S. that have historically lacked access to funding. Founded in September 2019, we spent our first year cultivating community and co-creating values and practices that position us well to bring on our first full-time team members to work with the founding co-directors. This is an exciting time for a collaborative partner with relevant lived experience in the South to take our work to the next level.

The Hive Fund supports groups advocating for strong policies; building social movements to intensify public demand for change; facilitating civic engagement to build political power and hold decision-makers accountable; and conducting creative communications efforts to move hearts, minds, and imaginations. The Hive Fund supports grantee partners with significant amounts of multi-year general support and trust in their expertise. A majority of our funding is awarded to groups in the South, where pollution levels are higher and philanthropic funding levels are lower than elsewhere in the country.

We approach grant-making differently, with a vision of resources rooted in abundance, not scarcity, and a recognition that relationships, trust, and integrity are essential and invaluable assets to propel social change. As a re-granting organization, the Hive Fund is in relationship with funders and grantee partners: we operate in a space between movements and money that is rich with the possibility of individual, organizational and systemic transformation. We move toward a more equitable and just future, in part, by unlocking resources and returning them to the communities from which they were extracted. We are accountable to and make all major decisions in consultation with key advisors, participatory working groups, and grantee partners. We foster collaborative relationships with funding partners and allies to challenge and change harmful practices in the philanthropic sector that reflect and reinforce white supremacy and misogyny.

More information about the Hive Fund can be found at www.hivefund.org.

Position Overview

In this newly created position that the selected candidate will help shape, the Atlantic Coast Program Officer will manage an annual grant-making portfolio of approximately $6M focused in the Atlantic Coast region, anchored in Georgia and the Carolinas with consideration for additional future grant-making in Florida and US territories off the Atlantic Coast, dependent on fundraising. This region is home to some of the nation’s dirtiest coal-fired power plants, most intransigent utilities, and most promising opportunities for growth of renewable energy.

Working within a participatory decision-making structure, the program officer will work with co-directors, grantee partners, allied funders, and others to support an ecosystem of grantee partners. This ecosystem will work to achieve the collective goals of fighting voter suppression and increasing civic engagement in ways that curb polluting industries’ influence, strengthening economic alternatives to fossil fuels and building a healthier and more just society.

The Atlantic Coast Program Officer will support grantee partners by making multi-year general operating and healing justice and holistic security grants; helping to craft compelling stories of collective progress and impact; and connecting grantee partners with other donors and potential supporters. The ideal candidate for this role is an entrepreneurial self-starter and inclusive bridge-builder who approaches new situations with humility and faces challenges with courage and humor.

ESSENTIAL JOB FUNCTIONS

Grant Strategy & Partnerships
- Build trusting relationships with grantee partners, advisory group members, regional stakeholders, and others to co-create grant-making strategies, goals, and objectives consistent with the Hive Fund’s mission, values, and theory of change.
- Serve as the lead facilitator, consensus-builder, researcher, writer, and peer review manager of semi-annual Hive Fund strategy memos and grant docket recommendations.
- Work with consultants, practitioners, and other experts to identify opportunities to provide supplemental Healing Justice and Holistic Security grants.
- Identify potential new Atlantic Coast grantee partners and help grow the number from 12 to approximately 20 over the next two years.
- Collaborate with grantee partners to support the development of grantee-driven ways to track progress and collect data and stories.
- Support grantees as needed with capacity-building, introductions to other funders, and connection to additional resources.
- Facilitate connections and partnerships across the region to support an emerging regional ecosystem. Partner with the Hive Fund’s Gulf South Program Officer to identify and lift up learnings across regions.

Grants Management
- Ensure adherence to the highest standards of integrity in managing internal grant-making procedures, including acquisition and management of appropriate documentation, maintaining detailed grant budgets and tracking, data entry, compliance, and processing of grant reports and renewals.
- Work with Hive Fund leadership and consultants to design new grant-making programs and areas of specialization as needed.

Funder Engagement
- Support the Hive Fund’s fundraising by providing timely and accurate data and stories of impact and contributing to grant writing and funder reporting.
- Contribute content to the Learning Lab, an online hub where we share insights, ideas, challenges and learnings from our grantee and funder communities.
- Work closely with funders in the Atlantic Coast Region and across the country to promote the expertise and strategies of grantee partners and the Hive Fund to shift philanthropic practices and increase giving to those on the frontlines.
- Participate and play a leadership role in networks with aligned funders, including regional associations of grant-makers and issue-specific funder tables.

QUALIFICATIONS & CHARACTERISTICS
Core - Ideally, the program officer will have a mix of these core experiences and skills to support their ability to thrive in the role:
- Lived and work experience relevant to climate, gender and racial justice in the Atlantic Coast region, particularly Georgia and the Carolinas, reflected in a clear commitment to the mission and growth of the Hive Fund.
- 7+ years of grant-making, grant-seeking, nonprofit and/or philanthropic experience preferred, ideally within the climate, gender, and racial justice landscapes.
- Familiarity with power-building strategies, policy advocacy, and systems change work.
- Highly collaborative work style with outstanding relationship-building skills, experience contributing to a positive organizational culture, and the ability to operate as a peer and thought partner to the co-directors, grantee partners, funding partners, and external constituents with the highest levels of integrity.
- Outstanding oral and written communications skills, along with strong facilitation skills and experience leading participatory, inclusive, and collective decision-making processes across a diversity of backgrounds and approaches.
- Proven project management abilities to ensure priorities are clearly understood by internal and external stakeholders and that grant-making programs advance on time and on budget.
- Strong emotional intelligence, humility, and commitment to supporting the expertise of grantee partners and community-based leaders and to inclusive and participatory decision-making processes.

Preferred - Preferably, the program officer will also have some of these desired experiences and skills to enhance their thought partnership in the role:
- Ability to develop a long-term vision and understand the role of grant-making in moving it forward. A thinker and a doer who understands the role philanthropy can play in achieving climate, gender, and racial justice.
- Content knowledge in climate, gender, and/or racial justice as a generalist, or an expert in a specific approach (e.g., civic engagement or economic development).
- Ability to learn new areas and approaches quickly and pull in outside expertise as needed.
- Entrepreneurial spirit filled with ingenuity, inventiveness, flexibility, and the ability to help build something innovative from the ground up, both ideating and executing.

WORK ENVIRONMENT, SCHEDULE & TRAVEL
The Atlantic Coast Program Officer will be an employee of the Hive Fund’s fiscal sponsor, the Windward Fund. This is a full-time salaried position with comprehensive benefits. As a distributed organization, our team members currently work remotely embedded in key regions across the U.S. and will mainly work from home or in co-working spaces post-COVID. The Hive Fund will provide necessary office equipment and supplies for remote work and work in co-working spaces. Approximately 25-30% travel, mainly regional, is required to support an intentionally distributed workplace, to build trust and relationships by meeting grantee partners in their communities, and to attend conferences and other learning and networking events. Reasonable accommodations will be made for individuals with disabilities, those who have caregiving responsibilities, and those who reside in rural areas.

COMPENSATION & BENEFITS
The Hive Fund’s compensation practices support staff in thriving and are part of living into the just, equitable world we are actively creating. These practices are guided by the Hive Fund’s six core values, especially transparency, equity, and healing & security. The salary range for this position is $125,000 - $165,000, commensurate with qualifications, plus access to professional development resources, and the competitive benefits package provided to all Windward Fund employees including health coverage, retirement benefits, paid sick leave, vacation and holidays.

How To Apply

The Hive Fund is partnering with Walker and Associates Consulting – a Black woman owned and led strategic consultancy. Email a cover letter, resume and a short (1-2 page) writing sample by April 1, 2021 to hivefund@walkeraac.com. We invite you to lift up relevant qualifications not specified in this announcement that might make you ideal for this role in your cover letter. Use the subject line “Atlantic Coast Program Officer.” One combined PDF file is preferred. Candidate review begins immediately. Beginning in April, advancing candidates may be invited to participate in two rounds of interviews with a diverse set of Hive Fund staff and partners. Finalists may also be asked to respond to an advanced assignment related to a real-time challenge that the program officer would face in this role. We hope to have a new program officer joining our team by late spring or early summer.

COMMITMENT TO EQUAL EMPLOYMENT
In alignment with our core values and approach, Hive Fund is an equal opportunity employer committed to a diverse, collaborative, and sustainable work environment. We believe that White supremacy, misogyny, and economic systems that make pollution profitable are intimately intertwined. Addressing the climate crisis at a scale and in the time needed to avert disaster will require transforming the systems of power governing who pollutes, who profits, and whose lives are valued. We therefore recruit and hire with the understanding of systemic oppression and of the lived reality of people with marginalized identities and strongly encourage all to apply, especially Black, Indigenous and People of Color; lesbian, bisexual, queer, trans and gender non-conforming people; intersex people; people with disabilities; and formerly incarcerated people. We do not discriminate based upon race, color, national origin, ancestry, sex, gender identity, sexual orientation, sexual identity, age, religion, creed, disability (actual or perceived), medical condition including genetic characteristics, marital status, domestic partnership status, citizenship, military service, height, weight, HIV/AIDS status, or any other characteristic protected by state or federal law or local ordinance.

 

New York, NY

Research Officer, Arts, The Wallace Foundation

The Organization

About Wallace

The Wallace Foundation—an independent, national, New York-based philanthropy with $1.6 billion in assets—traces its origins back more than half a century to DeWitt and Lila Acheson Wallace, founders of The Reader’s Digest Association. Our work is grounded by our core values, which guide how we work together, and our mission and approach, which describes what we do. We aim to create a workplace where we all can thrive and contribute in support of our mission.

Our Core Values

We seek to improve complex social systems in ways that are meaningful, measurable, and sustainable. We value behavior that demonstrates a commitment to Mutual Respect and Support, Diversity, Continuous Learning, Collaboration, Excellence, and Accountability.

Mission and Approach

The Wallace Foundation seeks to foster equity and improvements in learning and enrichment for young people, and in the arts for everyone. The foundation has an unusual approach: In each of our focus areas

–Arts, Education Leadership, and Learning and Enrichment –we seek to identify, and help answer, one or more significant questions whose answers are not known but which, if known, could help propel progress more broadly. As responsible stewards of our resources, we seek to ensure that our initiatives contribute to Wallace’s dual goals:(a) benefits for our partners and those they serve in the form of increased capacity, and (b) benefits for the broader field through credible, relevant knowledge.

This “Wallace Approach” is reflected in the way the foundation develops its strategies and designs its initiatives. We begin by attempting to understand the context of the fields in which we work in order to identify an important unanswered question to address. We then simultaneously fund programmatic work in the field by organizations (including technical assistance and peer learning communities) and research that studies the process and results of their efforts to answer the question, in order to generate improvements and insights that can benefit both the people served by the grant recipients and the field as a whole. The public reports emanating from this work are the basis for our strategy of catalyzing broad impact by serving as a knowledge hub for credible, useful lessons to be disseminated to key audiences of practitioners, policymakers and influencers.

Interdisciplinary Team Structure

The Wallace Approach is carried out in an interdisciplinary team-based structure with three disciplines: program, communications, and research. We seek employees who are highly skilled in their professions, able to work collaboratively across disciplines to capture the synergy of diverse experience and ways of thinking, think analytically, and communicate clearly the rationale for recommendations. We value the flexibility to adapt to change, a desire to learn, and the ability to work productively both on one’s own and with colleagues inside and outside the foundation.

For more information on The Wallace Foundation and to see examples of our work, please visit http://www.wallacefoundation.org.

Position Overview

The Opportunity

There are two aspects to Wallace’s work in the arts:

·         Investing in the relevance and resilience of arts organizations and understanding their role in community, and

·         Engaging more young people in high-quality arts learning during the school day and beyond.

Collaborating with the Director of Arts and members of the Arts Unit and Interdisciplinary Team, the Program Officer, Arts is a key contributor to the success of the Foundation’s initiatives and shares a commitment to equity and social justice for all.

The Program Officer brings substantive field knowledge and experience to the interdisciplinary team’s work on strategy design, ongoing refinement, and implementation; managing the work of the grantees and partners to advance the overall goals of the initiative; and supporting sharing of knowledge.

Core duties of the Program Officer include:

Grants/Contracts/Partnership Management

·         Acting as stewards of our resources, ensure that the funded work of our initiatives reflects Wallace’s “dual goals:” benefits for our partners and those they serve, and benefits through the broader field through knowledge.

·         Manage the work with grantees to advance the overall goals of the initiative: local impact and broader field benefits.

·         Fulfill stewardship responsibilities: (i) ensure grantee budgets reflect the scope and deliverables, monitor spending, and review financial reports to inform future funding; and (ii) maintain an up- to-date grantee record, including report reviews and feedback, conversations with grantees, and budget discussions to ensure the integrity of the foundation’s grants management database.

·         Use feedback skills effectively to build a relationship of trust, candor and transparency with grantees so that discussion of challenges and problems leads to shared problem-solving and resolution; and progress and success is recognized and built on.

·         Prepare timely analysis of funded work to inform the discussion of strategy, initiative goals and implementation in the team and unit. Analysis includes strengths and challenges in fulfilling scope of work, options with pros/cons, and a recommendation.

·         Fulfill lead role on “strands” of work within an initiative, e.g., Professional Learning Community,

conference planning, field data collection, to meet agreed-upon goals.

Participation in Teams

·         Actively contribute to building high-performing teams to improve how we work together, build trust,

and develop strategy, design initiatives, and manage implementation to advance Wallace’s mission.

·         Fulfills individual responsibilities and commitments as assigned within the team and/or unit.

·         Works collaboratively to advance the work by contributing own perspective and listening to understand the perspectives of all members of the team.

·         Demonstrates an approach to shared problem-solving that is grounded in advancing the work, assumes good intentions, demonstrates respect, and welcomes diversity of perspectives.

·         When presenting analyses and recommendations for grants/projects/strands of work to the team allows for all voices to be heard, consideration of options, and discussion of pros/cons to lead to a consensus.

Knowledge-sharing to Catalyze Broad Impact

·         Contribute to sharing what we learn to support the foundation’s mission to catalyze broad impact in

our fields of interest.

·         Participate in staff review of draft reports and knowledge products to ensure final reflects our

interdisciplinary perspective to only “say more as we know more,” and is respectful of the grantees

whose work is presented in the report.

·         Drawing on message maps and other resources, share what we are learning at conference presentations, in the local communities of our grantees, and in other venues.

·         Cultivate relationships and participate in external networks, such as funder collaborations,

“grantmaker” organizations, and professional associations.

Candidate Profile

Wallace’s next Program Officer will possess the following attributes and competencies. Appreciation for the Mission

Deeply committed to the Wallace approach, the Program Officer honors and values the important role that philanthropies play in forging progress in a democratic society. A champion of the mission, they

steward the Foundation’s values by inspiring and motivating others both within the Foundation’s ecosystem and the community arts world. They lead with humility, strive for excellence, and recognize that success is a long-term effort that requires the Program Officer to be a co-creator in the success of the Foundation’s initiatives, grantees, and the communities that they serve.

Passion and Knowledge about Arts and Arts Education

The Program Officer embraces the belief that arts and creativity are fundamental and necessary for the health of the human spirit. They share a sense of urgency to amplify the arts’ critical role in improving the lives of young people and contributing to strong, resilient communities. They celebrate the artistic and creative process and possess the skills to apply inherent elements – such as creative problem-

solving, comfort with ambiguity and rigorous inquiry, conveying relevance and meaning, learning and iteration, and deep listening and collaboration, among others – to develop strategic and innovative initiatives to address community challenges in the field. Experienced in working with the arts, culture, and/or creative sectors, they share their deep knowledge of best practices and trends broadly and enthusiastically.

Intellectual Curiosity and Mindful Thinking

A creative thinker, the Program Officer thinks strategically, takes initiative, and executes strategies to define clear program objectives, evaluate progress, and steward projects through a complete

lifecycle. They bring a fresh perspective and solutions-oriented mindset, possessing equal parts quantitative and qualitative analytical skills to identify investment opportunities, build organizational capacity and efficacy, design and evaluate initiatives, and evaluate proposals and outcomes. They thrive in an environment that fosters a fluid exchange of ideas and harness the power of different perspectives to foster the success of their grantees and Foundation initiatives. They are knowledgeable about complex organizational and community conditions, recognize the role of policy and policymakers on the arts and arts education, and navigate nuanced political and community dynamics. A strong project manager, they foster comprehensive approaches to addressing common challenges in the community arts. Throughout their work, they recognize the potential in others, celebrate differences, and share success and accountability equally.

Relationship Building and Collaboration

Skilled at building, cultivating, and sustaining productive relationships with diverse constituencies, they have successfully developed external partnerships to advance the Foundation’s strategic priorities and initiatives. They are a proven team player who serves as a trustworthy advisor to grantees, partners, and vendors. They embrace a collegial approach to both sharing ideas and receiving feedback, consider new perspectives, encourage open dialogue, listen with patience and empathy, and inspire diverse constituencies to collaboratively work towards common goals.

Leadership Through Influence

As a public-facing representative of the Foundation, the Program Officer recognizes that their scope of influence extends beyond their portfolio of grantees—it inspires the broader community arts landscape. A champion of the Foundation, its grantees, and the arts, the Program Officer is a skilled public speaker who builds supportive, respectful networks by presenting information succinctly, objectively, and credibly in a manner that is inclusive of Wallace’s diverse constituencies. They recognize the powerful impact of personal relationships and can appeal to a broad audience of grantees, partners, vendors, and community members through a wide range of communication channels.

Diversity, Equity and Inclusion (DEI) Perspective

An advocate for advancing equity as a driver in the arts sector, the Program Officer will play a critical role in supporting Wallace’s efforts to strengthen DEI in its own work and culture. The next Program Officer will be a co-conspirator in the Foundation’s efforts to collectively engage in the difficult, necessary conversations around equity and inclusion and will partner with the Foundation in taking actionable steps towards investing in programming and strategies that promote diversity and inclusion within the constellation of communities that Wallace serves. They have the courage to look inward and recognize that an awareness of conscious and hidden biases—both individual and collective—is a powerful catalyst for reflection, personal and professional growth, and action. They bring an open mindset, a strong sense of socio-emotional intelligence, and a commitment to inclusive and equitable practices in their work with their team(s), colleagues, grantees, and partners.

QUALIFICATIONS

·         Demonstrated collaborative approach to shared problem-solving and contributing to program design and strategy – preferably in an interdisciplinary setting – that is grounded in advancing the work, assumes good intentions, demonstrates respect, and welcomes diversity of perspectives.

·         Multiyear experience at the program management level in a community-based arts organization, preferably in the visual or performing arts.

·         Ability to bring together and build productive relationships with and among external parties (grantees/partners/vendors).

·         Exceptional project management skills, the with the ability to effectively manage multiple projects and competing priorities.

·         Excellent conceptual and analytical thinking skills.

·         Outstanding communication skills: listening, writing, speaking.

·         Full-cycle grant management experience is strongly preferred.

Compensation & Benefits

The salary for this position is $140,000.

Our benefits include:

·         Health, dental and vision for employee and covered dependents as of date of hire.

·         403(b) Retirement Plan with employer contribution.

·         Generous Paid Time Off (PTO) and schedule of annual holidays.

·         Tuition reimbursement and professional development initiatives for growth.

·         Leaves of Absence providing employees time to manage personal or family responsibilities, recover from an illness or injury, or respond to civic duties.

How To Apply

Contact Malissa Brennan and Anne McCarthy of Koya Partners have been exclusively retained for this search. To express your interest in this role or to submit a nomination, please visit click here or email WallacePOSearch@koyapartners.com. All inquiries and discussions will be considered strictly confidential.

The Wallace Foundation is an Equal Opportunity Employer, committed to maintaining a diverse workplace where differing perspectives are a source of strength.

About Koya Partners

Koya Partners, a part of the Diversified Search Group, is a leading executive search and strategic advising firm dedicated to connecting exceptionally talented people with mission-driven clients. Our founding philosophy—The Right Person in the Right Place Can Change the World—guides our work as we partner with nonprofits & NGOs, institutions of higher education, responsible businesses, and social enterprises in local communities and around the world.

Washington, DC

Managing Director of Policy, Americans for Financial Reform Education Fund (AFREF)

The Organization

Americans for Financial Reform (AFR) has been called “the leading voice for Wall Street accountability” in Washington. Help us continue and grow this important work. Our organization played a leading role in winning passage of the Dodd Frank Financial Reform bill and the creation of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, and we are continuing the fight to create a financial system that deconstructs systemic racism and inequality and promotes a just and sustainable economy. Americans for Financial Reform Education Fund (AFREF)’s staff effectively advances the agenda of a coalition of more than 200 consumer, civil rights, labor, community-based, and other organizations, along with academics and other experts, working together to advance this fundamentally important part of the economic and racial justice agenda.

Position Overview

AFREF invites nominations and applications for a Managing Director of Policy. As a key member of the senior leadership team and reporting to the Executive Director, the Managing Director will increase our impact and capacity to drive change. She/he/they will partner with AFREF’s leadership and staff to strengthen our policy analysis and advocacy, build connections between different threads of our work, and will bring an inclusive management style that supports staff members to achieve their highest potential and is grounded in principles of equity and inclusion.

KEY RESPONSIBILITIES

Leadership

• Leading a team of AFREF policy staff; Managing the work of the team to increase coordination of work streams within the team, and across the organization.

• Providing mentorship and support to policy staff that helps build and sustain a strong culture of inclusion, growth, and performance.

• Working with the Executive Director, leadership team, and policy staff to develop and implement specific strategies to advance our policy agenda.

• Contributing to planning and to fundraising for the organization as a whole.

Policy Effectiveness

• Collaborating with and supporting members of the policy team to produce high quality work including regulatory comments, bill analyses, reports, memos and responsive materials.

• Collaborating with members of the policy team, and across the organization, to identify, develop and articulate connecting themes in AFREF’s work to build a strategic shared narrative.

External Engagement

• Representing the organization and presenting on our policy agenda in meetings with policy makers, at public events, and with the press in an effective manner that advances AFREF’s goals.

• Building and maintaining relationships with policy experts and leaders at partner organizations and academic and research institutions.

• Building and maintaining relationships with policy staff and principals at financial regulatory agencies and on Capitol Hill.

QUALIFICATIONS OF THE IDEAL CANDIDATE

While no one person will embody all of the qualities enumerated below, the ideal candidate will possess many of the following professional and personal abilities, attributes and experiences:

• A serious commitment to economic and racial justice.

• 15+ years of relevant experience, including five years of leadership and management experience in a mission-driven, fast-paced, high-performance environment.

• Deep knowledge of at least some areas of AFREF’s policy work, and a demonstrated ability and willingness to learn in additional areas.

• Experience with and enthusiasm for mentorship and staff development; demonstrated commitment to equity, and to responsive, accountable leadership and proactively managing others to take ownership, initiative, and action.

• Exceptional writing skills, including for both general and technical audiences.

• Excellent public speaking skills, and experience dealing with the media.

• Knowledge of the federal legislative and regulatory processes, experience on the Hill or at a Federal Regulatory Agency an asset.

• Excellent time management skills and the ability to handle multiple projects at once, and to adapt to a swiftly changing environment.

• A record of strategic and big picture thinking.

• A law degree or an advanced degree in economics or a related field is an asset but not required. The salary range for this position is $110k-125k plus benefits and will be determined based on experience and qualifications for the role.

How To Apply

For more information about Americans for Financial Reform (AFR), please visit: www.ourfinancialsecurity.org  For more information about the AFR Education Fund (AFREF), please visit: realbankreform.org

This search is being led by Katherine Jacobs, Paola Peacock-Villada, and Sarah Hecklau of NPAG. Due to the pace of this search, candidates are strongly encouraged to apply as soon as possible. Candidates may submit their resume, cover letter, outlining their interest and qualifications, along with a writing sample (included as part of cover letter document) via NPAG’s candidate portal.

AFREF is an equal opportunity employer and proudly values diversity. Candidates of all backgrounds are encouraged to apply.

Eden Prairie, MN

Program Officer, Environment, Margaret A. Cargill Philanthropies

The Organization

Program Officer, Environment
Margaret A. Cargill Philanthropies
Eden Prairie, MN

 

About Margaret A. Cargill Philanthropies

Founded by the late Margaret A. Cargill, Margaret A. Cargill Philanthropies (MACP) actively partners with capable organizations to make a lasting difference for individuals and communities, with particular attention to overlooked causes.

MACP develops and implements community-based grantmaking strategies across seven programmatic domains: Arts & Cultures, Disaster Relief & Recovery, Environment, Animal Welfare, Quality of Life, Teachers, and Legacy & Opportunity. MACP believes that the best way to make a lasting difference on issues they care about is by investing in long-term relationships with key grantees, strengthening their combined abilities to make a meaningful difference in the world.

Cultural values inspire MACP’s team to learn, create, and excel through strong relationships with one another, their grantee partners, and the communities where MACP funds programs. They are guided by a set of core values: making a difference, respect, excellence, learning, integrity, and humility. We strive in our engagement with one another and in our grantmaking to support equitable and inclusive approaches. The culture is one of engagement, thoughtfulness, and ongoing discovery. And they are constantly inspired by the good work carried out by their grantee partners. MACP is a team of diverse individuals inspired by a common mission, shared values, and a desire to make a difference by working together.

MACP is comprised of two grantmaking entities, Margaret A. Cargill Foundation and the Anne Ray Foundation, and their combined assets place them among the top ten foundations in the US. In 2019, their national and international grantmaking efforts consisted of 498 grants totaling more than $240M.

For more information on Margaret A. Cargill Philanthropies, please visit macphilanthropies.org.

Position Overview

The Opportunity

MACP is seeking an experienced Program Officer for the Environment Domain who brings deep expertise in global field conservation work, grantmaking, and personal alignment with MACP’s commitment to community-based capacity building and long-term partnerships with grantees. This is a unique opportunity to play a key role with a significant funder in the environment and conservation space and a team of caring, engaged and thoughtful colleagues based in Eden Prairie, MN.

The Program Officer is responsible for the development, implementation and management of one or more Ecosystem Programs of the MACP Environment Domain; likely to include the Tropical Forests Ecosystem Program. This position reports to the Environment Program Director and works in collaboration with the Managing Program Director, other Program Officers, and Program Associates. The Program Officer will work with Environment Domain team members and other Foundation staff in supporting and managing an effective grantmaking program to support the strategic content and desired impact for Environment Domain.

Under its existing and well-honed strategy, the Environment Domain at MACP supports grantees in a set of defined focal geographies to deliver effective, sustainable community-based conservation solutions to address the problem of degradation of the Earth’s freshwater, marine, and terrestrial ecosystems.

More detail about the role and candidate profile can be found below. MACP recognizes that this search is unfolding during a very challenging time, when people around the world are navigating the impacts of the COVID-19 outbreak and social injustice issues. MACP’s mission of providing meaningful assistance and support to society, the arts, and the environment is more important than ever, and they need exceptionally talented leaders to help continue to advance this mission, especially in this critical moment. If you are such a leader, please review this job description and consider joining the MACP team.

Candidate Profile

The ideal candidate is a seasoned professional with eight years or more of experience in ecosystem conservation.  A solid understanding of community-based natural resource management is essential, as is a track record of successful collaboration with a wide range of key stakeholder groups in this field.  International experience and demonstrated ability to work effectively in a wide range of cultural settings is critical.

Five or more years’ experience in grantmaking, preferably in the conservation arena, and a demonstrated track record of effective relationships with grantees and fellow funders will be vitally important.  An undergraduate degree is required with a graduate degree in a related field preferred or significant related experience working in the conservation sector.

Candidates should have an active curiosity and passion for MACP’s program interests and values, including making a difference in communities, forming deep partnerships with grantees, providing support to low-attention needs, and working with humility. Successful candidates will be collaborative, positive, and able to deal well with ambiguity and change. They will be adept at building collegial relationships and able to respond to issues with clarity and diplomacy. They will inspire and foster trust and confidence in staff, management, and their colleagues. And they will be aligned with MACP’s grantmaking philosophy, which is grounded in the Foundation’s values and history.

 

About the Twin Cities and MACP’s Office

MACP’s office in Eden Prairie, Minnesota, known as The Preserve, strongly reflects the organization’s culture and identity. Expanded in 2016, The Preserve is testament to MACP’s environmental values and commitment. The building is LEED Platinum certified by the U.S. Green Building Council and is a space that promotes collaboration and a connection to nature while reflecting MACP’s values.

Eden Prairie is part of the Twin Cities metro area, including Minneapolis and St. Paul, which have over 3 million residents and together make up the 14th largest metropolitan area in the country. A unique blend of small town and major cosmopolitan hub, both urban cores boast a thriving business atmosphere. Saint Paul, as the state capital, is home to state government and has a more historical vibe. Minneapolis is the larger and more commercial of the two cities. Both cities share a common root of being river towns – and the great outdoors are still a major attraction for residents and visitors alike, with over 100,000 acres of parks, walking and bike paths, and other outdoor spaces.

The Twin Cities offer something for everyone, from national sports teams to a robust theater and arts scene, to a thriving “foodie” culture. The area also has a diverse range of neighborhoods and homes, with an atmosphere of a small town feeling with the conveniences and cultural hallmarks of a big city.

MACP recognizes that the COVID-19 outbreak has made relocating a challenging option and may require a longer transition period than usual. But for candidates seeking a welcoming, highly livable community with a strong focus on access to arts, culture, and the outdoors, the Twin Cities offers all of this and more.

Compensation & Benefits

MACP is invested in the health and well-being of their staff and offers a comprehensive and valuable benefits package, including but not limited to:

·       Relocation support available

·       Strong medical, dental, and vision benefits for individuals and their eligible dependents

·       Retirement programs, including 401(k) matching and access to employer-paid financial planning resources

·       A broad range of insurance programs, including employer-paid life, short and long-term disability, and business travel accident insurance

·       Access to legal insurance plan and identity theft protection program

·       A generous matching gift program

·       Paid holidays and personal time off

·       An employee assistance plan

·       Healthcare and dependent care flexible spending accounts

·       An onsite fitness room

·       Domestic and international travel resources

·       Paid parental leave

·       Tuition reimbursement

Salary is competitive and commensurate with experience.

How To Apply

Contact

Koya Leadership Partners, the executive search firm that specializes in mission-driven search, has been exclusively retained for this engagement. Molly Brennan and Meghan Franklin are leading this search. To make recommendations or to express your interest in this role, please visit this link here. All nominations, inquiries, and discussions will be considered strictly confidential.

Margaret A. Cargill Philanthropies is an equal opportunity employer and encourages candidates of all identities, experiences, orientations, and communities to apply.

About Koya Partners

Koya Partners, a part firm dedicated to connecting exceptionally talented people with mission-driven clients. Our founding philosophy—The Right Person in the Right Place Can Change the World—guides our work as we partner with nonprofits & NGOs, institutions of higher education, responsible businesses, and social enterprises in local communities and around the world.

At Koya, we don’t just accept difference—we celebrate it, support it, and thrive on it for the benefit of our team, our clients, and the communities we serve.

Koya is an equal opportunity employer fully committed to creating an environment and team that represents a variety of backgrounds, perspectives, styles, and experiences. We encourage all to apply because we believe a diversity of voices leads to better discussions, decisions, and outcomes for everyone. Koya does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, national origin, religion, sex, disability, age, sexual orientation, military status, veteran status, genetic information, gender identity, or any other characteristic protected by applicable federal, state, or local law.

For more information about Koya Partners, visit www.koyapartners.com

Brooklyn, NY

Donor Services Manager, Brooklyn Community Foundatoin

The Organization

About the Foundation

Brooklyn Community Foundation is the first and only public foundation solely dedicated to New York City’s largest borough. We are on a mission to spark lasting social change, mobilizing people, capital, and expertise for a fair and just Brooklyn. Since our founding in 2009, Brooklyn Community Foundation has provided over $60 million in grants to more than 300 nonprofits through our Community Fund and Donor Advised Fund program. The Foundation is committed to racial justice and to challenging systemic racism through all aspects of our grant-making, advocacy, operations, and governance. Visit www.BrooklynCommunityFoundation.org for more information.

Position Overview

The Donor Services Manager (DSM) is a key member of the Foundation’s team focused on providing our donor advisors with the highest level of service in support of their charitable giving. The DSM works closely with the Director of Donor Engagement, the Chief Operating Officer (COO) and the President & CEO in all aspects of managing and growing the Foundation’s fund assets and stewarding existing and new donors. The DSM leads the way in terms of addressing donors’ needs, while connecting them to the community and each other in ways that will enrich their experience of giving through the Foundation. In coordination with the Donor Services Assistant and a third-party vendor, the DSM oversees incoming fund contributions, maintains and updates the Foundation’s online donor portal, and facilitates and monitors all donor services activity.

This role has recently been expanded to offer the right individual a chance to bring their creative imprint to support real growth and long-term sustainability for a premier Brooklyn institution.  This requires a marketing and customer service approach that both draws new donor advisors to the Foundation and offers unique and valuable stewardship to current fund holders by connecting them to our strategic grant-making and community programming.

This is a full-time, exempt position based in Brooklyn. It supervises the Donors Services Assistant and reports to the COO.

Responsibilities

The responsibilities of the Donor Services Manager include but are not limited to:

Marketing and Fund Development

·         Maintain broad knowledge of the nonprofit community, especially Foundation initiatives

·         Collaborate with Programs and Development teams to connect fund holders with the work of Foundation grantees and key constituents – including developing high-touch programs and events – to deepen their level of engagement and investment; keeping the Foundation’s focus on racial equity front and center

·         Work with the Communications and Development teams to cultivate new donors and manage the pipeline of prospects, including: developing materials and technology; creating opportunities for donor recognition; drafting articles and stories

·         Work closely with some of the Foundation’s largest donors and Board members to develop creative ideas for new donor cultivation; expand and strengthen outreach to and relationships with new networks of professional wealth advisors, including making presentations to professional/affinity groups and their related conferences

Donor Advised Fund (DAF) Operations

·         Communications: Serve as primary point of contact and relationship manager on all donor needs and inquiries related to the Foundation’s DAFs, with the goal of enhancing their satisfaction with the Foundation and the effectiveness of their charitable giving

·         Reporting: Oversee processing of and tracking of financial transactions within the DAF program, utilizing the Foundation’s Salesforce database and fund management platform, including: monthly reconciliations with Bookkeeper and Accountant; revenue reports for Board meetings; coordination with Finance team and Donor Services Assistant to ensure timely and accurate acknowledgement of gifts; maintain guardianship of donor intent

·         Governance: Work with COO and Donor Services Assistant to prepare fund agreements and establish new funds, ensuring legal and regulatory compliance throughout the process; participate in special fund review projects (e.g., inactive funds, support fee changes), create and document policies and procedures that relate to DAFs

Organizational Leadership

·         Supervise Donor Services Assistant (part-time position) with a supportive approach that encourages professional growth and accountability

·         Participate actively in BCF’s cross-departmental racial equity working groups

·         Attend team and all-staff meetings

Abilities and Competencies

·         High level of personal and professional integrity; discretion in working with confidential information

·         Ability to work both independently and as a part of a collaborative team; to take both initiative and direction

·         Keen attention to detail and organizational skills

·         Familiarity with nonprofits, including grant-making organizations, charitable giving funds, and/or fiscal sponsorships

·         Excellent written and oral communication skills with a broad range of constituents

Qualifications

·         6-8 years of relevant development experience, major gifts experience a plus, and including staff supervision

·         Experience communicating with high-level donors about their giving decisions and impact

·         Proficiency in Salesforce and/or CRM tools with external facing audiences

·         Passionate about creating opportunities for Brooklyn’s residents; knowledge of Brooklyn nonprofits a plus

·         Commitment to the Foundation’s racial equity focus and core values

Additional Information

Due to the coronavirus pandemic, the Manager of Donor Services will be a remote position through at least June 2021, and interviews will be conducted via Zoom. The Foundation plans to resume in-person operations when it is safe to do so, and the position will then be based in the Foundation’s office in Crown Heights, Brooklyn. BCF will provide at least one month of advance notice before the return to in-office operations.

The Foundation offers an excellent benefits package, which includes generous paid time off, employer-paid health, vision, dental and life insurance, and a vibrant, dedicated, and flexible work environment.

Salary range: $70,000-$90,000 annually

How To Apply

Email a cover letter and résumé to search@brooklyncommunityfoundation.org (no reference letters or phone calls please!) listing Donor Services Manager in the subject line.

Brooklyn Community Foundation is an Equal Opportunity Employer. In alignment with its Racial Justice Lens, the Foundation is committed to maintaining a staff that diversifies philanthropy, including lifting up the leadership of people from communities historically underrepresented in the field and those directly affected by structural racism, centering them in decision-making. Additionally, the Foundation does not base any hiring decisions on an applicant’s history of involvement in the criminal justice system.

Baltimore, MD

President and Chief Executive Officer, Maryland Philanthropy Network

The Organization

The Opportunity

Maryland Philanthropy Network (MPN) is conducting a search for its President and Chief Executive Officer (CEO). Founded in 1983 by Baltimore area grant makers to provide a forum for philanthropic peers to come together to learn and collaborate, MPN has grown steadily to become a resource for philanthropy across the state.

Today, MPN represents about 130 member organizations and serves as a neutral convener, supporter of collective action, and reservoir of institutional knowledge about our cities, communities, and philanthropy. MPN is dedicated to maximizing the impact of giving on community life through a growing network of diverse, informed, and effective philanthropists. The organization is committed to deepening the community’s understanding of racism and the actions we can take individually and collectively to recognize and disrupt bias, challenge our own norms and practices, and support other organizations in doing the same. MPN’s annual revenue is approximately $1.5M, and it has a team of 11 staff and consultants.

MPN’s Board of Directors is searching for a motivated, seasoned executive leader who is passionate about strategic philanthropy and its potential to make a positive difference in the region. The new CEO will lead the continued evolution of this respected membership organization and will ensure MPN is regarded as a leading voice in advancing racial equity.

MPN: An Overview

MPN is a statewide membership association representing more than 130 organizations that together steward more than $9 billion in charitable assets. Its mission is to maximize the impact of giving on community life through a growing network of diverse, informed, and effective philanthropists.

About MPN’s Members  

MPN welcomes philanthropic organizations that believe their individual giving can be leveraged for greater impact through learning, alignment, and collaborative action with other funders and partners across sectors and communities. Grantmaking must be a significant part of a prospective member’s activities, with grants awarded making up at least 50% of the organization’s total annual expenditures. This and other membership requirements are outlined in greater detail on MPN’s site.

About MPN’s Work

MPN provides services and consulting to meet the needs of its members. These offerings include:

  • Designing programming and series to meet the needs of trustees, executives, and professional philanthropic staff members at every level of engagement and career stage
  • Hosting issue-based funder affinity groups  (e.g., arts, education)
  • Extending the capacity of members with staff who curate information and cultivate opportunities
  • Supporting innovation within MPN’s membership, as well as through cross-sector partnerships
  • Supporting dialogue, workshops, and events that raise awareness of systemic, structural, and institutional racism, with the goal of inspiring action that will create a more equitable sector and city
  • Providing a responsive infrastructure that connects funders to address emerging issues, policy shifts, and current events impacting our communities
  • Representing and connecting the philanthropic sector to key audiences
  • Leading advocacy in member issue areas to inform policymakers across the state
  • Providing targeted programs and workshops that strengthen the connection between philanthropy, nonprofits, the public sector, and social sector innovators
  • Providing consulting expertise and services to meet the technical needs of members
  • Providing fiscal hosting services and support that strengthens the nonprofit ecosystem

Structure of MPN

MPN is led by a 20-member Board that sets the organization’s direction and provides guidance to the CEO. MPN members elect Board members from within the organization’s membership. The Board’s work is supported by several standing committees, as described on MPN’s site.

Position Overview

The CEO Role

The new CEO will work closely with the Board of Directors and lead a highly skilled team to balance the organization’s long-term strategy and day-to-day operations. This is an opportunity for an exceptional, collaborative leader with vision to build upon a strong organizational foundation and reputation. This unique moment in our country’s history will offer new challenges and opportunities to lead advocacy, innovation, and collaboration.

Critical Competencies for Success

Board Partnership and Strategic Direction

  • Collaborate with the Board, staff, and members to evolve the organization’s vision and refresh its strategic plan; ensure that future objectives reinforce MPN’s commitment to racial equity as an organizational operating principle
  • Define, communicate, and lead the execution of major initiatives; coordinate member and staff support of those initiatives
  • Foster an innovative culture within the organization; seek new methods and approaches for achieving MPN’s goals
  • Serve as principal liaison between MPN staff and the Board; provide transparent and forthright updates to the Board on successes and areas needing support
  • Provides guidance to the Board and committee leadership on governance and policies 

Advocacy and Representation

  • Serve as an ambassador for MPN, ensuring engagement with a wide stakeholder group, including funders, media, policy makers, the public, and other philanthropy-serving organizations
  • Strengthen ties with other organizations consistent with MPN’s mission; help MPN take a leadership role in the broader collaborations and partnerships in which it participates
  • Develop and carry out an advocacy agenda related to the philanthropic sector that incorporates the needs and interests of members
  • Inspire members to support MPN’s advocacy efforts

Member Network Leadership

  • Continue the key work of maintaining and building meaningful and authentic relationships with the MPN membership; increase and strengthen member engagement
  • Align members around key issues for advocacy, shared learning, and collaborative action
  • Apply expertise in the fields of philanthropy, nonprofit organizations, and public policy to benefit MPN members through responsive programming, strategy, and leadership
  • Collaborate with Board and staff members to identify opportunities for statewide membership growth

Financial Stewardship

  • Sustain a staff-inclusive and -informed annual budgeting process
  • Manage the organization to meet budget requirements
  • Ensure ongoing revenue through member dues and donations sustained through positive and ongoing partnerships with members and funders
  • Develop and manage other long-term sustainable revenue streams and business models (e.g., grants, capital campaigns, investment revenue, other measures)
  • Assist the Board in developing and maintaining appropriate reserves and reserve policies, as well as investments and investment policies
  • Negotiate and execute appropriate and reasonable contracts on behalf of MPN
  • Secure an annual audit performed by qualified auditors for presentation to the Board
  • Oversee the growing fiscal hosting portfolio

Staff Development and Management

  • Retain and grow a talented and inclusive team that embraces a culture of collaboration, learning, and shared leadership
  • Serve as the individual solely responsible for the hiring, supervision, termination, promotion, and compensation of MPN’s employees, within budgetary constraints determined by the Board
  • Support professional development and mentoring, leadership opportunity at all levels, and equity among team members
  • Establish administrative and personnel policies, as well as the organizational structure for staff

Candidate Profile

MPN is fortunate to be staffed by a highly competent, collaborative, and supportive team. Staff members are committed to individual and team equity, as well as leadership development. Ideal candidates for this position will reflect MPN’s core values, embrace its team culture, and demonstrate an ability to quickly integrate into the community in order to be an engaged, inspiring, collaborative and ethical leader. MPN is seeking candidates with a variety of experiences and attributes, with emphasis on the following:

Professional Qualifications

  • At least 5 years of senior leadership experience in nonprofit fiscal management, budgeting, and operations
  • Experience working with a Board of Directors and developing effective governance
  • Ability to think strategically and critically, interpret data, synthesize complex issues and information, proactively identify new opportunities, and manage change
  • An understanding of philanthropy as a vocation and a demonstrated personal commitment to philanthropy and social justice
  • A connection to the nonprofit and public sectors that extends beyond philanthropy
  • Experience working in and making connections on behalf of a statewide organization; experience in Baltimore or a similar urban environment highly desired

Personal Qualities

  • Ability to be visionary about philanthropy and Baltimore / Maryland and mobilize the Board and staff around that vision
  • Commitment to and value of racial equity as an organizational operating principle
  • Exceptional interpersonal and communication skills; the ability to listen, convene, facilitate, and connect in a way that attracts participation even among competing interests
  • An inspiring and inclusive leader with a successful track record of creating collaborative work environments and modeling work/life balance
  • Ability to work as a team member, demonstrating a positive mindset, sense of humor, patience, confidence, and humility
  • Curiosity about learning and leading members in conversations that can challenge and shape the sector

Compensation

MPN offers a comprehensive benefits program, paid time off  and a competitive compensation package.

To Apply

To apply, please send a cover letter and current résumé (Microsoft Word® format preferred) to mpn@smartinsearch.com. The cover letter should outline how your experience fits the requirements of the position as this will be an important factor in considering your candidacy.

MPN is an equal opportunity employer fully committed to creating an environment and team that represents a variety of backgrounds, perspectives, styles, and experiences. MPN does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, national origin, religion, sex, disability, age, sexual orientation, military status, veteran status, genetic information, gender identity, or any other characteristic protected by applicable federal, state, or local law.

Additional Information 

For more information, contact:

Sterling Martin Associates
1025 Connecticut Avenue | Suite 1000
Washington, DC 20036

David S. Martin | Managing Partner
mpn@smartinsearch.com
(202) 257-1627

Stacy Saltzer | Senior Executive Recruiter
mpn@smartinsearch.com
(330) 666-5059

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