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In this first video in our series about supporting college foundations, Dan Swanson, Assurance Manager, shares his passion for helping college foundations fulfill their missions. With more than a decade of experience in the firm and a lifelong connection to education, Dan explores the unique financial challenges and opportunities that college foundations face.
Transcript
Welcome everybody. I’m very excited to be here today. My name is Dan Swanson. I am an Assurance Manager here at Cray Kaiser. I’ve been with the firm for about 12-13 years now, and I wanted to talk about a subject matter that I’m very passionate about. And that is college foundations and some of the important factors that we need to be considering, some of the hot topic issues. I want to talk about some success stories, some issues that they commonly face.
One of the reasons I’m very passionate about this, because we always hear that question, if I wasn’t an accountant, what would I be doing? You know, I’m a big fan of education, my parents were teachers, I have brothers that are teachers, so if I wasn’t an accountant, I would be a teacher. So by serving these college foundations, I feel like I get the best of both worlds. I’m helping students, while getting to use my accounting knowledge and expertise. So, it’s very near and dear to me. So, I wanted to kind of talk about foundations and how we here at CK have helped foundations in a number of different areas.
So, when you think of college foundations, what do you think about? You know, what are some of their big struggles? What are they? What’s their mission? What’s their vision? What are their values? So, with college foundations is they get funds, they get dollars, they get money, they get to invest, and hopefully those earnings, it earns returns, which then turn into scholarships, turns into real dollars for real students to pay for real education. So sounds simple, but if you only had like two or three scholarship funds, not a big deal, but some of our clients that we serve have over a hundred different individual unique scholarship funds or program funds and they have millions of dollars of investments. So how do we ensure that everybody’s getting their fair share of these investment earnings. How do we ensure that the financial statements are telling an accurate story to the board, to the executive director, to the finance committee, to all those involved to make sure the end to the day, the maximum amount of dollars are going out to students to serve the mission.
A big thing that I see with a lot of these foundations is the budgets. Every year, the board, the finance committee comes up with budgets. How much are we going to budget to spend out in scholarships? How much are we going to budget for various, just kind of general expenditures? So how do we make sure on a monthly basis our budgets to actual are being monitored and tracked and appropriately recorded. So that’s the overall goal. That’s the overall purpose of what we here try to accomplish when working with foundations.
The board, the finance committee spends a lot of time coming up with budgets. Whether it’s kind of revenue budgets based upon donations that are coming in or investment earnings. But it’s also some of those management in general costs, you know, because we all know that there’s some just overhead that they need to cover. They need software, they need to pay for people, supplies, printers, etc. So, it’s not 100 % of it’s not going to scholarships. There are these overhead manager, we try to minimize it or they try to minimize it, but there are those costs. So a good way to kind of monitor and track that is through like is through budgets.
So how do we make sure as expenses are being incurred and checks are being cut, that we’re matching up the right expense item to the right budgeted line item. Seems simple but it can get it can get kind of tricky depending on the volume of invoices and who’s coding the invoices. You know, are we consistently coding this vendor to this budgeted line item? So again, what I like is kind of being on the outside is we’re that second set of eyes. You know, we can go in there and kind of build some of these expenses and enter your payables and run your checks for you. But you know, you are the kind of the initial person at you being the foundation, but we’re that second set of eyes. Hey, did you think about that? Did you think about this? Does this match up with the budget? And then we can kind of catch some inconsistencies in real time. And as we catch them, we can try to implement best practices because consistency is key. So, if we can implement these best practices, we’re consistent. And then the financials, again, tell the story. If you have any questions that you would want to ask me, you know, please feel free to reach out. You can go to the Cray Kaiser website and you can find me again I’m Dan Swanson. I’m an assurance manager here.