Financially Sustainable Schools

1 / 91
About This Presentation
Title:

Financially Sustainable Schools

Description:

Financially Sustainable Schools. Six Steps to Re-engineering Your ... Casual analysis. Judgment. Style preference & assumptions. Reaction. Emotional response ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:71
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 92
Provided by: patric433

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Financially Sustainable Schools


1
Financially Sustainable Schools Six Steps to
Re-engineering Your Schools Financial Future
Corey McIntyre, NAIS Chief Financial Officer
2
Your Financial Challenges

?
3
The Situation
4
Long Term Trends
  • Annual giving average up 24 2002 to 2005
  • Average gift and participation rates
  • Current parents 1,000 63
  • Trustees 5,150 93
  • Alumni 358 16
  • Grandparents 705 0.3

5
New Actors
  • Competition technology
  • Demographic downturn
  • Teacher supply
  • Real estate prices

6
Group Problem-Solving Approaches
7
Evidence-Based Management
  • 19th century Rx Leeches
  • Pierre-Charles-Alexandre Louis (1830)
  • Mortality rates for treatment of pneumonia 77
    patients
  • Leeches used early 44
  • Leeches used late 25

8
RIGOROUS ANALYSIS INFORMED DEBATE
DATA Other Sources
STRATEGY
FEEDBACK
9
The Six Steps
  • Trend analysis
  • Ratio analysis
  • Ten financial planning assumptions
  • Data markers of school success
  • Re-engineering strategies
  • Projecting alternative preferred financial
    futures
  • Guiding principles
  • Data-driven
  • Deep dives - CSI
  • School-wide learning
  • Shared language
  • Shared commitment

10
Step 1 Trend Analysis
  • Where have you come from, where are you going?
  • Key questions
  • 5 and 10 year trends
  • Projection of trends into future
  • Defining benchmark group
  • External trends
  • Tasks
  • Run your numbers
  • Compare to others
  • Collect environmental data

11
Core Sample Trends
Dollars adjusted for inflation.
12
National Admissions Trends
13
Shifting Aid Applicant Pool
14
Ratio Analysis Tools
  • Extending StatsOnline with excel

15
Sample NAIS School
16
(No Transcript)
17
Step 2 Ratio Analysis
  • Snapshot of ratios vs. benchmarks
  • Key questions
  • Establishing benchmark measures
  • Understanding differences
  • Strengths/weaknesses
  • Tasks
  • Run reports - Online Financing Schools Calculator
  • Pursue resulting lines of inquiry

18
(No Transcript)
19
(No Transcript)
20
(No Transcript)
21
Data-informed questions
  • Tuition and financial aid lower than peers
  • Charging too little?
  • Charge more and increase the number of students
    receiving aid and the aid amounts?
  • Annual giving and special events income lower
    than peers
  • Opportunity?
  • Other income" better than peers
  • Why? Can this continue?
  • Salaries and benefits expenses competitive even
    with smaller budget
  • How. Can this continue?

22
Data-informed questions
  • Higher student per faculty ratio than your
    benchmark schools.
  • Sustainable? How do you know?
  • Efficient student to teacher ratios and lower
    average salaries.
  • Why? Younger faculty? Clever scheduling? Faculty
    morale and recruiting time-bomb?
  • Lower student to administrator ratios
  • Why? Advantage or inefficiency?
  • Annual giving participation for parents and
    trustees favorable, but average gifts are lower.
    Why? Improving?
  • Alumni participation rate is extremely low.
    Opportunity?

23
Data-informed questions
  • Admissions funnel less competitive student
    attrition is slightly higher.
  • External and internal surveying and marketing
    needs?
  • Non-compensation expense per student (i.e.,
    program and instruction-related budgets) is
    nearly 25 percent lower. Concern or strength?
  • Endowment per student is significantly lower.
    Improvable?

24
Step 3 Ten Financial Planning Options
  • Objective assessment of your position on ten key
    continua
  • Key questions
  • Where do you fit in the market?
  • Where to want to be?
  • What fits your mission and inherent strengths and
    opportunities?
  • Tasks
  • Study, interpret and debate all of the above

25
Ten Planning Assumptions
  • Market position and pricing
  • Affordability
  • Tuition dependency
  • Staff salaries
  • Program and staff
  • Class size
  • Facilities, equipment technology
  • Debt
  • Giving
  • Alternative revenue streams

26
Market Position and Pricing
  • Factors to understand
  • Demand, demographics, family incomes
  • Attrition, signs of pushback on price
  • Mission imperative relative to tuitions
  • Pricing strategy options
  • Higher 5 and above
  • Moderate 3 to 5
  • Low Less and 3

27
Affordability Example
Minimum income to pay tuition at amount listed.
Assumptions Using SSS Methodology for a family
of four, two parents, two children, parents age
45, both work, no assets - parent or student, DC
state/other taxes, no COLA
28
Selected Planning Assumptions
  • Faculty salaries
  • Market trend, future expectations
  • Competition from public schools
  • Climate advantage
  • Attrition, age of faculty
  • Hiring practices
  • Class size
  • Scheduling options
  • Faculty load
  • False perceptions and sacred cows

29
Selected Planning Assumptions
  • Facilities, equipment, technology
  • Age, deferred maintenance
  • Maintenance cost
  • Technology integration
  • Giving
  • Capacity
  • Friend raising, seed planting
  • Expectations and objections

30
Step 4 Ten Data Markers of Success
  • Define numerical markers to measure progress
    toward goals.
  • Key questions
  • Measures of educational success
  • Alignment of budget to those measures
  • Proxies from successful schools
  • Tasks
  • Determine where you stand relative to markers
  • Define your basic assumptions

31
NAIS Data Marker Guidance
  • Use to provide context
  • Indicators that inform, not goals themselves
  • Understand inter-relationships
  • Learn to reconcile adjust accordingly
  • Mission
  • Location
  • Endowment
  • Market position
  • Avoid ratio envy

32
Ten Data Markers of Success
  • Stable financial aid
  • High staff and teacher productivity
  • Well funded professional development and
    technology
  • Growing endowment
  • Successful student outcomes
  • High market demand
  • Low attrition
  • Generous giving
  • Competitive faculty salaries
  • Affordable tuition, moderate increases

33
Ten Markers of Success Market Demand
  • Market demand number of applications per
    acceptances measure the markets perception of
    the schools success (high ratio a proxy for
    reputational value).

34
Ten Markers of Success Low Attrition
2. Low annual student attrition measures
stability of school and satisfaction of parents
(low percent a proxy for high stability and
satisfaction.
Day Attrition _at_ Day Schools
Boarding Attrition _at_ Boarding Schools
35
Ten Markers of Success Low Attrition
Day Attrition _at_ BdDay Schools
Boarding Attrition BdDay Schools
36
Ten Markers of Success Giving
3. Generous giving measures constituent loyalty
(generosity as a proxy for high support and
attributed effectiveness).
37
Ten Markers of Success Faculty Salaries
4. Competitive Faculty Salaries measures a
schools capacity to attract, keep, and reward
high quality faculty (salaries a proxy for
competitiveness in recruitment and high quality
teachers)
38
Markers of Success Moderate Tuitions
5. Relatively moderate tuition and moderated
annual tuition increases measure value in the
value proposition (a proxy for comparative
affordability and moderated inflationary
pricing).
39
Markers of Success Financial Aid
6. A stable, sustainable proportion of students
receiving financial aid measures a schools
commitment to socio-economic diversity balanced
by financial prudence.
Day Schools
40
Markers of Success Financial Aid
Boarding Schools
Boarding Day Schools
41
Markers of Success High Productivity
7. Comparatively high studentfaculty and
studenttotal staff ratios measure workload
productivity (a proxy for institutional
efficiency)
Day Schools
42
Markers of Success High Productivity
Boarding Schools
43
Markers of Success Funding Professional
Development Technology
8. Significant budget for professional
development and technology measures commitment
to human resources and innovation (a proxy for
investment in supporting a high-quality learning
environment).
44
Markers of Success Grow Endowment
9. Growing endowment measures commitment to
financial security (a proxy for
inter-generational equity and long-term
stability).
Day Schools
45
Markers of Success Grow Endowment
Boarding Schools
46
Step 5 Re-engineering Strategies
  • Develop plans to pursue the objectives you have
    set
  • Key questions
  • Priorities, biggest vulnerabilities
  • Communication strategies
  • Tasks
  • Team or task force formation
  • Entrepreneurial opportunities

47
Possible Strategies
  • Grow enrollment (without growing staff)
  • Capitalize upon intellectual property
  • Full utilization of physical assets
  • Enhanced fundraising to build endowment
  • Increase productivity
  • Moderate the arms race for new facilities
  • Sunset programs. Undertake periodic sacred cow
    hunts.

48
Revenue Enhancement
  • Grow enrollment (without growing staff)
  • Capitalize upon intellectual property
  • Calvert School (MD) curriculum for
    home-schoolers (net 1.5m/yr). Now one version of
    website in Russian.
  • Elmwood Franklin (NY) Achieve! Storefront
    Tutorials (projected 100K/yr.)
  • St. Richard's School (Indianapolis) auxiliary
    education center for tutoring, technology, adult
    education, testing preparation (SAT), GED

49
Revenue Enhancement
  • Capitalize upon intellectual property (cont)
  • The Norman Howard School (NY) -- EnCompass
    Resources for Learning, struggling learner
    assessment, coaching, tutoring, college LD
    assessment guidance training/consultation for
    schools community workshops and seminars.
  • San Francisco School (CA) Kids Battle the
    Grown-Ups trivia game co-authored by 6th graders.
    Net 70K royalties so far. 2nd game, Kids Rule,
    now carried by Wal-Mart and Toys R Us.

50
Revenue Enhancement
  • Full utilization of physical assets
  • Lake Forest Academy (IL) Outsourcing to Sodexho
    weddings (500K/yr) sale of adjoining property
    to high-end developer for endowment
  • Shattuck-St. Marys (MN) Building a golf course
    on adjacent property and selling lots (Net 2M in
    first year). Also rentals of ropes course for
    corporate outings.
  • Many schools adult ed in evening sports clubs
    during class time weekends (See the Money
    issue of Independent School-Fall 2003.)
  • Georgetown Prep (MD) Luxury apartments on 3
    acres of leased property (Income 1.3M year on
    99-yr lease.)
  • Hilton Head Prep (SC) Women's wellness Retreat
    (Summer Session for Moms and their teenage
    daughters) also homeschoolers can take one
    course at the school for 1/5th tuition.

51
2006 Non-Tuition Revenue Survey
  • Key Findings
  • Most common summer programs (78), auctions
    (72), and extended day programs (63)
  • Least common adult learning (5), intellectual
    property (1) and franchising (0.6)
  • 36 cited auctions as most significant source of
    income
  • Only 2 exhibited net loss from operating the
    program(s)
  • 75 cited operations as the program financed by
    the revenue 2nd most frequent was financial
    aid (23)
  • Full report www.nais.org. More research to
    follow.

52
Revenue Enhancement
  • Enhanced fundraising to build endowment
  • Serious deferred giving programs e.g., most
    boarding schools.
  • Grow endowment via a combination of allocating to
    endowment 1/3rd of all capital campaign, annual
    giving, and special event proceeds to endowment
    and/or a commitment of 1-3 of annual budget
    contribution to endowment.

53
Step 6 Projecting Preferred Scenarios
  • Project financial alternatives quantify impact
    of various strategies.
  • Key questions
  • Impact of plans to bottom line
  • Likely, possible, and preferred financial futures
  • Decisions required to reach preferred financial
    future
  • Tasks
  • Run numbers using NAIS Financing Schools
    Calculator

54
Step 6 Projecting Preferred Scenarios
  • Different assumptions for different projection
    runs
  • First Change nothing. Last five years'
    budgetary trends for the next five years.
  • Second Reflecting all your goals from step 4
    (Data markers of success)
  • Third Balancing and making choices

55
Sample NAIS School, Anywhere, USA
56
(No Transcript)
57
Sample NAIS School, Anywhere, USA
58
(No Transcript)
59
(No Transcript)
60
(No Transcript)
61
First sample projection based on preliminary
assumptions.
62
(No Transcript)
63
Sample NAIS School, Anywhere, USA
64
Deficits in Year 3?
65
Deficits in Year 3? Typical Response Hit the
back button to increase tuition more.
66
Sample NAIS School, Anywhere, USA
Results Higher tuition income stream
67
and good surpluses for five years. But falling
back into the same pattern of high tuition
increases. The challenge create surpluses by
changing other variables.
68
The End
69
Appendix Related Slides
70
Moodys Update 2005
  • Moodys continues to believe that the majority
    of independent schools in our portfolio retain
    pricing flexibility and will continue to grow
    total net tuition revenue and net tuition revenue
    per student. However, this pricing flexibility is
    finite, and already you have heard some cases
    where pricing is becoming more sensitive as
    parents consider lower cost day schools and
    church-related institutions as an alternate to
    the more expensive boarding schools. Tuition
    flexibility is greatest at highly rated schools
    which typically hold premier academic reputations
    nationally and increasingly internationally.
  • NAIS Price is related to demand which is
    driven by PAVS factors
  • Prestige (i.e., perceived rank and status
    of school)
  • Affordability (i.e., perceived affordability)
  • Value (i.e., perceived outcomes)
  • Sacrifice (i.e., willingness to use
    discretionary dollars on education
  • Often schools price themselves by their desired
    market position rather than the real market
    positionand therefore discount more heavily.

71
Financial Equilibrium
  • Revenues equal or exceed expenses.
  • Year after year, the rate of growth in revenues
    equals or exceeds the rate of growth in expenses.
  • The value of financial capital is preserved or
    augmented over time.
  • The value and functional efficiency of physical
    capital (i.e., plant, equipment, and technology)
    is preserved or augmented over time.

72
Financial Equilibrium
  • The effectiveness of human capital is preserved
    or augmented over time.
  • The ability to maintain or improve delivery of
    the school's stated mission is preserved.
  • Resource allocation is aligned with mission
    imperatives

73
Shifting Aid Applicant Pool
74
Middle Income PerspectivesIncome Distribution
of US Family Quintiles
Source U.S. Census Bureau web page,
http//www.census.gov/hhes/www/income/histinc/f01a
r.html
75
Affordability Index
Minimum income to pay tuition at amount listed.
Assumptions Using SSS Methodology for a Family
of four, two parents, two children, parents age
45, both work, no assets - parent or student, DC
state/other taxes, no COLA
76
Income Demographics from 1997-2020
The rich getting richer, the poor poorer and the
middle class losing ground
Impact on Independent Schools? Is this good news
or bad news for us? Bad News trend is for fewer
kids at higher income levelsso plan for lower
pricesor rightsizing for lower enrollments.
77
The Middle Class Dual Income Family _at_75,000
(Source Harvard Magazine, Feb, 2006 The Middle
Class on the Precipice)
The Disappearing Middle Class
If independent school tuition is still the price
of a Ford, why is everyone feeling so pinched
now rather than 30 years ago?
The Ford Analogy - a crime of logic one
payment every 3-5 years vs. 13 consecutive annual
payments for each of two kids.
78
Should Tuition Cost of a Ford?
The problem Pay for the Ford one time over five
years pay for tuition for 2 kids, for 13
consecutive years.
79
Costs of Losing the Middle Class? Resource
Accreditation Class Issues Ruby K. Payne
  • Loss of the value set that the middle class
    brings to the mix drivers of work ethic,
    achievement orientation, and sacrifice for
    material security.
  • Absence of balancing tonic for ills of affluence
    over-involvement of the parents intense academic
    and social competition misguided parental
    intervention in student consequences.
  • Potential barrier to attracting young, idealistic
    Teach for America talent who seek diversity.

80
The Data on Class Size
81
Shattuck-St. Marys Supplemental Sources of
Income (SSI) Analysis
82
Shattuck-St. Marys SSI Details
83
SSIs Inspiring Donors to Fund Facilities
  • Design the program and SSI that a new facility
    will provide the school. (Soccer development
    program lease revenue Dane Family Field House)
  • Prepare presentations for donors that show both
    the program for the students and the SSI.
  • Fund the program and facility through donations
    and SSI revenue. (Dane Family Field House 1.2
    mm in donations, 1.6 mm in financing)

84
Shattuck-St. Marys Looking Ahead
85
The Demographics of Charitable Giving Source
NewTithing Group, from IRS 2003 Tax Returns
86
Title
Testing Hypotheses Source The McKinsey
Quarterly 4/20/2006
Which pair would you choose given an opportunity
to flip over just two cards to test the
assertion, "If a card has a vowel on one side,
then there must be an odd number on the other
side"?
Confirmation Bias Most incorrectly choose U 7
7 offers no new info with a vowel on the back
answer is U 8. Related to possession bias
people 2 to 3 times more likely to prefer what
they have to what they may get coffee mug vs.
chocolate experiment charge 7 to switch, would
offer 3.50 to buy.
87
Data-driven Decision Making
  • 19th century Rx Leeches
  • Pierre-Charles-Alexandre Louis (1830)
  • Mortality Rates for Treatment of Tuberculosis
  • Leeches 44
  • No leeches 25

88
Grounding Principles of Six Steps
  • Data-driven rather than subjective
  • Ongoing rather than start-and-finish
  • Interactive among school constituencies, board,
    and staff
  • Flexible in process, structure, and language
  • Separates what an organization does (strategy)
    from how it is structured (design)
  • so that re-design is possible to achieve
    financial sustainability

89
Truth
  • Truth never damages a cause that is just.
  • Mahatma Ghandi

90
(No Transcript)
91
(No Transcript)
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)