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Organizing

Capacity/Organize

General Reference

  • U.S. EPA Capacity Building Resources:
    • Capacity building means establishing resources needed to fulfill a mission or achieve a goal. U.S. EPA recognizes that watershed groups and local governments need a range of tools to effectively manage their local land and water resources. This Web site is designed to assist groups in developing knowledge by providing a compendium of Web-based and printed resources and tools.

Meeting Management

  • Facilitation Skills: Helping Groups Make Decisions (book) by Gregory Putz (check your local library or bookstore):
    • Group decision-making is hard work! A good facilitator makes it much less painful. Watershed coordinators often find themselves in this role, without having any prior training. This book contains the essential practices of facilitation, as well as some do’s and don’ts and FAQs.
  • Facilitator’s Guide to Participatory Decision Making (book) by Sam Kaner, Lenny Lind, Catherine Toldi, and Sarah Fisk (check your local library or bookstore):
    • This techniques-oriented book will take you through the mechanics of facilitation.
  • Coping with Difficult People (book) by Robert Bramson (check your local library or bookstore):
    • The “bully.” The “complainer.” The “conversation dominator.” If your watershed group doesn’t have at least one personality that is “hard to love,” you may not have found all the stakeholders you need! This book outlines several different personalities that can be difficult to manage in a group and provides very practical advice on how to counter their behaviors. This resource is so useful for committee meetings with strong personalities that it should be required reading. This document [PDF] covers similar concepts to the book.
  • How to Run a Great Meeting:
    • This document lays out very clearly what to do before, during, and after the meeting to make it great (and make your committee members want to come back!). Use it as a checklist for every meeting.
  • Sample Ground Rules (from Watershed Coordinator Training Modules) [PDF] and Ground Rules for Group Deliberations and Consensus Building [PDF]:
    • Watershed issues can stir strong emotions. Get your meetings started on the right foot by establishing ground rules early in the process (at the first meeting). Ground rules provide a corral around the conversation and tone of meetings so that everyone is respected and treated fairly.
  • Robert’s Rules of Order (10th ed):
    • What do you say to initiate a vote? What is the proper way to adjourn a meeting? Look to the most widely used manual on parliamentary procedure for more information on how to run group meetings.
  • Effective Meeting Facilitation: The Sine Qua Non of Planning and Effective Meeting Facilitation: Sample Tools, Forms, and Checklists:
    • Produced by the National Endowment for the Arts, this article and its companion contain helpful hints for making a meeting successful and facilitation techniques.

Board Development

  • Knowledge Center:
    • Boardsource.org is an online reference site for nonprofit boards of directors. Their knowledge center includes articles and ebooks on a wide array of topics from recruitment and orientation to fundraising. Though geared specifically to nonprofits, the information provided at this site should apply to many watershed groups, regardless of their tax status.
  • Free Toolkit for Boards:
    • An online resource site with articles for for-profit and nonprofit board operations and governance. Though geared specifically to boards of incorporated organizations, the information provided at this site should apply to many watershed groups, regardless of their tax status.

Committee Design

Organizational Planning

  • Indiana Office of Faith-Based and Community Initiatives:
  • Strategic Planning:
    • This material provides a primer as to the purpose, components, and conduction of strategic planning. It includes multiple sections/modules and tools to assist with strategic planning. It is useful for groups that are thinking about undertaking strategic planning. However, if you have never conducted strategic planning before, this will not lead you step by step through the process.
  • Mission Impossible:
    • This Web-based article addresses the purpose of a mission statement and provides examples of mission statements, plus additional mission-related resources. This article is useful when your group is preparing to draft a mission statement.
  • Business Planning for Nonprofits:
    • “Business plan” is a buzzword in watershed management in Indiana these days. This newsletter article from the National Council of Nonprofits lays out the purpose of business planning and compares business planning to strategic planning.
  • Becoming a Nonprofit Organization:
    • In addition to providing basic information on forming a nonprofit organization, this site also includes content and a series of resources that can help groups determine whether or not they should form an organization.

Staffing / Policies

  • Wanted - Perfect Coordinator:
    • This “job description” includes some true duties to post and some tongue-in-cheek language to help your group remember what it is asking the watershed coordinator to do! It is the perfect remedy for a burned-out coordinator, steering committee, board of directors, etc.
  • Hiring Toolkit:
    • Step by step process for hiring an employee. Includes sample job descriptions, assessment tools, interview questions to ask and avoid, and transitional tips to make the move into your organization easier.

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