Search Results
- Aging (1)
- Arts and Culture (2)
- Community Development (2)
- COVID-19 (3)
- Democracy/Civic Engagement (3)
- Disaster Relief (1)
- Diversity, Equity and Inclusion (1)
- Economic Development (3)
- Education (8)
- Environment and Sustainability (3)
- Health (1)
- Housing/Homelessness (1)
- Poverty (1)
- Racial Equity (5)
- Technology (1)
- Show all (272)
- Applications (1)
- Capacity Building (8)
- Committees (3)
- Communications (6)
- Corporate Giving Program (2)
- Diversity, Equity and Inclusion (25)
- Donor Relations (3)
- Employee Benefits (6)
- Finance (14)
- Fund Development (3)
- Fundraising Events (1)
- Fund Types/Agreements (5)
- Gender (1)
- Governance (10)
- Grantee Engagement (4)
- Human Resources (14)
- Investments (12)
- Leadership Facilitation (2)
- Lobbying Rules (1)
- Marketing (3)
- Operating Support (3)
- Personal Development (3)
- Plans (1)
- Professional Development (4)
- Proposal Evaluation (1)
- Public/Private Partnership (1)
- Public Policy (49)
- Reporting (3)
- Resource Development (6)
- Software (1)
- Strategic Planning (2)
- Succession Planning (1)
- Technology (5)
- Volunteerism (2)
This is a sample document from The Community Foundation for Crawford County for their board orientation.
Learn with Ohio partners and embed sustainable development goals (SDGs) into your work during this nine-month cohort process. The Cleveland Foundation, in partnership with Philanthropy Ohio, is convening a first-of-its-kind regional initiative to use the SDGs in local efforts to advance social change. Advance your understanding of the United Nations' SDGs and learn how to align your local efforts with these global goals.
Trust-based philanthropy is not a one-size-fits-all approach, and its application may vary based on specific contexts, circumstances and organizations. Funders can adapt these practices to align with their values and the needs of their grantees and communities.
The fall Philanthropy Review edition features how funders are addressing sustainability and how philanthropy can contribute to this space even if your organization does not consider itself a climate, sustainability or environmental funder; Philanthropy Forward ’22 Plenary Speaker Grace Chiang Nicolette, of the Center for Effective Philanthropy, on meeting this moment; how to create an environment that challenges biases; the four new Philanthropy Ohio board members; and more!
Established by the Philanthropy Ohio Board of Trustees in 2013, the Guiding Principles are a set of values that establish a framework for expected behavior and decision-making among Philanthropy Ohio members. Members shall abide by the applicable principles and be informed by the Diversity Principles.
This past February, Resilia and Philanthropy Ohio held a learning conversation on the capacity-building landscape of Ohio nonprofits with key funders in the state and members of Philanthropy Ohio. The discussion was thought-provoking and rich, with a key takeaway: both funders and nonprofits need support in building their own capacity to engage in trust-based work.
Connect with fellow Ohio funders about the challenges and possibilities and identify opportunities to collaborate. Get the mentoring and training you need and be reassured you’re doing things in the best way possible. You have the ability to become the funder you envision and seek to be.
Leading and supporting philanthropic work to center racial equity, we bring training, tools, inspiration and conversations to our members, holding space for peer sharing and cohort learning and expanding to include other marginalized identities and issues.
Elevate your work, grow in your career, exercise your leadership and demonstrate your expertise among your peers. When you join a committee, connect with a peer group or participate in a policy initiative, not only are you giving back to the sector, but you’re also gaining valuable skills and relationships.