A NATIONAL CONVERSATION

Tanarra Social Purpose invited some of Australia’s community leaders, philanthropists and social change peers to share what they think makes a great charity, in 2024.

This campaign aims to strengthen and support charities in a challenging operating environment.

  • Charities represent the best of Australia. A great charity provides a way for people to come together to do good, transform aspirations into action and to give shape to our dreams. Great charities can be found in all parts of Australian society and beyond; whether their work is to strengthens our communities, protect our environment, seek justice or help support, educate, and nurture individuals. They work collaboratively with their funders – be they philanthropic individuals or organisations, corporates, government, the public or others. They are effective by being conscious of the latest developments in the not-for-profit sector such as Paying What it Takes, particularly in the aspect of not selling themselves short on what it really costs to deliver the project for which they are seeking funding. They have an awareness of how to understand their impact and share their learnings with others. They value their people, from their staff and volunteers to those whose lived experience is at the core of their work. A great charity is also willing to use its voice and be unapologetic about its mission, values and purpose.

    Adam Ognall, Philanthropy Australia

  • What makes a great charity?  The answer to this will vary from funder to funder, based on their respective strategies and priorities. For some it will be the organisation that proudly declares its low overheads. For others, it will be the organisation that recognises the importance of investment in organisational development, the better to deliver on its mission.

    The Myer Foundation and Sidney Myer Fund are in the latter camp. Our funding model, of making untied grants over multiple years, is premised on an intent to support organisations to achieve on their mission, rather than our objectives, recognising that effective organisations are better placed than are we to determine their expenditure priorities. To this end we look for organisations that know who they are, what they do, how they do it and why they do it. That is, they have a clear mission – what are they trying to achieve? They have a clear strategy, which articulates the change they are seeking, and the way they are going about achieving it. They have great leadership – at executive and board level – that is focussed on the mission and values the team that is tasked with achieving it.

    A great charity seeks to understand and communicate its impact and is open to changes in strategy or approach in order to achieve on its mission.

    A great charity can be large or small, established or start up, but those fundamentals of clarity of mission and strategy, leadership, learning and communication are crucial.

    Leonard Vary, EO Myer Foundation and Sidney Myer Fund.

  • At the Community Council for Australia, our work is about supporting good charities and encouraging them to become great.

    Good charities come in all shapes and sizes and work in all kinds of ways to make a difference, to be changemakers, to improve the lives of individuals, families, communities, our environment, our world. They do so partly by encompassing fundamental human values including hope and justice, and engaging with authenticity and respect.

    Good charities represent the best of us, creating the we rather than the me. They reflect our collective strength and diversity, an antidote to fear and greed-driven discrimination and dismissal.

    Great charities are charities that not only do good work, they share stories and create knowledge about what is possible, what can and has been achieved. They are acknowledged and valued for the difference they make.

    Great charities are more than a brand, a program or a well-run service. They meld funding and support; giving and volunteering; collaboration and leadership; work and capability, innovation and impact into a values-driven movement for change, a movement we can all belong to.

    Great charities are about both doing things smarter (the head), but also doing things better (the heart).

    We need to strengthen and promote the value of both good and great charities if we are to advance the kind of Australia, world and future we want.

  • For me, there are three things that make a great charity: being focused on people, being effectively run, and being engaged with the wider ecosystem.

    Charities exist to support people to live their best lives – so your first priority as a charity is to keep these people at the centre of the decisions you’re making. Running a charity can be complex, but the best charities keep it simple by listening to their communities and never losing sight of the reason they exist. 

    Great charities also have a solid understanding of how to effectively run the unique beast that is a charitable entity. Many of the settings and regulations are different to corporate organisations and truly great charities have a masterful grasp on these differences and the true costs of achieving impact. They’re also able to communicate these needs to policy makers and funders because even the best charities can’t become great without the right enabling environment from both a policy and macroeconomic perspective.

    And finally, great charities are the ones that are responsive to the ecosystems they operate in. So often the missions that charities set out to achieve, like ending homelessness or eradicating poverty, can only be achieved through collaboration. Charities that understand their own particular role in the wider ecosystem and work in partnership with others to solve the big problems we all care about are truly great in my view.

  • A truly great charity is one that is very clear on its mission, puts that mission at the centre of everything it does, and knows how it will demonstrate its progress against that mission.

    Executing its mission then requires the charity to have 3 attributes – namely, being collaborative, capable and sustainable.

    Collaboration requires partnerships with other organisations in its sector, as it is only by working in conjunction with others that truly effective and efficient outcomes can be achieved. Collaborators don’t fall into the trap of seeing their partners as competitors for funding, as they ultimately prioritise achieving their mission over themselves.

    Capable means the charity has passionate people who understand what it is trying to achieve but acknowledge the need to learn continually. The organisation appreciates that recruiting, retaining and developing outstanding talent is a critical investment in achieving its mission, and isn’t something it should feel embarrassed about just because it doesn’t exist for a commercial purpose.

    Sustainable means the organisation appreciates that achieving its mission requires a resilient and diversified funding base. It works hard to avoid becoming reliant on any particular type of funding and being forced to operate with a short-term scarcity mindset, but rather cultivates a range of financial supporters who can sustain the organisation for the longer term.

  • Supporting the self-determined endeavours of First Nations Peoples is an opportunity for learning and the sharing of power and influence. Trusting support is fundamental to creating a new future for both First Nations Peoples and our non-Indigenous community.

    Anything less than the genuine sharing of power and responsibility based on trust simply consolidates the chronically wretched state we have been in since 1788.

    2024 and beyond will be a new era for our country if we can learn from and share with First Nations Peoples in ways we have rarely done before. The key is a level of trust which takes non-Indigenous supporters well beyond the sort of apprehensions which can beset us as we respond to our impulses to help.

    The Annamila First Nations Foundation message is simple - learn by trusting First Nations Peoples with unguarded support.

  • “A great charity is led from the top and the bottom, driven by lived values and experience coupled with strategic nous and a carefully balanced level of commercial acumen. They have a clear and realistic ambition that reflects their focus, scale, and the relative complexity of the issues they seek to address. Great charities have a genuine understanding of their place and role in the sectors and systems they operate in. They know what they are great at, know their worth, and resist temptations to diversify outside their lane as funding cycles and trends come and go. They serve the greater good by harnessing and deploying their expertise and collaborating meaningfully. They get outcomes and tell great stories that bring others along, create a shared vision, and sense of progress. A great charity is well-resourced, makes a profit and can plan ahead for several years. Charities should never let their own survival be their focus – great charities ask themselves regularly whether they should be trying to do themselves out of business, if that’s what achieving the mission would result in.”

    Natalie Egleton, FRRR

  • At EQT we have a vision of a future where effective philanthropy supports a prosperous, equitable and sustainable world for all. We achieve this by collaborating with and listening to those around us – be it fund seekers or grant makers. We work closely with the for-purpose sector; we understand they’re the experts and we are led by them as to where and how our funding is needed.

    We support organisations who understand the unique space they occupy and are clear about what they do well and why, and just as clear about what they don’t do. 

    We value collaboration and ‘systems thinkers’ - those who understand the interconnected dynamics, emphasise addressing root causes and encourage strategic interventions. 

    We aim to fund better futures, not just immediate needs, so we grant to organisations that are working in new ways with longer term outcomes and visions. 

    We back leaders who are deeply connected to the people and causes they are working to improve, as we believe that the solutions are there, it’s about amplifying them.

    We know there isn’t a one size fits all approach for what makes a good charity.  That’s why we see our grantees as partners, where learning together guides all that we do.

    Jodi Kennedy, General Manager, Philanthropy and Community Trustee Services, Equity Trustees

  • Through MECCA M-POWER, we want to create a movement for gender equality, by supporting a group of brilliant social change makers working at the front lines of inequality, and by engaging our MECCA community of more than 7,000 team members and 4 million customers. Just as we aspire to nurture and build each of the more than 200 beauty brands within our portfolio, we seek not just to fund but to partner and collaborate with the organisations within our M-POWERed Collective.

    We want to work with founders and CEOs with a bold vision and a differentiated strategy. As a business that is customer obsessed, we value organisations that centre lived experience and are relentless about impact. And because we want to build a movement for gender equality, we want to work with organisations that can craft a narrative and tell the stories of their work in a way that captures the hearts and minds of our MECCA community.

    Finally, because we know that building a brand takes time, we look for evidence of robust governance and a clear focus on maximising resources – money, time, people – in pursuit of an organisation’s goals.

  • A good charity is one that has a laser like focus on furthering its charitable purposes. It exists to benefit the community, rather than to advance its own interests - often these aims will be aligned, but it’s important to have an awareness of when that may not be the case, and to act accordingly. This means that a good charity has a culture of ‘organisational reflectiveness’ - it can look at itself, think about what it does well, what it could do better, and it’s not afraid to acknowledge the need to do things differently. A good charity does not just call on others to change, be they governments or business or whoever, but also thinks about whether and how it can change itself. And when it does call on others to change, a good charity models behaviours that we sometimes lack in our modern society - it engages constructively, even if it needs to be direct, recognising that in a diverse society, good people and good organisations can have different views about how best to move forward collectively. And in doing so, the actions of a good charity provide the important scaffolding needed for building a more inclusive, pluralistic and thriving Australia.

  • Great charities are ones that are driven by purpose and have audacious and optimistic ambitions to make positive change.

    To make these ambitions a reality, great charities need leaders who can galvanise and engage, garnering support for their vision from their team and the broader community. Where a charity is led by a founder with lived experience, governance needs to guide them to become exceptional leaders, connecting them with business-acumen support and coaching so they can advocate for their cause and succeed.

    Great charities have clear alignment on vision, with the cause and the people at the heart of the organisation. They are supported by monitoring and evaluation frameworks that measure their success. As a team, they find time to regularly come together to reflect, learn, and innovate. In this way, they are able to deliver results, demonstrating impact and progress towards solving our society's challenges, making the world a better place for all of us.

    Whilst funding for charities continues to be a challenge, finding employees who have creativity and resourcefulness as core attributes will be necessary for charities to be great and achieve their purpose. Our hope is for charities of the future to be beyond great because they are adequately resourced and equipped to solve the problems our world continues to face.

    Laurence Marshbaum and the 10x 10 team

  • Great charities come in all forms, shapes and sizes. A strong vision and the unwavering passion of its leaders are important, as is the ability to ignite hope and possibility. It is this vision that becomes the guiding light, navigating through challenges and inspiring collective action. As the CEO of Sydney Community Foundation, I've come to understand that a clear, compelling vision serves as the cornerstone, rallying supporters and stakeholders towards a common purpose.

    It is also vital for charities to listen to the communities they serve. As a place-based organisation, we have fostered deep connections with the grassroots organisations in our local neighbourhoods over the past 20 years. Partners, donors and grantees value being part of a broad, generous, connected community and actively work to advance community-driven solutions.

    Leaders also need the passion and tenacity to see their vision through. Passion fuels perseverance in the face of adversity, propelling the organisation forward even when the path seems daunting. It is the driving force that compels us to push boundaries, innovate and advocate tirelessly for change.

    A good charity, therefore, is not merely defined by its mission statement or programs but by the depth of conviction embedded within its leadership. It is the fusion of vision and passion that transforms noble aspirations into tangible impact, touching lives and fostering meaningful change.

    In the realm of local community philanthropy, where the needs are varied and vast, it is the duty of leaders to cultivate a strong long-term vision, to invite the community in, and to have the passion to propel communities into action to create change. Together, guided by a shared vision and fuelled by unwavering passion, we have the power to create a brighter, more equitable future for all.

  • The origin of the word Charity goes to a Christian concept of benevolence, of giving without expecting anything in return, of extending love and kindness to others, unconditionally.

    It is at the essence of what a great charity should be. However, it would be unrealistic to think that there are absolutely no strings attached to the giving: we expect our grants to be employed to their best use, and our donations to make an impact.

    So, we do face a conundrum, while we need data and KPIs to measure the impact of each donated dollar, we don’t want to tie up the recipients with extra layers of bureaucracy. At John and Myriam Wylie Foundation, we try and select recipients with a clear culture of mission, outcomes, cost-effectiveness, and transparency. We trust that these organisations are best placed to decide how funds are spent in the areas of real need, whilst we also try and partner actively with them, rather than being simply passive donors.

    The key word is trust.

    Myriam Boisbouvier-Wylie, John and Myriam Wylie Foundation

  • For me, it’s about the charity leader and the quality of the staff employed by the organisation. I look for an effective CEO acting with integrity and demonstrating a clear vision for their organisation while being supported by a great board and strategic plan.

    Honesty with donors is very important. I like to hear about the successes but also when things aren’t going so well. What has gone wrong, how is the organisation going to respond and what has been learnt from the experience?

    Love organisations who take the step to create and build their own foundation to provide a regular income stream to assist in their future sustainability.

    Jargon free and acronym light communications please, particularly in relation to proposals and reporting!

    Mitty Williams, EO The Kimberley Foundation

  • Facta non verba – acts not words – it is through adhering to this ethos that we think a great charity is made.

    Great charities have that something extra. Big or small, they are established by inspiring founders and helmed by leaders with drive, passion, and purpose who are on the ground, imbedded into the community, delivering real outcomes to vulnerable people experiencing disadvantage.

    With empathy and compassion, a great charity listens to the voices of those it serves, understanding their needs, preferences, and aspirations. This empathy informs the design and delivery of programs that truly make a difference in people's lives.

    Whether through capacity-building initiatives, advocacy efforts, or long-term investments, great charities seek to create lasting change that empowers individuals and communities to thrive independently. An eye to sustainability ensures that great charities have an impact that endures beyond the immediate interventions.

    Ultimately, a great charity is more than the sum of its parts – it is a shining light on the hill that drives positive change and inspires other to join in the pursuit of a better world.

    Cooper Investors Philanthropy

  • A great charity begins with a visionary charter, one that not only aims to address the immediate needs of its beneficiaries but also elevates them to achieve extraordinary feats. At its core, the mission of such a charity is driven by kind and compassionate outcomes, ensuring that every action taken translates into a positive impact on the lives it touches. This is made possible by a dedicated team that excels not just in their individual expertise but in delivering methodologies that are innovative, effective, and, above all, empathetic. The recipient experience at this charity is nothing short of welcoming and generous, creating an environment where everyone feels valued and supported.

    Unique solutions to everyday problems are the hallmark of a great charity, making it stand out in its approach to tackling challenges. These solutions are not just innovative, they are practical; addressing real-world problems faced by those it seeks to help in a resourceful manner that amplifies its impact. This makes a great charity not just a helper but a beacon of hope for many.

    Engagement with its four key groups—Donors, Sponsors, Volunteers, and Friends—is crucial to the charity's success. For donors, it's about communication; telling the stories of great work being done and the lives changed. Philanthropic sponsors are shown the tangible impact and outcomes of their support, ensuring they see the value and importance of their contributions. The charity also excels in attracting and retaining outstanding volunteers through engaging programs and initiatives, recognising their invaluable contribution to the mission. And in the digital age, befriending new friends on social media is an art that this charity has mastered, expanding its reach and influence.

    Fundraising efforts are approached with sincerity and transparency, creating a trustworthy relationship with donors and sponsors alike. This, coupled with a strong social media presence, ensures a broad and engaged audience.

    Above all, a great charity delivers on its promises, showing purpose and endeavour in every action. It's about making a real difference, being a source of hope, and transforming lives through compassion, innovation, and unwavering commitment to its mission. This is what makes a charity not just great, but truly extraordinary.

Views from the sector

30+ organisations share what they believe makes a great charity….

  • No two charities look alike and there’s no one formula for success and impact. But there are common themes.

    A noble and important cause, which is underserved.

    Inspiring people who can motivate others to donate or help, who roll their sleeves up, pitch in and lead by example.

    A clear idea of what success looks like, and how it can be tracked meaningfully.

    A commitment to running an organisation really well, and spending money wisely at all times.

    Open minds, warm hearts, and personal integrity.

    It’s also often useful to flip the argument and call out the “red flags”, the warning signs of impending danger or irrelevance.

    Politics or passengers around the board table.

    Loss of sense of purpose and entrepreneurial spirit, with a slow drift into “existence for the sake of existence”.

    A reliance on anecdotes and heart-string stories in fundraising in lieu of more substantive measures of success.

    The state of the world gives plenty of reasons to worry at the moment; some of the ugliest elements of human behaviour and global politics are on full display. Thankfully, amidst this gloom, the charity sector shines a bright and uplifting light. The fundamental decency, positivity and community spirit of those involved in the sector and the inspiring example of great and effective charities are a joy to behold. All of us thank those committing themselves to charity work.

  • The key elements of a great charity are purpose, people, and partnerships.

    A great charity is one that is focused every day on the people and communities for whom it exists. It is focused on its social purpose, ahead of its own survival.

    A great charity has great people. Effective and adaptive leaders are key to this. Fostering a culture where staff and volunteers are empowered, supported, aligned on purpose and values, and encouraged to keep learning, means better outcomes for the people it exists for. A great charity doesn’t go it alone. A great charity sees the big picture and understands where it fits in that picture. It works with others where this can produce better outcomes. It knows when to step up and lead and when to hold back and let others take the reins. It understands what it is good at and what it is not, and it plays to its strengths.

    A great charity knows that bigger is not always better.

    While impact should be big, the charity itself may not need to be. A great charity grows impact, rather than themselves.

    A great charity is ultimately about contributing to social change not providing “charity”. As one of Banksy’s famous images of a person on the street with a cup in front of them says “Keep your coins, I want change”.

    Kristy Muir, Paul Ramsay Foundation

  • I love cooking for family and friends, a passion I inherited from my mother. If I was baking a great charity it would start with the team. Charities are seeking to solve society’s most complex social and environmental challenges. They need passionate, committed and capable people able to see the possible in every situation, a mix of idealism and pragmatism in equal portions. Next, I would ensure a generous portion of rigorous impact measurement. Sure, spice things up with some engaging stories but there is no substitute for hard data to keep you accountable. You need to mix in a strong learning culture, using the lessons from both successes and failures to constantly improve the dish. Season with some high-quality governance, not afraid to take smart risks. Place all the ingredients into a dish that keeps everything very focused on mission and bake. Ensure your funding model reflects the recommended cooking time - real change doesn’t happen overnight. Serve with appropriate partners – very seldom can any one charity achieve the sought after change by itself.

    Paul Ronalds, CEO & founder, Save the Children Global Ventures

  • No matter its size, shape, structure, creed or focus, a good charity does three fundamental things well: It grasps a human need; it commands forces to fill that need; and it upholds integrity.

    Every day, charities face into a myriad of social, cultural, historical, regulatory, environmental, economic, relational, and political factors – some helpful, mostly challenging – that make the process of meeting human needs hard. A ‘good’ charity thinks strategically about the levers it can pull to navigate these challenges to affect positive change, keeps the needs of its intended beneficiaries at the heart of decision-making, and maintains focus on sustainable operations and balance sheets.

    A good charity also tells a good story. It knows the beginning, the middle and the end of the change it wants to create and brings people along on that journey, using smart tools to articulate progress and inspire others to join them in writing bigger, and better, endings.

    A good charity can be one person helping a small group, or a 1000 people addressing a global issue, but common features are empathic leadership, strategic nous, effective and inclusive tactics and an unwavering focus on the people, or places, at the centre of the need.

    Laura Cochrane, CEO of the Bennelong Foundation and Bennelong Foundation UK

  • A great charity can come in all different shapes and sizes.  It can be entirely volunteer based, or it can have a staff of hundreds.  What sets it apart is its ability to unite people and resources in service of a shared purpose that creates lasting positive impact.  

    A great charity has a clear and galvanizing purpose that explains why it exists and the impact it seeks to have on the world. It constantly evaluates and optimises every aspect of its business to achieve that purpose and is uncompromising in its pursuit.  A great charity embraces collaboration and engages stakeholders in an ongoing dialogue, ensuring that the voices of the people it serves are reflected in its decision making.  Its people demonstrate their values in action; they rally around their shared purpose and are empowered to contribute their ideas and experience.  A great charity measures its impact and uses data, stories and insights to inform, adapt and evolve its strategy.  It pursues continuous improvement, willing to embrace new ways of working and letting go of programs and practices that aren’t delivering results.  And, perhaps most importantly, a great charity consistently and effectively harnesses its resources to create lasting positive impact.

    Kristen Lark, CEO The Funding Network

  • Founders, who are passionate, committed and personally invested in a cause.

    Purpose, great charities have their purpose as their guiding light, it needs to 'have a difference which matters' (is it different from other charities?) it should be the heading on Board papers and on most communications,

    Narrative, having a compelling narrative is critical.

    Board members, with a range of skills, diversity and experience, but importantly who are also passionate about the cause. 

    Board skills, need to be thought through for each charity, but should include as a minimum: -, finance, 'subject matter' expertise, philanthropic/fundraising expertise, legal, and often understanding of Government (preferably, not members who just want a charity on their CV)

    Strategy, a detailed strategy/business plan

    Fundraising strategy - Mentors, surveys of founders globally identify the need for founders to have mentors that are involved to support the founders.

    Philanthropy/Fundraising depth, resources with numbers benchmarked against best practice charities.

    Governance, failures of Governance happen regularly and can destroy charities, donors and society expects Charities to have strong Governance structures.

    Board Terms, limits on Board terms are important, renewal, fresh thinking and critical thinking ensure a charity does not evolve with the times.

    Ian Carson AM, Chair, Arts Centre Melbourne

  • I believe that there are three areas that organisations need to get right to be truly ‘great’.

    1. Consider their people their number one asset, not their beneficiaries or their donors, though they are undeniably important. Without great people, who they invest and re-invest in – whether that’s professional development; recognition or enriching experiences – they won’t succeed for the long-term. This is more than intentions! These organisations are visibly demonstrating a people-centred approach and highly regarded by their employees, volunteers and peers.

    2. Focus on the wellbeing of their employees and volunteers, evidenced by workplace wellbeing practices that ensure their people are psychologically healthy and safe at work. They also appreciate and acknowledge the choice people make to stay in our sector and serve for social good.

    After all, it’s brave to choose to work in our sector. Many are paid significantly less than their corporate counterparts; have low job security and the work can be emotionally confronting. Great charities recognise these challenges and are proactive about how they mitigate and manage the wellbeing of those who work in their organisations. They have robust governance in place, with policies and practices that are reviewed regularly.

    3. Finally, great charities have clarity. They can clearly articulate the problem they seek to solve, how they solve it and demonstrate the outcomes they are achieving. They also listen to and are guided by the people they support and co-design programs that respond to the challenges those beneficiaries face or the opportunities they want to embrace.

  • A great charity is:

    Clear and resolute in its social purpose. In such organisations we see a deep, evidence-based (including ‘lived expertise’) understanding of the complexity of the issue the charity is aiming to address and alignment between the Board, executive, staff, volunteers and other stakeholders in their understanding of the organisation’s role.

    Curious and engaged with their broader ecosystem. Great charities understand the complexity of our most intrenched social and environmental challenges, and that no single organisation can solve them alone. They remain open to any emerging opportunities to enhance their impact and sustainability by working with others.

    Understands the relationship between its social purpose (its ‘why’) and the work that it does (the ‘how’). Informed by a deep understanding of their social purpose, great charities connect their purpose to their activities to deliver real and lasting community benefit.

    Always learning. Many great charities have innovative ways to monitor and reflect on their operations to support a culture of ongoing learning and improvement.

    Led by people at all levels. Great charities have people at all levels who understand their role in, are empowered to translate, the organisation’s social purpose into sustained social impact.

  • The Ian & Shirley Norman Foundation views a “good charity” as one that has a values-based laser focus on shifting the dial on business as usual, underpinned by a relational approach, good governance and a commitment to transparency.

    Clearly articulated values are the basis of a good culture, creating consistency in service delivery, decision making and alignment at all levels.

    A relational approach is characterised by mutual respect, listening with purpose and authentic connections. This extends to the recipients of the service, volunteers, staff, the Board, and funding partners.

    Shifting the dial requires a willingness to innovate, be brave and take risks.

    A good governance structure is a skills-based strategic Board who are supportive while seeking accountability, diligent in setting a policy framework, have a firm handle on finances, and are capable of setting a risk profile that allows room for innovation, agility and change if required.

    Transparency is about honesty – being honest about what it actually takes to run the charity, being honest about the costs (including back of house), measuring the impact of the work, owning the failures – and openly sharing this information for growth and shared learning.

  • My instinctive response to this question is – The same thing that makes a great company. At the core – both companies and charities are made up of people that come together under a structure to achieve an outcome. Companies are governed by ASIC, Charities by the ACNC – in essence one has shareholders and can distribute profit and the other can still make profit but must use it for the benefit of society.

    Great Charities, and Great Companies have:

    Absolute Clarity of Purpose: They know why they exist and who the serve,

    Great Governance: Made up of capable and respectable Board and Audacious Leadership: CEO who values advocacy, accountability (efficacy) and relationship building – They are well run.

    A clear, understandable and executable Strategic Plan to achieve its purpose,

    Resources to underpin and execute the plan: Having capacity and capability are 2 critical elements

    Insight: they deeply understand the ecosystem and their place and role within it.

    Collaborative intent: partnership orientation to achieve scale and depth. Don't have to do everything themselves.

    Great Storytellers: people that can sell Goosebumps to engage and maintain relationships to provide the required capital to achieve outcomes.

    Great cultures: a place that people want to be connected to.

    Sustainability or a clear pathway: People want to know the charity will be around until they have fulfilled their purpose.

    Great charities like great companies have great people doing great things for the benefit of others.

  • "There are many components to being a great charity. To name a few, a great charity is measuring its success in relation to its outcomes, not in relation to the cost of its overheads. A great charity has diversified revenue streams all aligned with its mission, to ensure financial sustainability for continued delivery of services. A great charity invests in recruiting and retaining talent, including through high quality professional development opportunities. A great charity has a clear theory of change and impact measurement framework to assess how well it is delivering on its mission.

    We don’t have the luxury of time to not empower charities to their full potential. As entrepreneur, philanthropist and star of the film UnCharitable Dan Pallotta says, "Our generation does not want our epitaph to read 'We kept charity overhead low'. We want it to read that we changed the world." A great charity dreams big to fix the problems it was created to solve."

  • The William Buckland Foundation has been funding Victorians in need since 1965. Our granting supports better housing, health, education and employment outcomes. We also fund initiatives that build resilience in rural and regional communities.

    Our funding supports for-purpose sector leaders who work tirelessly to address wicked problems and advocate for a better future for all Australians. We believe in listening to our grant partners and anchoring the relationships in trust.

    As a funder, we are seeing how charities are connecting and collaborating with others in their industry, in the for-purpose sector more broadly and across sectors engaging with innovators and policy makers. In an environment of growing complexity and finite resources, collaboration and connection are pre-requisites, and we are increasingly interested in funding co-ordination and system-wide work to address social and environmental challenges.

    As investors we are building our impact investment portfolio so that our corpus also contributes more towards positive social and environmental outcomes.

    As trustees we are committed to transparency, to learning from our grant partners and peers and to supporting the growing impact of the philanthropic sector through support for umbrella bodies and networks.

  • Thinking about what makes a great charity, I’m reminded of the proverb: “It takes a village to raise a child.” In this proverb, if the child represents the public good, then there are many great charities in the village.

    Great charities come in all shapes and sizes. Some are tiny grassroots groups run by inspirational volunteers, who skilfully support local people facing social isolation or rebuild community after a disaster. Others are great because they provide trusted social services that respond sensitively and holistically to the complex needs of people with experiences of trauma, illness or exclusion. For some, greatness comes from powerful advocacy underpinned by bold, creative strategy. Philanthropic charities can achieve greatness through impactful partnerships that deliver the resources, evidence base and networks needed to equip other charities to do great work.

    Whatever their dimensions, great charities are great change-makers. Whatever their purpose, whatever their scale – they see the world as it could be for the better, and work to make it a reality. And in doing so they contribute to a bigger picture – a great ‘village’ of charitable endeavour where all people and planet are valued, cared for and celebrated.

  • To me, the greatest sign of a thriving and successful charitable organisation is in its leadership. Not just leadership at the upper echelons, but leadership that cascades through the very veins of your organisation, at every level, not just around the Board and/or management tables.

    Whilst leadership at the CEO/Executive and Board level is ultimately responsible for defining the vision and purpose, and setting the strategic direction of your organisation, leadership needs to be evident – and implemented - at every level for a charity to realise its potential.

    Truly great charity leaders model and nurture great leadership. They seek and find strengths and greatness in others. They create a leadership culture where staff members, beneficiaries, and stakeholders understand their worth and the valuable contribution they make to realising a social impact legacy that is far greater than any one person, or group of individuals, could achieve alone.

    And collectively they make the world a better place.

    Great leaders have a presence about them that embraces and embodies the purpose of the organisation they lead. They inspire others to do more, be more, and say more in a safe environment that values their thoughts, ideas, and achievements.

    You may be one of the biggest names, the most financially successful; or longest standing charities in Australia, but how do your people feel and talk about working for - and with - your organisation?

    It is within those words and sentiments, rather than your size and stature, where the question of true greatness will be answered.

  • There are lots of factors that can make a charity great.

    Many great charities have a bold vision and a strong sense of how to get there, reflected in their strategy and activities. They can articulate their vision clearly and foster a sense of shared commitment to achieving it as a common goal.

    Great charities understand what makes them unique. They understand their remit and can tell their story to position themselves as best-placed to do what they do.

    Many great charities are led by a diverse range of people, seeking to shift power and amplify diverse voices.

    Great charities often have a learning culture and take the time to reflect. They evaluate their work to improve their approach and share these learnings with others.

    Great charities don’t need to tick every box.

    But the reality is they do need great funding. They need funders to trust them. They need funders who give unrestricted support. They need funders who give across many years and who are with them for the long haul. So let’s talk more about what makes a great funder.

    Acting CEO, Australian Communities Foundation

Free resources for charities

Free resources for charities

Campaign media

  • Charities should never let their own survival be their focus – great charities ask themselves regularly whether they should be trying to do themselves out of business, if that’s what achieving the mission would result in.”

    Natalie Egleton, FRRR

  • For me, it’s about the charity leader and the quality of the staff employed by the organisation. I look for an effective CEO acting with integrity and demonstrating a clear vision for their organisation while being supported by a great board and strategic plan.

    Mitty Williams, The Kimberley Foundation

  • For me, there’s three things that make a great charity: being focused on people, being effectively run, and being engaged with the wider ecosystem.

    Suzie Riddell, Social Ventures Australia

  • A great charity has grit, focus, and a collaborative mindset. Most importantly, it offers a very good solution to a problem where there is not a level playing field. Supporters trust that they're at the right table.

    Lisa Kingman, CEO Tanarra Social Purpose

  • A great charity can be large or small, established or start up, but those fundamentals of clarity of mission and strategy, leadership, learning and communication are crucial. Leonard Vary, EO Myer Foundation and Sidney Myer Fund.

    Leonard Vary, Myer Foundation and Sidney Myer Fund

  • The key elements of a great charity are purpose, people, and partnerships. A great charity doesn’t go it alone. A great charity sees the big picture and understands where it fits in that picture. It works with others where this can produce better outcomes.

    Kristy Muir, Paul Ramsay Foundation

  • A great charity can come in all different shapes and sizes.  It can be entirely volunteer based, or it can have a staff of hundreds.  What sets it apart is its ability to unite people and resources in service of a shared purpose that creates lasting positive impact.  

    Kristen Lark, The Funding Network

  • If I was baking a great charity it would start with the team. Charities are seeking to solve society’s most complex social and environmental challenges. They need passionate, committed and capable people able to see the possible in every situation, a mix of idealism and pragmatism in equal portions.

    Paul Ronalds, Save the Children Global Ventures

  • The state of the world gives plenty of reasons to worry at the moment; some of the ugliest elements of human behaviour and global politics are on full display. Thankfully, amidst this gloom, the charity sector shines a bright and uplifting light. The fundamental decency, positivity and community spirit of those involved in the sector and the inspiring example of great and effective charities are a joy to behold. All of us thank those committing themselves to charity work.

    John Wylie AC, Tanarra Social Purpose

CAMPAIGN COLLABORATORS

Contact us about this What makes a great charity Campaign

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Tanarra Social Purpose

Lvl 31, 35 Collins St, Melbourne 3000