What is good stewardship? For a nonprofit provider, it is 2 things: preservation (of organizational strength, mission and the trust of those served), and change (to adapt to new demands and innovate for the future). Choose an article below to learn about how LeadingAge members approach both.
- Where Stewardship Comes Naturally: A look at this issue of LeadingAge Magazine from the Editor.
- Stewardship of Affordable Housing Must be a LeadingAge Priority: A conversation with Retirement Housing Foundation’s Laverne Joseph on why the HUD 202 program must be revitalized.
- Stewardship: Balancing Risk and Responsibility: For mission-driven organizations committed to maintaining viability for the long term, stewardship requires both cautious preservation and a willingness to take risks to change for the future. Here is a look at how some providers achieve that balance.
- Faith-Based Stewardship: Faith-based providers preserve their missions and religious heritage by serving low-income seniors. Here is a look at how a few of them put stewardship into action.
- Donor Stewardship For Mission and Stability: For nonprofit providers, building long-term relationships with donors is crucial to successful fundraising and preserving long-term stability.
- Stewardship and Bricks and Mortar: Despite the steady growth of home and community-based services allowing seniors to remain in their own homes, there will always be a need for senior living in all its permutations. Even so, stewardship of those resources might look different in years to come.
- Building an Inclusive Organization: What does good stewardship of the climate and culture inside a provider organization require?
- Intergenerational Friendships Under One Roof: This Students-in-Residence Program—a partnership between a LeadingAge member and a nearby university—is building friendships and exploding myths about people of different generations.
- This I have Learned: Essays from nonprofit leaders.
- Engineers, Artists and Dedicated Staff – These Are the People We Serve: LeadingAge members tell the stories of remarkable people they work for—and with—every day.