Efficiency in non-profit organizations
- How do aid organizations estimate external and internal efficiency and how is it communicated?
Abstract
Background and problem discussion: The need for aid organizations is growing in pace
with increase in natural disasters and poverty. At the same time the need for non-profit
organization to be able to present results of some kind increases with the amount of
money involved. The often quite long distance between people giving money to charity
and the set where the actual aid projects take place makes it important to have some type
of efficiency thinking formulated. The difficulty lies in understanding the efficiency of
non-profit organizations and what results the contributions have. Therefore our focus in
this study will be on describing how efficiency in the activities of aid organizations is
estimated.
Purpose: The purpose is to describe how three Swedish aid organizations estimate
external and internal efficiency and what they do in order to achieve it and for what
reasons.
Delimitations: We have chosen three Swedish non-profit aid organizations and picked
out one or two people from every organization and let them represent the entire
organization.
Method: We started our study by reading relevant literature and earlier research in order
to get to know more of the selected subject. We are going to approach this subject by
doing a case study, where we have selected three Swedish aid organizations to be the
focus of our interest. We wanted the organizations to have activities that focused on
similar kinds of target groups in order to make it easier to detect common denominators.
We noticed that some of the largest ones had as their main goal to better the lives of
children. We also wanted to have one smaller and two larger organizations to get
variations and see if we noticed any differences in control and structure. To be able to
collect the empirical data that we needed we decided that the most suitable tool for this
would be to do interviews with the right people working in these organizations.
Conclusions: In our study it has emerged that it seems to be a widespread tendency of
taking for granted that the efficiency measuring of profit driven organizations can be
replaced with something similar in the non-profit sector. This however is not the opinion
of the interviewees of this study. The estimation of efficiency in the aid organizations is
often an object of judgment and a question of having contributed to something rather than
having created something alone. Therefore standardized measuring systems are badly
suited for many kinds of non-profit activities. We have found out that the organizations
3
feel increased pressure from their surroundings when it comes to accounting for their use
of resources. Our interpretation of the situation is that they take after the behaviour of
profit driven companies in order to try and make it look as if they are satisfying the
demands from the outside to a greater extent than they are really capable of and in order
to gain legitimacy. This, however, does not mean they have found any reliable business
ratios or other structured measuring instruments to make their activities more efficient.
The organizations have their focus on the target group rather than the interest parties and
prioritise quality in front of efficiency.
Degree
Student essay
View/ Open
Date
2007-03-07Author
Steingrüber, Helena
Larsson, Kristin
Series/Report no.
Externredovisning och företagsanalys
06-07-67
Language
eng