generation engage

Mobilize.org and Generation Engage: a Match Made by Millennials

Merge Left

This week Mobilize.org announced it would acquire the assets, staff and programs of Generation Engage. In some ways, it’s surprising to see this merger because it’s not something done every day. In other ways, it’s not surprising at all.

Generation Engage has worked since 2004 to encourage youth civic engagement and to fight the political isolation of youth, particularly those in community college systems. Mobilize.org was founded in 2002 to get the youth of America engaged in the political process and empower them to influence public policy. Their missions are basically identical. They were both founded and are run by Millennials. They are both based in Washington, D.C. The organizations have worked together on a number of projects, including the 80 Million Strong coalition last year. Their similarities might make you wonder why they didn’t merge before now. This merger will save thousands of dollars every year and, if all goes as planned, truly make the resulting organization “more powerful than the sum of its parts,” as Maya Enista says in her announcement letter.

They are doing what many organizations are unwilling to do – recognizing their many commonalities and merging to form a more powerful organization. While there will undoubtedly be growing pains, I’m interested to see where they are six months or a year from now and how they are able to leverage each other’s strengths to move the dial on youth civic engagement. I’m especially glad to see this move from two Millennial-driven and Millennial-focused organizations. One of our strengths as a generation is our collaborative way of working toward change. And this collaboration is not without sacrifice. Generation Engage chairman Justin Rockefeller put the values and mission of the organization he has spent five years building ahead of his personal ego and his organization’s legacy. Much like I have asked Millennials to consider whether starting a new nonprofit is the best use of their resources and passion, Justin seems to have recognized that his team could better serve its mission and have greater impact as part of Mobilize.

Since the economic crisis, financial necessity has driven more organizations to consider and discuss mergers like the one announced this week between Mobilize and Generation Engage. Twenty percent of nonprofits polled by Bridgespan last year said mergers could play a role in how they respond to the economic downturn. But as Bridgespan points out, tight budgets are not the only reason for considering a merger. Just as hardship and necessity often push people to innovations and inventions they would benefit from under ordinary circumstances, mergers can be a smart strategy for healthy organizations as well. Just because two groups of people can afford to run extremely similar organizations does not mean they should.

While for-profit mergers and acquisitions are often incentivized and orchestrated by strategic planners and financial backers, nonprofits cannot always find the same type of support. This may be changing a bit (for example, The Knight Foundation is helping in the Mobilize and Generation Engage partnership), but nonprofits interested in the possibility of a merger may have to get creative as well. In the Stanford Social Innovation Review last year, consultant Jean Butzen suggested nonprofits look to current donors, capacity-building grant programs in your community, national funding opportunities, and pro bono services. For additional resources on nonprofit mergers, check out the Lodestar Foundation and LaPiana Consulting. For now, I tip my hat to Mobilize and to Generation Engage, wish them the best of luck and will be looking forward to reporting on their progress later this year.

Social Citizen Sighting: Decker Ngongang

Decker Ngongang

This interview is part of our "Social Citizen Sightings" series, in which we highlight how people are using their creativity, idealism, and digital fluency to support their causes ever day. If you see a Social Citizen, we would love to hear about what they're doing too. Just fill out this quick form with their name, affiliation and 150 words or less on what makes them a Social Citizen.

 

Name: Decker Ngongang

Organization where you spent more than 40 hours/week: GenerationEngage
 
If you had to describe yourself in one tweet, what would it be?
“I just, wanna be, there's no need to put titles on you and me
Those are limitations; living and learning are our only obligations.
Equality, honesty, independence, intelligence, emotion and devotion
Humbly seeking to hear God when he's speaking” - Cee-lo
(Ok, Decker, that's more than 140 characters, but I'm going to let it go.)
 
Your role model? My little sister Chelsea
 
What are you reading: Community: The Structure of Belonging, by Peter Block
 
How has your personal experience convinced you of the importance of engaging youth and helping them to become active citizens?
I was raised by a single mother and much of my childhood, adolescence and adult successes, failures and overall experiences have been shaped by people and organizations who provided opportunities and windows into things I otherwise would not have had access to. To become an active young person and young citizen, I first had to see it, to learn, to be exposed to different variations of “being engaged” before I could find that form of civic expression that was right for me.
 
You’ve had a lot of powerful speakers for your sessions, including President Clinton, General Colin Powell, Coretta Scott King and Spike Lee. What is the most moving message that has emerged from those talks?
The biggest thing that emerged from many of these high profile conversations is the continued admission at each one of these events by many of our speakers that in trying to inspire young people they aren’t saying anything new. We all, in our varied degrees of recognized importance, have the ability to reinforce a message that social change comes not from huge institutions, not from governments, or from corporations or foundations, but instead it comes from the will of passionate individuals who take the potential energy of passion and unite it with the kinetic energy of organization with others and make change happen.
Whether the speaker is President Bill Clinton or a County Commissioner in Charlotte, N.C., it is our hope that young people who come to a GenerationEngage event see that changing first their communities, and eventually the world, for the better isn’t about waiting on President Clinton to bless an idea or concept – it is empowering their own perspective and experiences with information and a strategy and ACTING.
 
How can local and national civic leaders improve their communication with community college students?
Meet young people where they are; don't just come to an event and give a stump speech. We are in a political age of socialization where - along with knowing what you stand for - young peole want to understand the person making decisions. Using social networking to advertise is different than using social networking as a form of communication with your constituents, fans and observers. Young people such as GenerationEngage’s target demographic need to feel like they have a part to play in owning and directing their future. Civic Leaders have the ability to honor and engage that drive just by listening. , and I can provide you many opportunities to do just that, and we can arrange for you to get in front of these community college students.
 
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