Resource Library

The Center's resource library has over 800 items covering the breadth of topics in nonprofit management. Find answers to your questions plus articles, sample policies, checklists, and more.

For narrow results, be specific with the keywords and topics. For more general results, select a topic or publication type. For Spanish language resources, search keyword espanol.

Didn't find an answer? Contact Member Assistance, (919) 790-1555 x220.

 


Enter keywords to search through
Principles/Practices
/16 Selected
Publication Type
/10 Selected

The Common Sense of Compensation 

When questions about a nonprofit leader’s exceptionally high salary make the front page of the paper, we wince. A single nonprofit is being criticized for being an outlier, but it feels as if all charitable nonprofits and their values are being questioned.

Building Community Capacity to Meet Public Needs 

Identifies benefits that local governments receive from working with small community nonprofits, challenges that these nonprofits often face in developing internal strength, reasons that governments help address these challenges, and strategies that governments use to provide such assistance.

Battling Burnout 

Doing good is tough work, and consensus shows that many do-gooders face more resource restraints than their private sector peers. With the stress of impressing your manager or your peers, the pressure to produce superb programs, and the weight of scrutiny from regulatory bodies, funders, and the general public, it's easy to burn out fast.

What is Capacity Building? 

Nonprofit capacity building refers to many different types of activities that are all designed to improve and enhance a nonprofit's ability to achieve its mission and sustain itself over time.

You Hired Who? Top 10 Nonprofit Employment Mistakes 

Nonprofit employers face a unique set of challenges. They are always trying to do more with less — fewer staff members, less support, less funding. A combination of these pressures can result in poor employment practices, even when one thinks they are doing “the right thing.”