Tech roles at nonprofits
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Tech roles and responsibilities (Lisa (facilitator) / Max / Ryan)
In nonprofits: Sometimes someone becomes the “accidental techie” - the body of knowledge is vast!
- Tech Support
- Someone should be holding tech support (but not necessarily solely responsible for solving)
- Rule of thumb: It generally requires 1 hour per week per person for tech support
- One solution: outsource tech support
- Another solution: empower others to research it OR share your problem-solving skillsets to those who seem interested in addressing issues on their own
- Tech needs & Individual tool management
- If someone is good at something, they should be the one that does it (given that it’s written in their job description)
- Periodically assessing the tools being used - can two be consolidated into one, etc,?
- Designate an owner for each tool (maybe the person who uses it the most)
- Keep an inventory (whether it’s in your password manager or elsewhere) with notes: who’s responsible for the tool
- Offboarding process should include a passing the torch of knowledge
- Documentation
- It’s irresponsible not to have documentation
- It may feel like no one reads it, but nails down organizational practices
- Focus on the 95% of the tool/process usage (the edge-use cases don’t need as much focus)
- Pretend you’re leaving next week - what do you want your replacement to know?
- New people will read it and they have fresh eyes
- Training new people is sometimes a good reason to update documentation (the trainees can even help you)
- FAQs - can point people to resource if something is asked repeatedly
- Example: “How do I set up my out of office message?”,
- Planning, Implementation, Delegating
- Shadowing is a valuable tool
- Time/project management: blocks of time on your calendar specifically for projects (even if you have to later move it)
- Ask yourself, “Is this really urgent?” or “Can it wait?” when receiving new requests, issues. Etc.,
- Being interruptible (available) vs not - it takes time to refocus after interruptions
- Taking a day “off” when you’re actually devoting time for non-interruptible projects
- Orientation to organizational culture (part of onboarding process)
- Communication channels - text versus call versus instant message versus email versus desk visits
- Helps differentiate what’s urgent
- Provides expected wait time for different types of responses
- Expectation management
Notes: NTEN Technology Staffing Reports are worth exploring: Report page