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Financial Analytics for Non-Profits: Cost to Raise a Dollar, Functional Expense, and Grant Burn

Financial analytics for nonprofit CFOs — cost to raise a dollar by source and channel, functional expense analytics aligned to Form 990, grant burn rate and compliance analytics, and the financial analytics that informs board conversations about program investment and fundraising efficiency.

Why Non-Profit Financial Analytics Is Stewardship Math

Non-profit financial analytics isn't enterprise FP&A — it's stewardship math. Cost to raise a dollar by source (major gifts vs annual fund vs events vs peer-to-peer) and by channel. Functional expense ratios (program / total expenses) that donors and watchdog sites (Charity Navigator, GuideStar / Candid, BBB Wise Giving) scrutinize. Grant burn rate against budget and the compliance reporting funders require. Program cost per outcome for program investment decisions. Reserve adequacy against the volatility of contribution revenue. Each of these depends on methodology nonprofits debate — how joint costs get allocated, how indirect costs get attributed to programs, how in-kind contributions get valued. The CFO and finance committee spend as much time on these analytical questions as on the standard close — and most nonprofits answer them with spreadsheets.
Non-profit financial analytics that supports board and stewardship decisions automates the spreadsheet work and documents the methodology. Cost to raise a dollar with source and channel attribution using fundraising data and allocated expenses. Functional expense with program/management/fundraising allocation documented for audit and 990. Grant burn rate against budget with indirect cost allocation. Program cost per outcome with the fully-loaded methodology the board has validated. Reserve analytics with the Financial Health of Charities benchmarking. Done with this analytical discipline, financial analytics becomes a strategic input to board conversations. Done as spreadsheets, it stops at basic budget variance.

How Non-Profits Apply It

Cost to Raise a Dollar & Fundraising Efficiency

Cost-to-raise-a-dollar analytics by fundraising source (major gifts, annual fund, events, planned giving, grants) and by channel. With the allocated cost methodology (direct + allocated) the CFO and development team have agreed.

CTR$1 + source + channel + allocated methodology

Functional Expense & Watchdog Ratios

Functional expense analytics aligned to Form 990 program/management/fundraising with joint cost allocation. Watchdog ratios (program expense %, fundraising efficiency, administrative ratio) that Charity Navigator and Candid evaluate.

Functional + 990 + watchdog + program %

Grant Burn Rate & Program Economics

Grant burn rate against budget with indirect cost allocation, program cost per outcome analytics for program investment decisions, and reserve adequacy analytics against contribution revenue volatility.

Grant burn + program cost + reserves

What You Receive

Non-profit financial analytics delivered for board and stewardship decisions: cost to raise a dollar by source and channel, functional expense with 990 alignment, grant burn rate with indirect cost, program cost per outcome, reserve analytics, integration with fund accounting and CRM, and the analyst training that makes it sustainable.

From Our Blog

Financial Analytics for Non-Profit — FAQ

How do you handle joint cost allocation for communications that both fundraise and educate?

Through the SOP 98-2 methodology (now Accounting Standards Codification 958-720) with the purpose, audience, and content criteria that determine allocation eligibility. We document the methodology for the auditor and apply it consistently in the analytics. This is a specific nonprofit accounting issue that generic financial analytics misses.

Yes — through analytics that track the ratios these evaluators use (program expense percentage, fundraising efficiency, administrative cost ratio) with the methodology transparency nonprofit best practices require. We don't optimize for the ratios at the expense of mission; we make sure the mission's financial story gets told accurately.

Yes. Pre-qualified analysts with nonprofit financial experience — cost to raise a dollar, functional expense, grant compliance, program economics, and the stewardship analytical discipline nonprofit financial analytics requires. 92% first-match acceptance.

Financial Analytics for
Board and Stewardship Decisions

Cost to raise a dollar, functional expense, grant burn — the financial analysis that informs program investment and fundraising efficiency.