Here comes the flood? The changing landscape for voluntary action

Post on 22-Apr-2015

728 views 0 download

description

Future of the voluntary sector, innit!

Transcript of Here comes the flood? The changing landscape for voluntary action

Here comes the flood?The changing landscape for charities and voluntary organisations

Karl Wilding NCVO

#InvolveAPC@karlwilding

The current environment

47%44%

42%

26% 25% 23% 23%21%

16% 16%

Most important Gov’t priorities in deciding who to vote for at GE2015

Q. Below is a list of priorities for a potential Government to have, please select the three which you would consider most important when deciding who to vote for at a General Election? Base: adults in marginal constituencies (n=1,038) Source: ComRes

Voluntary sector income/expenditure

Source: NCVO/TSRC, Charity Commission

Sources of incomeIncome sources2000 – 2012(£ billions, real terms)

VolunteeringProportion of people formally volunteering, 2001 – 2012/13 (% of respondents)

Where next?

12

Barnet: The graph of doom

New ways to give, borrow, share… #crowdfunding

Source: Nat Cen, Guardian

22

The State(Public Agencies)

The Market(Private Firms)

The Community(Households,

Families)Non-profit

For-profit

Formal

Inform

al

Public

Private

VoluntarySector

Source: Evers & Laville, 2004

Here comes the flood?

What will the voluntary sector look like in the future?

Provocations: Future of the sector?

• Voluntary ‘sector’ growth• From fundraising to resource raising• Social action: wider, shallower, stronger• Millennials (politicians?) are sector agnostic• Digital disruption, innovation• Public trust

If you want to continue the conversation…

I’m @karlwilding on Twitter, where I share #vcs news and ideas, along with other @ncvo colleagues

We share stuff via our blogs at ncvo.org.uk

We can only do this because we have members. If your income is less than £30k its FREE .

Join us, and join in, at www.ncvo.org.uk/about-us/join-ncvo