Hiring a Consultant to Serve as Interim Senior Staff

When Growth for Good is asked to provide consulting services, we often find ourselves rolling up our sleeves, working on-site part-time, and serving as interim staff. Whether it’s serving as an interim development director or managing a rebranding campaign, we always set realistic expectations that foster success.

Team Meeting

If you are considering hiring a consultant to serve as an interim staff member, here are three steps of self-reflection nonprofit staff and board members should take and guiding questions:

#1) IDENTIFY THE CONSULTANT’S ROLE

  • Does our nonprofit need a sustaining interim to just keep the “trains running on schedule” or are we looking for a turnaround agent?
  • Will the consultant be expected to provide strategic direction, develop processes, and/or set priorities?
  • Do we want the consultant to manage staff, provide executive coaching, and/or facilitate team trainings?
  • Are we ready to explore new models, resources, and changes that may be needed to implement with best practices?

Team Meeting
#2) IDENTIFY YOUR ROLE AS THE CLIENT

  • Who will be the supervising point person?
  • Will we be able to take responsibility for fundraising and financial health of our organization?
  • Who will assume the external role through the transition?
  • Will we manage the job of searching for and onboarding their replacement staff or will we need consulting through this process?
  • How will the consultant’s success be evaluated and who will do it?

Together We Create

#3) IDENTIFY ISSUES

  • Are there any tough decisions that a consultant could help mediate?
  • Are there areas of weakness that should be disclosed and strategically addressed?
  • Are there key staff departures, financial problems, or other concerns that should be disclosed?
  • Are there any conflicts or staff resistance that they should be aware of?
  • Are there any strategic initiatives that will need to be addressed during this consulting engagement, i.e., strategic planning, capital projects, board leadership transition, a rebranding, etc.?

We hope that asking yourself these questions leads to greater stability through leadership transitions or periods of strategic growth and change.

PHOTO CREDIT: rawpixel.com on “My Life Through A Lens” on Unsplash

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