What if the Economy Tanks?

Plan now to keep your association healthy and members supported through the next downturn.

Red umbrella financial downturn

If you were an AE in 2007 (the year of the economic collapse) you probably haven’t forgotten the drop in membership numbers that dragged down your revenue and spelled the end to a long list of programs and services. You remember the emergency board of directors meetings to authorize use of reserve funds and the creative ways you had to cut spending. You lost staff; maybe you took a pay cut.

All that is just a blurry memory in today’s booming economy and robust real estate market. But don’t be caught off guard. Those REALTOR® associations in 2007 that had sound financial policies, prudent investment of reserve funds, and a contingency plan for economic sluggishness fared well through the great recession; many others did not.

Now is a great time to take stock of your plan (or write one) for the next, inevitable downturn.

What’s your contingency plan?

Your members, directors, and leadership fully expect you to have a plan for steering your association through a recession. Not having a plan could be viewed as irresponsible or, worse, a career-ending failure to exercise due care. Entering a recession without a thoughtful, comprehensive plan can lead to hasty decisions, inefficiencies, and costly delays.

The size of your association will dictate the complexity of your plan, but every association should have one. At its most basic, an economic contingency plan details what steps your association will take to ensure the financial stability of the organization. It addresses where spending will be cut by prioritizing association services and programs.

The plan should outline a comprehensive menu of cost-saving initiatives that could be implemented in the event of a downturn. These might include reductions in travel, events, education, marketing, consulting fees, community support, charitable giving, personnel, or even salaries. They also might include suspending or discontinuing certain services or programs or charging a fee for them. Cost savings may also include delaying capital expenditures, such as new computers or furnishings, or selling assets such as property or vehicles. Your plan may also address alternative revenue-generating ideas including renting out association property or offering fee-for-service business support.

A vetted, predetermined contingency plan saves precious time when the day comes to implement it. Plus, when association leaders are involved in the plan’s development and approval, there is a broader base of support for its execution. That support base leads to more efficient implementation, making your job easier.

Notice: The information on this page may not be current. The archive is a collection of content previously published on one or more NAR web properties. Archive pages are not updated and may no longer be accurate. Users must independently verify the accuracy and currency of the information found here. The National Association of REALTORS® disclaims all liability for any loss or injury resulting from the use of the information or data found on this page.

Get Help Drafting a Financial Contingency Plan

As with your business plan, strategic plan, and crisis management plan, hiring a planning professional to guide you and your leadership through the stages of crafting a financial contingency plan is ideal.

Whether it’s your association accountant, a financial consultant, another AE with experience, someone from your local college or university, or another type of facilitator, make sure the individual is familiar with how a membership organization operates and the role of bylaws and policy in its management.

Free resources are available to AEs as e-books through the National Association of REALTORS® Library .

Reserve funds: How much is enough?

Although how much to have stocked away will be different for every association, many follow The Seven Measurements from the American Society of Association Executives, which has become the benchmark for a large portion of the association world. According to The Seven Measurements, the formula—or minimum goal—recommended for associations is 50 percent of annual operating expenses. For example, an association with $100,000 in annual operating expenses would strive to maintain at least $50,000 in operating reserves at all times.

REALTOR® associations often strive for more than the minimum and how much, exactly, should be spelled out in association policy.

Consider what other associations do, consult financial experts, and then have an in-depth dialogue with leadership to determine how much is needed to reach a collective level of comfort.

Your financial contingency plan should outline a comprehensive menu of cost-saving initiatives that could be implemented in the event of a downturn.

Update your policy on spending reserves

Some AEs say their members want reserves used for lowering dues in tough times. Other AEs say their members would rather see deeper cuts in programs, services, and operating expenses before resorting to tapping into reserves. Save a lot of debate and discussion at critical times when tensions are high by writing a reserve policy today that prioritizes how to spend reserves.

A good reserve policy, experts agree, addresses investment practices and guidelines for use of principal and yields once the benchmark amount has been reached and maintained. For example, after your minimum balance is achieved, will the yields be used for capital improvements, spent on new program development, saved for one-time unexpected expenditures, or used for something else?

Your reserve policy and reserve levels should be reviewed annually by the finance committee, which can make recommendations to the Board of Directors, as necessary.

Tell members how you’re helping

Even the most well-thought-out contingency plan can fail if it’s not transparent or not communicated effectively to members. As the last downturn showed, members who are struggling economically can become critical of each dues dollar spent. Some may resent your stable paycheck and fail to see your empathy with their situation. After the last financial crisis, some association executives volunteered to take a pay cut or pay freeze even though their associations were actually in a safe financial position. Many inauguration balls and holiday parties were canceled or scaled back in solidarity with members, not out of association financial necessity. Associations also established benevolent funds during the last downturn to aid members in financial hardship (see the Benevolent Funds Toolkit at nar.realtor).

If you’ve planned well, your association can weather the next downturn without much disruption, but the same may not be true of your members’ businesses. Plan now for how you can help members through the tough times with education focusing on doing more with less or cutting business expenses, a new menu of free services, or a temporary dues reduction. Make sure your contingency plan is ready when the time comes—and it will come.

Save a lot of debate and discussion at critical times when tensions are high by writing a reserve policy today that prioritizes how to spend reserves.

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