What Women Leaders in Nonprofits Need to Know

Episode 482 | Host: Emilie Aries | Guest: Jenny Mitchell

How do you ensure you fulfill your ambition, passion, and retirement fund when you work for a nonprofit?

The nonprofit sector differs from the corporate world in a number of ways. The workforce is heavily dominated by women, for one thing, and lower pay is a long-accepted trade-off for the privilege of pursuing a cause-oriented career. 

Despite these distinct differences, the Bossed Up episode library hasn’t delved too deeply into the nonprofit realm to date, but that’s about to change. Today, I share my enlightening conversation with Jenny Mitchell, the Chief Visionary Officer of Chavender, an organization that coaches mid-level leaders to senior executives to help them build leadership skills. Jenny focuses on women in the nonprofit sector in particular, and this focus inspired her first book, Embracing Ambition: Empowering Women to Step Out, Be Seen, & Lead, which came out earlier this year. 

In this episode, we discuss what women need to know to thrive within the nonprofit arena.

The challenges facing women working for a nonprofit

The underrepresentation of women in senior positions is nothing new, but in nonprofits, the stats highlight this inequality even more acutely: women compose up to three-quarters of the workers, and yet only 62% of them occupy the C-suite (and fewer still in the largest corporations).

This is just one example of the gender leadership gap’s grip on the nonprofit sector. Jenny acknowledges that these organizations have a tendency to hire from the outside, always seeking more qualified candidates despite having a large selection of fervently dedicated (and mostly female) staff ripe for promotion. She notes that nearly everyone she works alongside in nonprofits is kind, passionate, and curious—it’s a pool of excellent contenders who often spend too long in their entry-level and intermediate roles.

That innate passion runs up against likeability double standards for women in nonprofits, too. Unlike some corporate structures, a nonprofit CEO doesn’t make all the decisions. Instead, they are at the mercy of funders and a board whose chair changes every two years and whose members all have different pet projects within the organization. We know that women leaders have to fight to strike a balance between assertiveness and niceness. Achieving this equilibrium within a slew of—often mostly male—overseers can be a huge challenge; those relationships and potential donor funds are what keep the mission and the aforementioned passionate staff afloat, not to mention the leader herself.

Manage up as a nonprofit professional

The dedication to the cause that is a staple of so many people drawn to the nonprofit sector comes with a few downsides. So often, these committed workers adhere to one of the five pillars in Jenny’s book: Embodied Roles. When someone feels deeply connected to the group she is serving, it becomes very difficult to stop working—the next phone call, text, or email could literally save a life. This achiever mindset, while still so often lauded, can lead to burnout. It also sets a bad example for a manager’s direct reports, leaving these similarly impassioned people feeling like they aren’t doing enough unless they’re doing it all, all the time.

Jenny also highlights another issue that often crops up in nonprofits: weak management. Because budgets are stretched thin and organizations are focused on keeping administrative costs low—both to appease donors and the board and to funnel as much money as possible into their mission—staff members tend to receive minimal management training compared to corporate entities.

Workers in these situations need to learn to manage up, Jenny says. By this, she means putting communication channels in place if you aren’t getting the one-on-ones you require. She suggests establishing regular communication—through the channel that works best for your manager—outlining where you are with your work and what you need from your supervisor to keep succeeding.

This, on top of advocating for raises and healthy boundaries, can go a long way to preventing the oft-seen two-year turnover.

Manage well as a nonprofit leader 

As for the leaders of the organizations, Jenny stresses the importance of monitoring how much you’re contributing to a culture of overwork. “As a leader,” she says, “your job is to manage your energy and the wake of your energy.” This wake ripples out to every staff member around you, so if you are burning out or feeling hopeless about the battle, it’s only a matter of time until that feeling overtakes everyone else.

Jenny also advocates for making time to celebrate achievements, both with the rest of the team and personally. Scheduling active rewards for milestones met and goals completed goes a long way toward building morale, motivation for future work, and managing the looming sense of not-enoughness that can surface in any uphill battle for change in the face of systemic opposition.

In this episode, Jenny and I dive deep into all these topics, and we also explore the uniquely collaborative process she took to writing her book, Embracing Ambition: Empowering Women to Step Out, Be Seen, & Lead—a must-read for all women leading and aspiring to lead. Press play now to listen to the whole conversation.

Then, I want to hear from you. If you’re a woman working for a nonprofit, what issues are you seeing, and how have you navigated the various challenges of this kind of work? How are the women leaders in your orbit practicing the good management skills Jenny talks about? Stop by the Courage Community on Facebook or join us in our group on LinkedIn to share your experience, and let me know what other nonprofit topics you’d like me to bring to Bossed Up.

Related links from today’s episode:

Jenny’s book, Embracing Ambition: Empowering Women to Step Out, Be Seen, & Lead

Explore Chevander’s good work

Listen to Jenny’s Podcast The Underdog Leadership Podcast

“More Women Work in Nonprofits. So Why Do Men End Up Leading Them?” on HBR

Bossed Up Ep 421: The Top Struggles of High Achievers

LEVEL UP: a Leadership Accelerator for Women on the Rise

Book me to speak

Bossed Up Courage Community

Bossed Up LinkedIn Group

Follow me on Instagram

Learn to LEVEL UP your leadership at work:

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