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Nonprofits Are Messy: Lessons in Leadership | Fundraising | Board Development | Communications
Eric Nee, Editor in Chief of SSIR, joins me to talk about what's going on in our world and how it impacts social change and the work nonprofit leaders do every single day. The post Ep 158: 3 Big Trends That Are Altering the Nonprofit Sector (with Eric Nee) appeared first on Joan Garry Nonprofit Leadership.
Nonprofits Are Messy: Lessons in Leadership | Fundraising | Board Development | Communications
Eric Nee, Editor in Chief of SSIR, joins me to talk about what's going on in our world and how it impacts social change and the work nonprofit leaders do every single day.
Nonprofits Are Messy: Lessons in Leadership | Fundraising | Board Development | Communications
Eric Nee, Editor in Chief of SSIR, joins me to talk about what's going on in our world and how it impacts social change and the work nonprofit leaders do every single day.
Eric Nee is editor-in-chief of Stanford Social Innovation Review, a position he has held since 2006. SSIR produces a quarterly magazine, website, webinars, podcasts, and conferences, all serving leaders of organizations engaged in social change. SSIR has partners around the world who publish local-language editions of SSIR in Chinese, Korean, Japanese, Arabic, Spanish, and Portuguese. Eric has more than 40 years of experience in the publishing industry. Before joining Stanford University, he was a senior writer for Fortune. While there, he helped Time Inc. launch eCompany Now (where he was executive editor), which later became Business 2.0. Before joining Fortune, Eric launched Forbes's Silicon Valley bureau, where he was bureau manager. He also served as editor-in-chief of Upside and held positions at a variety of other technology publications. Eric is the author of the book “Information for Everyone: The Applied Materials Story.” He earned a BA in American Studies from the University of California at Santa Cruz, and a MSJ from the Medill School of Journalism at Northwestern University. He lives in Palo Alto, Calif., with his wife Tekla, a senior editor at IEEE Spectrum magazine. The Caring Economy made it onto FeedSpots Top 30 CSR Podcasts Don't forget to check out my book that inspired this podcast series, The Caring Economy: How to Win With Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR). --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/toby-usnik/support
Athletics and Activities Director, Eric Nee, talks about sports during the pandemic, the Bank of Sun Prairie Stadium at Ashley Field, and changes ahead when Sun Prairie West opens.
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In this super-sized double episode of What are We Building?, Andy talks about the various projects going on in Sun Prairie despite the COVID-19 pandemic and gives his 2 cents on the proposed apartment building at the corner of Bird & Main. There's also a chat with Liam Clark and his mom Penny about Dog Parks, and an interview with Sun Prairie Athletic & Activities Director Eric Nee on the progress at Ashley Field.
Listen to Athletic Director Eric Nee and Findorff Project Manager Justin Plautz talk about the progress of the construction at Ashley Field. The new multipurpose facility is slated to open in August 2020.
In the first episode of Civil Renewal, Dan Cardinali speaks with Eric Nee, managing editor of the Stanford Social Innovation Review (SSIR) about the recent launch of Civil Society for the 21st Century, a thought leadership series Independent Sector and SSIR. Dan and Eric specifically talk about the adaptive challenges we all need to meet for a healthy and strong civil society. About the Podcast: Civil Renewal is an Independent Sector podcast about the role, meaning, and future of civil society.
Sun Prairie Athletic Director Eric Nee joins Prep Mania to discuss the Cardinals' year-long run of state tournament success, including winning the state softball championship.
Eric Nee is managing editor of Stanford Social Innovation Review (SSIR), which has been serving global leaders of social change for almost 15 years- via its quarterly magazine, online articles, podcasts, videos, webinars, and conferences. Eric has some 30 years experience in the publishing industry; before joining Fortune, Eric launched Forbes’s Silicon Valley bureau, where...
Organizations around the world spend billions of dollars each year trying to lift people out of poverty. Despite the best of intentions, many of these efforts fail, and many others achieve less than optimal results. But some organizations have successfully designed, funded, implemented, and scaled impressive anti-poverty interventions. In this panel, SSIR’s Eric Nee talks to leading experts from three. Asif Saleh, senior director of strategy, communications, and empowerment at BRAC, talks about what the world’s largest NGO has learned about scaling up programs. Yale economist Dean Karlan outlines lessons that Innovations for Poverty Action, the nonprofit research and policy organization he founded, has drawn from more than a decade of evaluating poverty programs around the world. And Kevin Starr talks about the evidence-based approach that the Mulago Foundation, where he is managing director, uses to find and fund poverty-fighting organizations. https://ssir.org/podcasts/entry/what_have_we_learned_about_fighting_poverty
When huge disasters like Hurricane Katrina strike, who better to help out than the companies that provide many of the goods and services that relief agencies depend on? In this audio interview, Eric Nee, co-host of Social Innovation Conversations, converses with Tom Lehner, manager of the Partnership for Disaster Response, on how business has been providing an organized response to some of the most disruptive natural catastrophes occurring around the world over the past four years. https://ssir.org/podcasts/entry/thomas_lehner_-_putting_business_to_work_in_disaster_relief
Aid organizations around the world are learning that they can solve their technology and infrastructure problems faster and cheaper together than on their own. Enabling that collaboration is NetHope, a nonprofit information technology consortium helping NGOs establish the technology "ecosystems" they need to serve constituencies in more than 150 countries. Eric Nee interviews Bill Brindley, CEO of NetHope, on how the consortium got started, how it works, and how it is expanding its mission. https://ssir.org/podcasts/entry/william_brindley_-_collaborating_to_wire_ngos
In Chile, the farming of salmon seemed the ideal solution to the depletion of world fish populations—until it became clear that acquiculture causes its own environmental problems. In an audio interview by Eric Nee, managing editor of the Stanford Social Innovation Review, Rodrigo Pizarro explores the challenges of acquiculture and the foundation's project to reduce the impact of salmon farming through a sustainable system of seaweed cultivation. https://ssir.org/podcasts/entry/rodrigo_pizarro_-_making_salmon_farming_more_sustainable
Many nonprofits want to expand their staff and funding base so that they may serve a broader public. Until recently, little information was available about how such organizations may do so successfully. In an audio interview with Stanford Social Innovation Review managing editor Eric Nee, William Foster shares findings from the Bridgespan Group's groundbreaking research on what it takes to be in the big leagues. He discusses types of funders to pursue, how to restructure an expanding organization, and whether going big is right for everyone. https://ssir.org/podcasts/entry/william_foster_-_how_to_grow_a_nonprofit_big
One of the biggest challenges in nonprofit management is hiring and retaining talented executive leaders. In this conversation with Stanford Social Innovation Review managing editor Eric Nee, Thomas Tierney shares findings from the Bridgespan Group's study on the "leadership deficit." Tierney talks about how this crisis is affecting nonprofits, and what organizations can do to address the problem. https://ssir.org/podcasts/entry/tom_tierney_-_nonprofit_management_and_the_leadership_deficit