Written by: Hugh Munro
Drawing on Capacity Canada’s work with nonprofit leaders and organizations across the sector, this article offers a transformation view of the COO role: one that moves beyond internal operations toward stewardship of people, programs, partnerships, and system resilience. Chief Operating Officers and operational leaders are navigating one of the most complex environments in recent history. Charged with translating mission into delivery, they sit at the intersection of strategy, people, funding, and systems. Today, the role is defined less by steady execution and more by continuous adaptation.
The Financial Squeeze: Managing Instability, Not Just Budgets
Perhaps the most defining challenge facing nonprofit COOs is financial volatility. Fluctuating revenues, rising costs, and growing competition for funding mean operational leaders are no longer simply managing budgets—they are managing risk. Short-term, restricted funding continues to dominate, limiting flexibility and pushing organizations toward reactive rather than strategic decisions.
At the same time, inflation is driving up wages, rent, and program costs while donation levels remain unpredictable. The result is a structural imbalance: organizations are expected to do more with fewer unrestricted resources.
Workforce Pressures: Caring for the Caregivers
The workforce crisis is not a future risk—it is a current operational constraint. Vacancies, burnout, and wage inequities are reshaping how organizations deliver services. COOs are increasingly responsible for workforce sustainability: caring for the caregivers by protecting staff wellbeing, designing healthier workflows, investing in culture, and rethinking how work gets done.
The challenge is not simply hiring more people; it is creating conditions where staff can continue to do demanding, mission-driven work without being depleted by it.
Demand Outpacing Capacity: Choosing What to Stop
Nonprofit COOs are also operating in a paradox: demand for services continues to rise while organizational capacity struggles to keep pace. This creates difficult trade-offs about where to invest limited resources without compromising mission integrity. Increasingly, effective COOs are focusing energy and funding on the services that deliver the greatest social value—and being willing to rationalize programs that are no longer mission critical.
This includes the hard but necessary work of letting go of programs or services that may be valued but are better delivered by others. Strategic focus is not about doing less good; it is about directing limited capacity where the organization is uniquely positioned to make the greatest difference.
Rethinking Sustainability: From Organizational Survival to System Resilience
Traditional notions of sustainability have focused on the survival of individual organizations. But a growing perspective among operational leaders is that sustainability must be reframed at the system level. The question is no longer “How does our organization survive?” but “How does the work continue—regardless of who delivers it?”
This shift requires COOs to think beyond organizational boundaries and ask whether duplication, competition for scarce funding, and fragmented delivery models are truly serving communities. In many cases, they are not.
Collaboration, Partnerships, and the Case for Mergers
Collaboration is emerging as a central operational strategy. This includes shared services, strategic partnerships, and, in some cases, organizational mergers. Once viewed as a last resort, mergers are increasingly being reframed as proactive ways to strengthen impact, reduce administrative overhead, and build more resilient service delivery systems.
For COOs, this brings both opportunity and complexity. Collaboration requires alignment of cultures, systems, governance, and funding models. It also demands a mindset shift—from ownership and control toward shared accountability and collective impact.
Governance and Accountability: Navigating Complexity
Governance remains a critical dimension of operational leadership. Board engagement and accountability can either accelerate or stall effectiveness. COOs play a pivotal role in bridging strategy and execution, translating board direction into measurable outcomes while managing compliance and transparency requirements.
Administrative and Systemic Burden: The Hidden Cost of Doing Good
A less visible but deeply impactful challenge is the administrative burden associated with funding and compliance. Complex reporting requirements and grant restrictions consume significant capacity, diverting time and energy away from service delivery and innovation.
Technology and Adaptation: Opportunity Under Constraint
Technology offers a pathway to greater resilience. Nonprofits are adopting digital tools and AI to improve efficiency and streamline operations. But the challenge is not simply adoption—it is integration. Technology must be embedded into operations, culture, and decision-making.
Conclusion: From Operations to Stewardship of Resilience
The nonprofit COO role is undergoing a fundamental shift. No longer confined to internal operations, today’s leaders are stewards of organizational—and increasingly system-level—resilience.
What distinguishes effective operational leadership is adaptability: the ability to prioritize under pressure, align resources to mission, care for staff, and build partnerships beyond organizational walls. The most forward-looking leaders are willing to rethink sustainability itself—embracing collaboration, shared models, and even mergers where they strengthen long-term impact.
COOs are not just keeping organizations running—they are making disciplined choices about people, programs, and system-level resilience.
At Capacity Canada, we see these realities playing out every day in our work with nonprofit leaders across the country. Through our COO Peer Group, operational leaders are creating space to reflect, share hard-earned insights, and navigate complexity together. In a role that is often isolated but critically important, this kind of collective learning is not just valuable, it is essential to building the resilient, collaborative systems our sector needs. Capacity Canada Executives in Residence like Hugh Munro can help your organization navigate these realities. Connect with us today!
About Hugh Munro
♦Hugh Munro is a design-thinking consultant with Capacity Canada’s Capacity by Design Program, a marketing and strategy educator and advisor across sectors, and the Marketing Director on the Board of the Kitchener Blues Festival, with a distinguished academic career as a Professor at Wilfrid Laurier University where he held several leadership roles.
Email: hugh@capacitycanada.ca
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