A Mid-Year Checkup for Nonprofit Leaders
Midway through the year, most nonprofit leaders are running on caffeine, commitment, and the faint memory of what “work-life balance” used to feel like. Strategic plans written for your current fiscal year are now covered in sticky notes, revised budgets, and optimistic phrases like “pivot if necessary.”
It’s the perfect time for a nonprofit organizational health check.
Not a panic session. Not a blame exercise. And not another meeting that could have been an email.
A mid-year health check is a chance to pause long enough to ask a few critical questions: Are we making progress toward our mission? Are our goals still realistic? What is working well enough to repeat? And most importantly, is our team healthy enough to sustain the work ahead?
The strongest nonprofits are not the ones that never struggle. They are the ones willing to pause, reflect, adjust, and adapt before small problems become organizational emergencies.
Step One : Pause. Really. Stop what you are doing
The Tyranny of the Urgent by Charles E. Hummel is a short but influential book about how people become trapped by immediate demands and distractions at the expense of what truly matters.
Hummel argues that many people, especially leaders, professionals, and mission-driven individuals, spend their lives reacting to:
- deadlines
- interruptions
- crises
- emails
- meetings
- other “urgent” demands
while neglecting activities that are deeply important but not immediately pressing, such as:
- long-term planning
- relationship building
- reflection
- strategic thinking
- and personal renewal
The book’s famous core idea is: “Your greatest danger is letting the urgent things crowd out the important.”
Step Two: Reconnect with the Mission
Somewhere between grant deadlines, fundraising campaigns, program delivery, and emergency Zoom calls, organizations can drift from their original priorities. Mid-year is the time to examine whether current activities still align with the mission or whether “urgent” has quietly replaced “important.”
Look closely at your programs and initiatives. Which ones are producing measurable impact? Which are draining time and resources without meaningful outcomes? Nonprofits are especially vulnerable to mission creep because saying “yes” feels generous. But healthy organizations understand that strategic “no” is sometimes the most mission-driven decision they can make.
Step Three: Honest review of goals
This is where many leaders become unnecessarily hard on themselves. If your organization is behind on some goals, congratulations, you are operating in the real world. Economic shifts, staffing changes, donor behavior, policy changes, and community needs all evolve faster than annual strategic plans.
The purpose of reviewing goals is not to prove perfection. It is to determine what needs adjustment while there is still time to act.
Review fundraising targets, program metrics, operational improvements, volunteer engagement, and community impact. Identify what is on track, what is stalled, and what may need adjustment. Responsible leadership is not stubbornly pursuing a broken plan. Responsible leadership is knowing when to adapt.
And while data matters, numbers alone do not tell the full story. A nonprofit can hit every fundraising benchmark while quietly exhausting its staff. It can deliver successful programs while the team is falling apart behind the scenes. Organizational health is as much about people as performance.
Pay attention to morale. Are staff energized or depleted? Are board members engaged or just attending meetings while their souls are elsewhere? What concerns keep surfacing in conversations but never seem to make it onto official agendas?
Sometimes the most important indicators are not found in spreadsheets but in hallway conversations, staff turnover, and the tone of team meetings.
Step Four: Recognize Success
Nonprofits are often excellent at analyzing what went wrong and surprisingly poor at studying what went right. If a fundraising campaign exceeded expectations, ask why. If a partnership created meaningful community impact, document what made it successful. If a new process reduces stress and improves efficiency, do not let it get lost in the hustle.
Build long-term resilience by intentionally repeating successful behaviors instead of relying on accidental victories and heroic last-minute efforts.
Step Five: Adapt
Finally, turn reflection into action. A mid-year health check should end with clear priorities for the second half of the year.
Identify two or three top priorities. Clarify who owns the priority. Do not try to eat the entire elephant. Celebrate progress. Acknowledge the challenges. Protect staff capacity.
Stopping to reflect and evaluate does NOT slow down the delivery of the mission… it protects it. Nonprofits do extraordinary work. But even the most passionate mission cannot thrive indefinitely on exhaustion, misalignment, and crossed fingers.
Read that again.