Commission's latest Economic Survey of Charities. HIV Support Group for People Affected by HIV in Nottinghamshire. State of the Sector V | nicva. State of the Sector V - Northern Ireland Voluntary and Community Sector Almanac 2009 Now in its fifth edition its contribution towards our understanding of the voluntary and community sector is as relevant as ever. As is discussed throughout the report the sector that exists today is very different to the one that was first examined 12 years ago in the first State of the Sector. State of the Sector V can be downloaded in sections in pdf format. What's in it? Overview: the basic facts of State of the Sector V and a wider discussion of the headline figures are included in this section. Introduction: includes various definitions used to classify the voluntary and community sector.
An outline of the different methodologies that have been employed to produce is also included in this section. Profile: looks at the voluntary and community sector in its widest context and provides a breakdown of how the sector is structured in its activities and geographic remit. Key facts 4,700 organisations Price: State of the Sector survey: funding is the sector's main worry - Third Sector, 19 January 2010 What are the voluntary sector's priorities for the years ahead and what are the perceived keys to success?
More than 700 people working in the sector gave their answers last month in the biennial State of the Sector survey by Third Sector and research agency nfpSynergy. Looking ahead: Income remains the principal worry The need to maintain or increase funding was the top priority for the respondents, and many of their other needs were related to this. Joe Saxton, co-founder of nfpSynergy, says the recession might have focused minds on finance, but it is unlikely to be the reason why funding is at the top of the list. "It reflects the reality for a lot of organisations, particularly smaller organisations whose lives are mostly concerned with getting by," he says.
Skills: Areas where charities feel they lack the right talent What's important? What's the problem? Respondents saw sustainable funding as the sector's biggest challenge by far.
Onsite Training. Let us do the travelling For co-located groups and specialist audiences it is often more effective and motivating for training to be delivered onsite – as well as reducing the overhead of extra travel and accommodation costs. All of the workshops in our current catalogue (including those with BTEC-accreditation) are available for onsite training. Prices start from £999 for a one-day workshop with up to 12 attendees. To book an onsite workshop from our catalogue, please use the form below and one of our team will contact you directly. Details of how we run our onsite training can be found in our Onsite Terms & Conditions. A full day of training can cost as little as £85 per person Make an enquiry If you would like more information, fill in the online form or email enquiries@netskills.ac.uk and we'll get straight back to you.
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