South Yorkshire Funding Advice Bureau Information Sheets Last updated January 2004 All our information is produced in a standard sized typeface, but we can produce it in other formats on request South Yorkshire Funding Advice Bureau The Workstation 15 Paternoster Row Sheffield S1 2BX Tel: 0114 249 4343 email: enquiries@syfab.org.uk Website: www.syfab.org.uk Funding Advice Line 0114 276 5460 Registered Charity No: 1061118 Reg. Company No: 3030641 Financial planning for larger groups Funding for voluntary and community organisations has undergone major changes. Core funding is on the decline while project or service-specific funding has increased. Funders now rarely say ‘We like your organisation and your work - keep it up and we will continue to fund you.’ Instead they will look at the services you provide and decide which to support or buy. As well as this major change from ‘core’ to ‘project’ funding there are also a number of other requirements being made by funders, both in terms of how financial information is presented, and in terms of conditions of funding. These include things such as business plans, project costings, unit costs, value for money, added value, additionality, match funding, leverage and so on. What this all means is that organisations have to be more sophisticated and creative in drawing up budgets and funding proposals. It also means having to plan and present your finances in different ways in order to attract funding for specific pieces of work or projects while ensuring that the organisation’s running costs are covered. In this information sheet we’ll work through the above terms and explain what each means. What is a business plan? A business plan is a statement of what you are proposing to do over a period of two to three years, how much money you will need, when you will need it, and where it will come from. The core of your business plan will be a forecast of income and expenditure for that period of time. It can take quite a while to prepare - months rather than weeks. Once it’s drafted make sure that your whole committee or group approves it. Try to keep it as concise and short as possible and avoid jargon. The process of developing your business plan can be a positive experience for your organisation because it can: • Help you to focus on what you are actually doing. • Stimulate creative thinking by involving lots of people and seeking their opinions. • Help you to see any areas of weakness in your organisation. • Help you to see what is holding you back - whether is a shortage of people or time, or not enough funding. • Set a list of priorities for your group. • Help to develop action plans. • Help you to see opportunities that you were not aware of before. • Provide a way of monitoring and evaluating the progress of your group. • Help you to avoid crisis management. What does a business plan look like? There is no one model for the perfect business plan, but it could include the following: • A brief statement of your aims (often called a ‘mission’ statement). • A description of your organisation, its history, and its achievements. • A list of the services you offer now, and what makes them good and distinctive, and the services you are planning to offer. This should include a discussion of the ‘competition’. • An ‘operational’ plan detailing how things are done and what resources are and will be used, such as premises, equipment, your committee and staffing structures, recruitment and training procedures, how you comply with the law on issues such as health and safety and equal opportunities, your complaints procedure and purchasing policy. • Details of your finances, including a balance sheet and financial forecasts for two or three years. • An outline of how you will monitor the progress of the project. • A marketing plan. This is a key part of the whole document, setting out what your users want, whether they will pay you and, if so, how much. You need to consider the service you offer - who are your users and do they still want what you offer? You may find that you are offering your service in the way you do simply because that is the way you have always done it. Needs and ways of delivering services will change over time. You need to think about your services and how you deliver them. You need to work out what you should charge for your services or products. Charges should be based on how much it costs to provide that particular thing. Do not forget to include those ‘invisible’ costs like staff time in the calculation. Finally, you need to think about how to promote your services. You need to match your message to your market. Organisations in the voluntary sector are in far greater danger of under-selling themselves than of over-selling themselves. Project costing First of all, think about the work you want to do and convert it into project ideas, that is discrete pieces of work, and then devise a budget for each project including a share of your organisation’s ‘overheads’. There are a number of issues to bear in mind if you approach your fundraising in this way: • Your budget will have to reflect your ‘project thinking’ and shift away from a core budget to ‘cost’ or ‘project’ centres. • In costing each project you need to include one-off start up and capital costs and then divide your other costs into 3 categories - ‘direct’, ‘shared’, and ‘indirect’. • ‘Direct’ costs are those that apply exclusively to the project, such as salaries and recruitment costs. • ‘Shared’ costs are those that will be shared out between a number of different projects, like rent and cleaning. • ‘Indirect’ costs are those that are incurred by the organisation as a whole and may include things like insurance, audit fees, and management committee expenses. As with ‘shared’ costs these can be worked out on a percentage basis. • When including a share of general costs or organisational overheads (e.g. rent, heating, lighting, buildings insurance) into your project, make sure that you allocate the costs in a sensible and realistic way that can be explained. Do not just pluck figures out of the air. For instance, if the project represents 20% of your total staff time then it would be reasonable to expect it to pay 20% of the rent and other running costs. • When drawing up your budget for running costs, don’t forget to allow for inflation, that is, price rises in years two and onwards. You may need to seek advice on future levels of inflation. • When drawing up your budget for capital items, don’t forget to allow for depreciation, that is, things like equipment wearing out and losing its value. • If you already get some income from another source then that could cover your general costs so that you need only approach new funders for the interesting bits. An example of allocating general costs (this is sometimes called ‘apportioning overheads’). An Advice Centre normally offers four, three-hour sessions a week to the public for general welfare rights advice. The Centre decides to bid for money to offer one additional three-hour session a week targeted at disability rights advice. A total of five sessions will therefore be run with the new service taking up one of these, or one fifth (20%) of the Centre’s total work. Budget Total cost Disability Advice (x20%) Wages 10,000 2,000 Insurance 1,000 200 Rent, rates, heat, light etc 2,000 400 Stationary, telephone, post etc 1,000 200 Training 500 100 Volunteer expenses 1,000 200 Publications 500 100 Total £16,000 £3,200 Here the disability project represents a fifth of the total activity at the Centre, and so is allocated a fifth of all the Centre’s costs. This exercise may need further refining. It is a new venture so in year one the amount for training and publications may be more than one fifth of the total. Once you are happy that you’ve included all the relevant costs into your project budget ask yourselves: Does it look right? Is it a lot less or more than you expected? If you need to increase or decrease the total cost, look at the items that are flexible like management or administration time or any allocation of overheads. If you think that the total amount you need is too much for one particular funder to support you can approach several funders. You could try to break down the project into smaller chunks or mini-projects and ask different funders for money for the different chunks. Once you are happy with the budget, agree it within your group. Unit costs You may hear funders or others using the term ‘costing’ or ‘unit cost’ - especially where contracts are being developed for the delivery of services - and you may want to look at using this as a method for costing your activities. Statutory funders sometimes require you to cost your work like this - most charitable funders do not. However, you might want to be able to say how much it costs to help each person using your service or how much each activity costs in order to show that your project is good value for money, or to make it appeal to a particular funder, e.g.: ‘for every £x you give us, we can help y people’. This can be a complicated process and involves taking into account the whole organisation’s costs so you may need advice to develop your own systems. Basically a unit cost is the cost of a particular piece of work, activity or service. For example if the total cost of taking five people on holiday for a week is £1,000 then the unit cost per person is £200. A simple example of a Unit Cost Taking the same organisation and budget as before, if a funder wanted to pay for the service on a sessional basis they might want to know how many sessions they could pay for with a given sum of money. To pay for the disability project then, assuming the Centre is open 50 weeks of the year the total number of sessions would be 250. If 250 sessions cost £16,000 - one session costs £64 (16,000 divided by 250). So, in this case the unit cost for a session is £64. The disability project needs 50 sessions a year: a total cost of £3,200 per year. (50 x 64) This is a very simple example but as you can see a unit cost is simply a different way of looking at costings. Cash flow Once you have decided how much you plan to spend, how much you need to raise, and have managed to do so successfully, you can balance your budget. But in reality things may not work that way. Money is not all received and spent at the same time. Grants may come in as quarterly payments or might arrive late but you might not be able to delay payments such as wages or the phone bill. This can cause ‘cash flow’ problems. You need to know when you will receive money so that you can plan your expenditure accordingly. For instance, you could delay building works, or negotiate a bridging loan from your bank, or get a supporter to guarantee your overdraft. To work out your cash position you need to draw up a cash flow budget. This looks at each item of expenditure and income and shows when the money will be received and when it will have to be paid out. You should look at this each month, or at least once a quarter. Below is an example of a cash flow budget for a particular item of expenditure: Total expenditure on building works: £50,000 To be spent as follows: This year: Jan - March April - June July - Sept Cash out nil £20,000 £30,000 Cash in £5,000 £10,000 £35,000 Balance +£5,000 £-5,000 nil You can follow the same procedure for every item of expenditure, and then repeat it for your income budget. Keep track of the receipt of each item of your income over a period of time and you can then see how it matches up with your expected expenditure. This is called a ‘cash flow analysis’, and the point of doing it is to get advance warning of any problems so that you can take action to avoid them. Value for Money Increasingly you will have to prove to funders that your project is good value for money. This means asking yourselves three questions: • Is the project economic? How do your costs compare with those of other organisations running similar projects? • Is the project efficient? Could you do more for the same amount or by doing more could you reduce the unit costs? • Is the project effective? Will it make a difference? What are the likely outcomes? You can use a value for money argument to support your case. Added Value This is another way of arguing that your project is good value for money. Added value means that for every pound the funder puts in you will enhance their investment through other ‘inputs’ such as your knowledge and skills, your management capabilities, volunteers’ time and skills. If your organisation didn’t already exist to run the proposed project, then to set the project up from scratch would cost far more money, so you can use an added value argument to support your case. Additionality This is similar to added value but usually means added extra income. The Community Fund and a number of charitable trusts will not fund services that are meeting a statutory obligation (education, primary health care), or subsidise services paid for by statutory agencies. But they will fund ‘additional’ projects. For example if your organisation was funded by Social Services to provide day care you could apply to charitable funders for other aspects of your service, such as setting up a gardening scheme. Match Funding Some funders, like the European programmes, will only provide part of the total cost of your project, often a set percentage. You have to find or ‘match’ the amount they are offering from within your own resources or from other sources. Leverage This is the process by which your project brings in other money from other sources. For instance you might need to show that for every £1 given you by the Regional Development Agency you will be able to bring in another 50p or £1 from local businesses. Useful books: A Practical Guide to Financial Management by Kate Sayer, Directory of Social Change, 2002 Preparing Charity SORP Accounts edited by Kate Sayer, Directory of Social Change, 2003 Directory of Social Change, 24 Stephenson Way, London NW1 2DP Tel: 020 7209 5151 Fax: 020 7391 4804 email: books@dsc.org.uk online: www.dsc.org.uk/charitybooks Finding our future II: Understand and allocate costs, ACEVO, 2002 Tel: 0845 345 8481 email: info@acevo.org.uk Budget Yourselves - free software from FunderFinder Tel: 0113 243 3008 Website: www.funderfinder.org.uk © SYFAB 2003 All rights reserved. Our information is produced for local community and voluntary groups. No permission is needed for limited reproduction if the Bureau is acknowledged. Large scale reproduction or inclusion in publications for sale must have written permission from the Bureau. The South Yorkshire Funding Advice Bureau welcomes your comments and criticism. 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