Board Education and Fiduciary Training for Nonprofits and Associations

Fiduciary education tailored to your nonprofit or association’s governance structure and investment program helps your finance committee engage more effectively with oversight, reporting, and policy decisions.

Fiduciary Education for Nonprofit and Association Finance Committees

Volunteer finance committee members sitting in a board education training session

Nonprofit and association finance committees oversee investment programs that often span multiple reserve pools, time horizons, and spending objectives. Committee members rotate, market conditions shift, and the questions your board faces evolve over time. Fiduciary education tailored to your organization’s governance structure and investment program helps your committee stay current on the topics that matter most to their oversight role.

We provide this education as part of our advisory relationship because the investment program works better when the people overseeing it have the context they need. Sessions are tailored to your nonprofit or association committee’s experience level and can cover everything from fiduciary fundamentals for new members to focused discussions on reserve strategy or ESG investing for experienced committees.

Investment Education Topics for Finance Committees

Nonprofit and association finance committees have different levels of investment experience, different governance structures, and different questions depending on where they are in their oversight cycle.

The topics below represent the areas we cover most frequently with our clients. Each session is customized based on your committee’s priorities. Custom sessions are available upon request. 

Fiduciary Responsibility

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Fiduciary Responsibility

What fiduciary duty means for finance committees, including the duties of care, loyalty, and adherence to your organization's mission and governing documents as they apply to investment oversight.

Investment Policy Oversight

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Investment Policy Oversight

Learn how your Investment Policy Statement governs the investment program and how your committee should use it as a framework for decision-making and oversight.

Role of Your Investment Advisor

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Role of Your Investment Advisor

How your adviser fits into your organization’s governance structure, what responsibilities are delegated to the adviser, and how oversight and accountability are maintained.

Investment Strategy Fundamentals

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Investment Strategy Fundamentals

Asset allocation, diversification, risk and return, and how these concepts apply to your organization’s reserve structure and portfolio.

Portfolio Benchmarking

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Portfolio Benchmarking

How benchmarks are selected, what they measure, and how your committee can use them to evaluate whether performance is tracking as expected.

Reserve Structure and Spending Policy

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Reserve Structure and Spending Policy

How reserves are segmented by time horizon and purpose, how spending policies work, and how the two align with your investment strategy.

Peer Benchmarking

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Peer Benchmarking

Using the Study on Nonprofit Investing (SONI) Dashboard to compare your organization’s financial metrics to similar nonprofits and associations.
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ESG and Values-Based Investing

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ESG and Values-Based Investing

How to incorporate ESG and SRI considerations into investment programs, including approach options, trade-offs, and policy documentation.

How We Deliver Fiduciary Education for Nonprofits and Associations

Nonprofit and association finance committees benefit most from investment education that fits within their existing governance process rather than being treated as a separate event. How education is delivered matters as much as what is covered. We offer several formats depending on your committee’s experience level, meeting cadence, and the topics most relevant to your organization’s investment program.

Educational context is incorporated into your nonprofit or association’s regular committee meetings alongside reporting and performance review. Topics are tailored to what your committee is working through at the time, allowing education to happen within your existing governance cadence.

Annual policy reviews and strategic planning retreats give nonprofit and association finance committees an opportunity to go beyond routine agenda items and focus on broader topics like reserve strategy, spending policy changes, or ESG investing. These sessions allow for more in-depth discussion than a typical quarterly meeting.

Focused sessions for new nonprofit and association committee or board members joining your investment oversight structure. These cover how the investment program is structured, how policy decisions were made, and the current state of the portfolio so new members can participate meaningfully from their first meeting.

Topic-specific sessions designed around your nonprofit or association committee’s questions or a particular issue your organization is working through. These can be scheduled as standalone sessions or incorporated into an existing meeting.

Monthly webinars on a range of topics relevant to nonprofit and association executives. These sessions are open to all industry professionals. Sessions frequently include CAE credits and cover topics beyond investment management, including governance, financial strategy, and organizational leadership. Learn more about our Raffa Learning Community

 
 
 
 
 
 

Knowledge is Meant to Be Shared

Raffa Insights & Resources

Nonprofit investment committee meeting in conference room and discussing investment report and investment benchmarks

Is Your Investment Benchmark Doing Its Job? A Guide for Nonprofits and Associations

Choosing investment benchmarks, and reviewing performance against them consistently, is central to how a finance committee exercises fiduciary oversight of its reserves. This article covers what a benchmark is, how to identify one that fits your portfolio, examples of commonly used benchmarks, and how to monitor performance over time.

Sample Investment Policy Statement

Download our Sample Investment Policy Statement to use as a reference point when evaluating your own policy or starting the conversation with your board.

What's Normal For Nonprofit Reserves?

Learn how to think about reserve structure, investment allocation, and what peer benchmarking data can tell you about where your organization stands.

FAQs 

What are a nonprofit board member's fiduciary duties for investment oversight?

Nonprofit and association finance committee and board members have a fiduciary obligation to oversee the organization’s assets in its best interest. This includes (but is not limited to), the duty of care (making informed decisions), the duty of loyalty (putting the organization’s interests first), and adherence to the organization’s mission and governing documents. An organization’s Investment Policy Statement is useful in providing a clear framework for fulfilling these duties.

Nonprofit and association finance committees should evaluate portfolio performance relative to the benchmarks and allocation targets defined in their Investment Policy Statement. This includes understanding whether returns are in line with expectations, whether asset allocation remains within policy ranges, and whether market conditions or changes in the organization’s financial position warrant a policy discussion. Performance should be reviewed in the context of your reserve structure and time horizons, not just compared to broad market indexes.

Nonprofit and association finance committees typically review their investment program on a quarterly basis. These reviews cover portfolio performance relative to IPS benchmarks, asset allocation compliance, and any developments that may affect the organization’s investment strategy. An annual or strategic review provides an opportunity to address broader topics like reserve structure, spending policy, or changes in organizational direction.

New finance committee and board members at nonprofits and associations should understand how the organization’s investment program is structured, what policies govern it, and what their fiduciary oversight responsibilities are. Familiarity with the Investment Policy Statement, the current reserve structure, and how performance is reported gives new members the context to contribute meaningfully to committee discussions.

An investment adviser for a nonprofit or association typically manages the portfolio within the parameters defined by the organization’s Investment Policy Statement. The finance committee and board retain policy authority and oversight responsibility. The adviser handles day-to-day execution, provides reporting, and brings relevant market or regulatory developments to the committee’s attention. Understanding this division of responsibilities helps your committee focus on governance rather than portfolio decisions.

Peer benchmarking allows nonprofit and association finance committees to compare their organization’s reserve levels, asset allocation, spending rates, and other financial metrics against similar organizations. This context goes beyond portfolio performance and helps committees evaluate whether their investment program is structured appropriately relative to peers. Tools like Raffa’s Study on Nonprofit Investing (SONI) Dashboard provide this type of data specifically for nonprofits and associations. For additional information on reserves and using benchmarks to add valuable context, read our recent article “Are Your Investment Reserves Where They Should Be?”

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