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How Arts and Culture Nonprofits Can Discover Financial Insights with Comprehensive Forecasting

by: Darcy Copeland
Verified by: CPA

October 30, 2024

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Rising costs and uncertain funding often force arts and cultural organizations to be unsure of their ability to invest in exciting new programs and innovative ideas. But with shifting audience expectations, economic pressures, and evolving donor priorities, organizations need a more sophisticated approach to understand how their decisions will impact their mission in the future. 

Comprehensive financial forecasting equips arts and cultural nonprofits to navigate uncertain funding landscapes and rising costs confidently. It helps you anticipate challenges, make data-driven decisions, demonstrate stability to stakeholders, and address potential shortfalls before they impact your mission.

Previously, we reviewed financial forecasting and why it’s essential for nonprofits. Today, we’re exploring how comprehensive forecasting can help you discover important financial insights.

7 Reasons to Embrace Comprehensive Financial Forecasting

There are plenty of reasons to embrace financial forecasting, from alternative revenue streams to streamlining the tax process. Below, we’ve listed seven ways a more advanced approach to financial forecasting can transform your organization’s future and fuel its mission.

1. Explore Alternative Revenue Streams

Nonprofits can strategically diversify their income sources by accurately predicting revenue and expenses. This approach reduces reliance on traditional funding methods and builds a more sustainable financial model. Ultimately, comprehensive financial forecasting enhances long-term stability and growth potential.

But what is an alternative revenue stream, and how do you incorporate it into your financial forecasting?

An alternative revenue stream is any income source beyond traditional funding methods. They can take a variety of forms for your business:

  • New Partnerships: This can include collaborating with local businesses, attracting corporate sponsorships for exhibitions or programs, and joint ventures with educational institutions for workshops and classes. In your forecast, estimate expected sponsorship revenue based on similar partnerships in the past and factor in any revenue-sharing agreements.
  • Creative Fundraising Campaigns: Consider crowdfunding campaigns for specific projects, social media challenges that encourage donations, peer-to-peer fundraising initiatives led by board members or volunteers, and gamified donation experiences. When forecasting, analyze historical campaign data to project realistic donation targets and allow for seasonal giving patterns.
  • Earned Income Opportunities: Every organization has different ways they can drive additional income. This might include renting your facilities for corporate events or weddings, running membership programs, and hosting special events. This may generate revenue outside the mission of your nonprofit, so take care to determine whether these new revenues will result in Unrelated Business Income Tax liabilities. For your forecast, break down each revenue stream separately and track their growth rates, considering factors like facility capacity and service scalability.

2. Improved Safeguarding of Assets

Cultural institutions like museums are entrusted with protecting priceless artifacts and need reliable financial tools to fulfill this responsibility. This forward-looking approach helps institutions budget for essential resources—from specialized conservation equipment and expert staff to security systems and climate control. 

When forecasting asset protection, assess each collection’s needs and create distinct budget categories for maintenance, security, and conservation. Include regular assessments of equipment lifecycles, staff training requirements, and facility upgrades to project accurate costs over multiple years. Use industry standards and peer institution data to benchmark your conservation and security expenses. This is particularly important for arts and culture organizations, many of which act as stewards of priceless artifacts and works of art that require extensive care. 

3. Identify Future Cash Flow Needs

Financial forecasting helps arts and culture nonprofits plan for their future, from major exhibitions to seasonal changes to daily operations. Detailed forecasting of cash management allows organizations to take a proactive approach to weathering unexpected challenges, planning strategic partnerships, and maintaining core programs even during difficult times.

By analyzing programs, exhibits, and seasonal patterns, institutions can better manage their cash flow and prioritize initiatives that align with their mission and financial goals. Consider each program’s specific timing requirements in your forecast. Factor in advance deposits for exhibitions, staffing costs, marketing expenses, and projected ticket sales and merchandise revenue. Organizations must prepare for different financial scenarios to maintain stable operations. A professional nonprofit accounting advisor can help create projections to understand your cash position under various conditions and track metrics like months of cash on hand, debt service coverage ratios, and program profitability to spot potential issues before they become problems.

4. Develop a Better Visitor Experience

By embracing more sophisticated financial forecasting, organizations unlock greater capacity to make forward-looking investments that improve visitor experiences. When you take a data-driven approach, you can carefully plan major projects and roll them out in stages that make sense for your organization’s projected cash flow. 

For example, a museum might spread out the launch of new interactive exhibits over several years, or a botanical garden might gradually introduce new digital touring features as funding becomes available.

Strategic investments can take many forms, including:

  • Facility Improvements: Long-term financial planning enables institutions to schedule and fund facility upgrades and accessibility enhancements, ensuring their spaces evolve to meet visitor needs and remain inclusive for all
  • Enhanced Programming: Through financial forecasting, organizations can confidently experiment with diverse programming and optimize their event calendars based on seasonal trends, creating unique experiences that attract broader audiences
  • Personalized Services: Careful financial planning allows institutions to invest in advanced visitor tracking systems and ongoing staff training, leading to more personalized and engaging visitor experiences
  • Investment in New Exhibitions: Financial forecasting helps organizations evaluate ambitious exhibition ideas by projecting potential returns and planning phased rollouts, allowing them to make informed decisions about scale, timing, and associated programming

5. Be Responsive to Changing Conditions

While no forecast is perfect, comprehensive forecasting allows organizations to adapt to changing circumstances. That’s why embracing a flexible approach to financial management is important: so you can easily navigate challenges when they arise.

Rather than relying on rigid annual budgets, institutions can use rolling forecasts and scenario planning to quickly adapt their strategies based on emerging trends and unexpected events. Examples include updating your forecasts monthly with actual performance data, adjusting future projections based on emerging trends, and setting up financial dashboards to track data points like attendance, revenue per visitor, and program costs against your forecast to spot variances early.

Another strategy is to conduct regular analysis of performance against forecasts. By tracking variances, investigating root causes, and monitoring broader economic trends, institutions can refine their forecasting methods and make smarter decisions about resource allocation. This might include creating flexible budgets for quick responses to new opportunities or challenges.

6. Define What Financial Success Looks Like

Comprehensive financial forecasting is about working toward a clearly defined version of success. This process involves determining the key performance indicators (KPIs) that are most important to your organization and actively managing against those metrics.

In other words, what does financial success mean for your specific nonprofit?

Once you’ve identified what financial success looks like, you can align your financial strategies with your mission and values. Consider including these in your forecast:

  • Mission-Aligned KPIs: Track visitor numbers, educational impact, and community engagement alongside financial metrics. Your forecast should project monetary and mission-based targets, helping you evaluate the true success of your programs.
  • Long-Term Financial Modeling: Create 3-5-year financial models that include endowment growth projections, capital needs, and program expansion plans. Break these long-term goals into quarterly milestones within your forecast to monitor progress effectively.
  • Integrated Planning: Link your financial targets directly to strategic objectives in your forecast. Set specific revenue and expense targets for each strategic initiative, then track their performance against financial and mission-based goals. Update these targets quarterly based on actual results and changing conditions to maintain a responsive, mission-aligned forecast.

7. Optimize Audit and Form 990 Preparation

Preparing for your nonprofit’s annual audit and Form 990 filing process can be a major undertaking, but if you’ve invested in the financial infrastructure required for comprehensive financial forecasting, you’ll be much better placed. 

By implementing robust financial monitoring systems and maintaining organized digital records, organizations can catch and address issues early before they become problems and result in material weaknesses or significant deficiencies during an audit.

Regular internal audits and strong financial controls are essential for maintaining accurate records throughout the year. This proactive approach includes keeping detailed documentation of transactions, staying current with regulatory changes, and ensuring proper segregation of duties. Organizations can also benefit from maintaining open communication with their auditors year-round, allowing for early identification and resolution of potential issues.

At Smith + Howard, our nonprofit accounting professionals can help you implement these best practices and complete your audit and Form 990 filing efficiently and accurately. With decades of experience advising nonprofits, our team understands the unique challenges organizations like yours face and can help develop systems that meet your needs.

Upgrade Your Financial Management with Smith + Howard

Comprehensive financial forecasting empowers arts and cultural organizations to transform challenges into opportunities. Your organization can build a stronger, more sustainable future through strategic revenue diversification, asset protection, cash flow management, and enhanced visitor experiences. 

Implementing comprehensive forecasting may seem daunting. That’s where Smith + Howard’s experienced nonprofit accounting professionals come in. Our specialists can help you develop a sophisticated financial forecasting system that aligns with your specific values and goals and gives you the insights you need to run your organization more effectively. Contact your advisor to learn how our nonprofit accounting experts can help upgrade your financial forecasting today.

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