here comes the flood? the changing landscape for voluntary action
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Future of the voluntary sector, innit!TRANSCRIPT
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…
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