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Wednesday, 18 April 2001

The size and importance of the Australian Social Economy continues to grow. Unfortunately the professional development options available to institutions and executives in the sector lags best practice. As a consequence the efficiency and effectiveness of the sector is below its potential.

Over 30 Billion dollars
consumed by 700,000 organisations
that are extremely complex to manage and lead
whose executives can't get the education they want and need

What a huge opportunity to increase impact

Don't you think it's an issue?

It is time that Australia developed and implemented a strategy to increase the availability of, and reduce the marginal cost of participation in, executive education programs for the Social Economy.

In Australia, the non profit sector accounts for about 11% of non-farm private sector employment and is valued at about 5% of GDP. In total there are about 580,000 employees and 558 million volunteer hours across the 31,000 employing non profit organisations. The services provided by the sector are extremely diverse and range from drug rehabilitation to environmental lobbying to performing arts organisations.

Developing an accurate and sympathetic view of the management and leadership competency of an entire sector of the economy is not an easy task. Turning the learnings into an implementable strategy is even harder.  That said, much good work has been completed and clear recommendations are emerging. 

Initial research findings have led to the following conclusions:

  1. There is definitely a need to lift the management and leadership competency of executives and board members in the non-profit sector. It was important that this conclusion was in fact correct as it forms the base hypothesis upon which the remaining work rests.
  2. There are in the order of 30,000 individuals (executives and board members) that need competency development / education.
  3. The market (individuals needing education) is fragmented by industry, current organisational role, educational need, learning style etc. Some of the fragmentation is real while other aspects are driven by perceptions.
  4. Educational offerings for the sector exist today but will need to grow in scale and quality to have the impact we seek.
  5. There are substantial financial and non-financial barriers that limit the amount of education delivered to the sector. Overcoming these barriers is one of our major tasks.
  6. The four criteria that guide the selection of activities that SEEEN undertakes are:
      - Flexibility
      - Avoid duplication
      - Feasibility and low risk
      - Impact / cost
  7. SEEEN's activities include research, stimulation of funding for educaiton and being a coordinator/catalyst.

A national sector wide solution requires the inspiration and intelligence of the entire sector. Therefore you are invited to participate in the problem solving via this web site.

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