How to make cost recovery more than just about money

26 June 2024 / Insight posted in Articles

As the effects of the cost of living and inflation increases continue to filter down, many charities have seen their income fall and are looking for ways to improve their bottom line. Equally, many charities have been subsidising core services for years from unrestricted funds without fully understanding the impact. In both cases, better cost recovery is a straightforward way to get more money from grants and contracts and secure effective funding for their work.

Improving your cost recovery will also help multiple aspects of your organisation. There is the obvious point that it improves your income, but it can also enhance your management information and strategic decision-making capability – as well as your relationships and negotiating potential with funders. These areas are not new areas of focus within the charity sector but have been areas of underperformance for several years.

Know your costs

To be able to recover costs in a grant or contract bid, you must first know what your costs are. This may sound obvious, but our work at Moore Kingston Smith has found that around a third of all charities don’t accurately know what their services cost. Studies have shown that there is a typical shortfall of between five to 10 percent on all bid submissions and we think similarly. This funding gap then needs to be paid for from somewhere and often ends up being funded from unrestricted reserves, fundraising, or staff overtime.

If you know your costs, then you can start to allocate and apportion them. We have seen numerous charities include costs in their overheads that actually relate to their services, and this makes their overheads look unnecessarily large. For example, building costs are often included in overheads when part of the building is being used to deliver services. This is a real cost of that service and should be counted as such. Something as simple as this could reduce your overheads by a substantial amount.

By simply knowing all your costs and not missing any when costing for bids, will help you get more money for your organisation. Using something as simple as a standardised template with lines for all your organisation’s different costs can help ensure that you don’t leave any costs out. We have found that a template, and having that complete budget template signed-off, are the two most effective ways to improve your cost recovery.

Be transparent

The key message with costing your services and cost recovery is transparency. This applies both internally and externally. If management don’t know how much a service costs, including that service’s portion of overheads and what the surplus or deficit on that service is, then how can they be expected to make informed decisions about the service’s financial viability or sustainability? Good management information is crucial when facing a change in your financial circumstances and should include accurate service breakdowns. If a funder is unwilling to cover all a service’s costs, then management are able to measure this funding gap and sign-off on whether or not they are willing to subsidise that service, and how.

Externally, how are you supposed to have transparent and open conversations with a funder if you aren’t telling the true story of what your services really cost? It may be that you want your services to appear cheaper to funders, but this will create a funding gap to be subsidised from other means if you underprice your services. Additionally, if you then need to go back to the funder in the future and negotiate to close the funding gap, that lack of initial transparency will hinder any subsequent negotiations. We have had clients in the past who have underpriced their services and then found themselves in real financial difficulty when they couldn’t fill that funding gap from other sources and the funder was unwilling to increase their funding.

If funders are unwilling to pay for our services in a sustainable way, then charities need to transparently sign off on that gap and how it will be paid. Alternatively, you may need to sometimes make the difficult choice of saying no to unsustainable grants and contracts where you are unable or unwilling to subsidise the delivery of that service.

More and more funders are realising that overheads are an important part of a charities’ ability to deliver their services and that not having a ‘fair proportion’ of overheads can severely impact on the quality of charities’ work and its long-term viability. With this comes a pledge from those funders to pay for a fair portion of overheads to ensure that charities can deliver their services in a sustainable way.

Charities need to start being open about the true cost of doing their work, and that includes claiming a reasonable portion of overheads on grants and contracts. The work that they do changes lives and so deserves to be funded in a sustainable manner so that we can keep providing that work in the future.

How we can help

Contact our Nonprofit Advisory team for more information on ways your nonprofit organisation or charity can improve your cost recovery.

View all articles in the ‘Seven ways to respond to a change in financial circumstances’ series

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