It’s a question I’ve heard countless times. Having led in both worlds, I can confidently say, leadership is leadership. The fundamentals don’t shift just because the metrics do.
But here’s the thing: the priorities, pressures, and perceptions in each sector couldn’t be more different.
In for-profits, numbers are king. Revenue, margins, and market share drive decisions and define success.
In nonprofits, numbers matter too, but they share the stage with outcomes like impact, community engagement, and staff well-being. Success is measured not just by what’s earned, but by what’s accomplished in the lives of people.
It’s fascinating to see CEOs and senior executives, who in their corporate roles wouldn’t tolerate slipping numbers, advocate in nonprofit boardrooms for rewarding staff simply for trying. This reveals how deeply mission and context influence decision-making.
Here’s an example:
Nonprofits and for-profits occupy different places on the “food chain.”
This distinction creates a different kind of leadership pressure and, unfortunately, sometimes leads to less respect for nonprofit leaders.
When I transitioned to the bank, one of the constant refrains I heard was, “That guy is going to make this a nonprofit bank” And what they meant was I was going to make the bank unprofitable.
I’d be lying if I said it didn’t sting. But those comments came from people who didn’t understand nonprofit leadership. In reality, high-performing nonprofit leaders juggle challenges that rival, and often surpass, those in the corporate world.
Let me be clearer, nonprofit leaders face some of the most complex challenges in decision-making.
They juggle:
It requires extraordinary integrity and skill. If you can lead at a high level within a high-performing nonprofit (and let’s be clear, there are levels to the game), you can likely lead anywhere, once you learn the context.
Here’s the truth: organizations thrive when they have a clear sense of purpose. For-profits that focus solely on profitability risk losing their edge. Mission-driven leadership fosters:
As I often say, if you don’t have money, you don’t have a mission. But the inverse is also true: if you lose sight of the mission, you lose the meaning, and value, behind the money.
Whether you’re leading a nonprofit or a for-profit, the fundamentals of leadership remain the same. The real challenge is balancing both revenue and impact without losing sight of either.
So I’ll leave you with this:
Are you driving profit, purpose, or both?