"I was aware that the Harvard Business School Club of NYC offered its alumni an opportunity to use their business and leadership skills to help nonprofits solve their pressing issues," Haller said. "I wondered why Booth could not also help in the Chicago area where no other MBA alumni associations were addressing the opportunity."
Eventually, the idea for BANC was launched as a way to match the desire among Booth alumni to give back to their communities and the need for external help expressed by nonprofit organizations.
BANC offers Chicago nonprofits the opportunity to tap into Booth alumni skills by providing pro bono consulting in a number of areas: growth strategies, process development and operations evaluations, performance reporting and dashboards, strategic planning, marketing planning, community engagement, and program evaluations. BANC also offers Chicago-area Booth alumni pro bono opportunities to help nonprofits deepen their knowledge of the nonprofit sector and connect with fellow Booth graduates.
Since its launch, BANC has grown tremendously. The pilot program started with two projects in 2016, and now has two cycles per year, helping at least five organizations per cycle. Among its accomplishments:
- Completion of a strategic growth plan for an economic development organization
- Promotion and pricing strategy for a growing social services organization that serves the most at-risk population in Illinois.
- Developing a marketing plan to help a Chicago theater with two proposed strategic partnerships to increase audience attendance
- Recommended financial systems and process flow improvements and created high level requirements for a new financial software package for a social service organization that helps low-income individuals find and retain employment.