When budgets are tight — and nonprofit budgets are always tight — capacity building is often the first line item to get cut. Training, strategic planning, technology upgrades, and process improvement are seen as nice-to-haves that can wait until the organization is on firmer financial footing. This thinking is understandable, but it is backwards.
Organizations that defer capacity investments create a self-reinforcing cycle: weak internal systems lead to poor grant performance, which leads to less funding, which leads to less capacity, which leads to even weaker systems. Breaking this cycle requires treating capacity building as a strategic investment, not an administrative expense.
Funders understand this dynamic, which is why capacity building grants have become one of the fastest-growing categories in philanthropy. Foundations are increasingly willing to fund organizational development, technology infrastructure, and staff training because they have seen the evidence: organizations with strong internal capacity deliver better program outcomes.
The key is to pursue capacity building strategically rather than opportunistically. Start with an honest organizational assessment that identifies the most critical gaps. Prioritize investments that will have the broadest impact — a new financial system that improves both grant reporting and donor management, for example, or a strategic plan that aligns the entire organization around shared goals.
Make capacity building part of your funding strategy, not separate from it. Include indirect costs in every grant budget. Pursue dedicated capacity building grants from foundations that offer them. Frame technology investments as program strengthening, not overhead. When you tell the story of capacity building as a path to better outcomes, funders listen.