Success Story Community Literacy of Ontario, Barrie

“Community Literacy of Ontario is a provincial network serving 100 literacy agencies all across Ontario. We have effectively used technology over the past five years to save our organization in its internal operations and to save our members programs time and money in their professional development.  Given that CLO is governed by a provincial board of 12 regional directors, it costs our organization a great deal of money to hold face-to-face Board meetings. Our organization is very small and face-to-face meetings were really stretching our budget to the breaking point. We tried conference calls, but had limited success because they aren’t very user-friendly for many people. Based on this, we tried out holding our meetings using live, state-of-the-art online software called “Centra” with voice-over-Internet capability. Now, we hold most board meeting and all committees meetings on Centra. Our Board and staff all love this interactive ways of meeting and it saves us a ton of money.”

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Food For Thought

Financially vibrant organizations do not limit their thinking to good stewardship and financial management. They go further and reflect on how their resourcing model and program model fit together and connect to their values about the work they do and the people they ask to help to do it.  It is a more systemic approach to creating an integrated vision of how money works to create value in communities. From this perspective, a financial statement is just a check-in with the financial roadmap and a proposal is a means to a collaborative relationship with someone else’s money, rather than a stopgap to keep the program going for a little while longer.

Project PartnersONESTEP OAYEC ACTEW
Special Thanks to Our SponsorsTHE ONTARIO TRILLIUM FOUNDATION EMPLOYMENT ONTARIO