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Financial and Operational Trends in Catholic Schools July 8, 2014

Financial and Operational Trends in Catholic Schools July 8, 2014. Financial & Operational Trends. Operational Vitality Measures : Compares school performance to national benchmarks and school results vs. other Archdiocesan schools

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Financial and Operational Trends in Catholic Schools July 8, 2014

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  1. Financial and Operational Trends in Catholic SchoolsJuly 8, 2014

  2. Financial & Operational Trends Operational Vitality Measures : Compares school performance to national benchmarks and school results vs. other Archdiocesan schools Combination of school financial, demographic, enrollment, and parish data Collectively helps to identify key issues (triage) Based on objective measures, but presented in ways that are simple to understand Schools & Parishes (Finance councils) are learning to utilize the information to guide planning

  3. Areas Covered in the Report Data and analysis is organized in 8 key areas Enrollment Tuition Revenue Instructional Costs Admin Costs Plant Costs Affordability Liquidity

  4. Financial & Operational Trends

  5. Financial & Operational Trends

  6. Financial & Operational Trends

  7. Financial & Operational Trends

  8. Financial & Operational Trends

  9. That’s impressive Wayne. But how did you do it?

  10. How has the educational environment of Catholic education changed over the last 50 years? • Competition? • Relationships with internal and external stakeholders? • Resources? • Values that inspire, unify and identify? • Processes?

  11. How have we adapted to the environmental changes of the last 50 years?

  12. Name this Chart Line?

  13. Name this other Chart Line Catholic School Enrollment ? ? ?

  14. Adapt or Die OR Die and Rise Apple Computers – Net Revenue

  15. Active Inertia Management’s tendency to respond to changes by accelerating activities that succeeded in the past.

  16. Managing by Commitments Despite differences in their personal attributes, successful managers all excel in the making, honoring and remaking of commitments. - Donald M. Sull, Managing by Commitments, Harvard Business Review Five Categories of Organizational Defining Commitments • Strategic Frames – How you see the world • Resources – Hard and soft assets at your disposal • Values – Shared norms that unite and inspire • Processes – How things get accomplished • Relationships-Customers, regulators, suppliers, partners

  17. Symptoms of Active Inertia Strategic Frames - How you see the world • People are fighting the last war • The “blame game” over multiple years (or decades) • Unimplemented strategies in binders provided by expensive consultants • Intolerance for diversity of thought

  18. Symptoms of Active Inertia Resources - Hard and soft assets at your disposal • Leaders hesitate to reconfigure resources for fear of jeopardizing their “profits” • Resources considered for annual value rather than lifetime value. • Reactive “repairs” rather than fixes • Lack of succession planning and cultivating the next generation of leaders and mangers.

  19. Symptoms of Active Inertia Processes - How things get accomplished • People stop thinking of processes as a means to an end and stop thinking of alternatives to their comfortable and reassuring routines. • “Best Practices” are known but not implemented • One person in the organization is “the process” • Don’t know (or don’t pay attention to) key data and core metrics

  20. Symptoms of Active Inertia Relationships-Customers, regulators, suppliers, partners • Gradual loss of key partners • Ossification of relationships with internal partners. • Established relationships with external partners prevent responding to changes in technology, regulation or customer preferences. • Antipathy toward or blaming the customers. • Your “stars” have found other partners.

  21. Symptoms of Active Inertia Values - Shared norms that unite and inspire • Unifying power of core values degenerates into mindless conformity. • Unifying values are supplanted by rigid rules and regulations codified in thick employee handbooks. • Confusion between “sacred cows” and “false idols”

  22. Active Inertia Trap* Success Formula Active Inertia Environment * Source: Donald M. Sull. Revival of the Fittest: Why Good Companies Go Bad and How Great Managers Remake Them

  23. Three Areas We Are Stuck • Improving School Leadership • Governance Models • Accepting our role in the New Evangelization

  24. Test Case: Improving School Leadership Traditional Success Formula Modified Success Formula • Strategic Frames • Resources • Values • Processes • Relationships • Strategic Frames • What is long term cost of not developing leaders? • Is this really a priority? • Resources • How do we identify future leaders? • What resources can be made to develop them? • Values • How do we demonstrate that we value our people? • Processes • How can we “mint” the best leaders in our industry? • Relationships • Do we in-source or out-source leadership development?

  25. Managing Commitments The actions that you take today can pave the way to success tomorrow. Or they an lock you into a doomed business model. The best leaders and managers now when to make commitments – and when to break them.

  26. Seven Deadly Sins of Transforming Commitments • Repeat what worked last time. • Fail to run the numbers. • Don’t sweat the details. • Delegate the hard work. • Half-tackles. • Ignore core values. • Keep past sell-by date.

  27. 3 Areas where we’re stuck: Improving School Leadership Governance Models Accepting our role in the New Evangelization

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