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28 October 2025 | Comment | Article by Harriet Morgan

Building sustainable futures: Why charities must embrace income diversification


The charity sector is no stranger to challenge. Rising demand, escalating costs, and funding uncertainty mean many organisations are under pressure to do more with less. At a recent charity breakfast seminar, I explored how sustainability for charities goes far beyond finance, it is about resilience, adaptability, governance, and culture. My message was simple: income diversification is not just a strategic ambition but an essential safeguard for the future.

Rethinking sustainability: more than money

Sustainability is often thought of as keeping finances balanced. Yet the concept is much broader. A truly sustainable charity is one that has the structures, culture, and adaptability to withstand shocks. This includes embedding strong governance, investing in staff wellbeing, and ensuring that culture encourages innovation as well as accountability.

By reframing sustainability in this way, boards and leadership teams can move beyond “survival mode” to long-term planning, even in times of turbulence.

The hidden risks of income dependence

Too many charities continue to depend heavily on one or two income streams. Whether that is a single contract, a major donor, or a series of fundraising events, this creates exposure if that stream dries up. With costs rising and competition for grants and donations intensifying, over-reliance can leave charities vulnerable.

Diversification is about recognising these risks and acting early to spread them. It does not mean abandoning existing strengths but supplementing them with alternative and complementary income sources.

If your organisation is exploring new ways to strengthen its financial resilience, our Charity team can help you assess opportunities and manage risks with confidence.

Why collaboration strengthens resilience

Collaboration plays a vital role in building resilience. Working in partnership with other organisations, whether charities, funders, or even private sector allies, can open doors to new opportunities, reduce duplication, and allow for shared investment in technology or skills.

For example, charities exploring digital fundraising may find they lack internal capacity. Partnering with a specialist organisation could deliver the capability they need while mitigating cost and risk. Collaboration can also strengthen credibility: funders are increasingly attracted to organisations that demonstrate joint working, efficiency and shared impact.

Balancing today’s needs with tomorrow’s growth

Charities also need to balance immediate demands with future investment. The instinct is often to prioritise today’s service delivery, particularly where beneficiaries face urgent needs. But without investing in tomorrow, whether in digital transformation, staff training, or financial planning ,charities risk weakening their future position.

Boards must therefore strike a careful balance between meeting short-term obligations and setting aside resources to build resilience. This can be challenging, but it is vital for long-term sustainability.

Technology’s role: opportunity and risk

Emerging technologies are already shaping the future of sustainability. Artificial intelligence could bring efficiencies to fundraising campaigns, data analysis, and even service delivery. Social media continues to evolve as both a trust-building tool and a channel for supporter engagement.

But with opportunity comes risk. Over-reliance on technology without considering ethics, accessibility, or reputation can undermine confidence. The lesson here is not to embrace every innovation blindly, but to assess where it can genuinely enhance resilience and long-term impact.

Five actions for the next five years

From my discussions with sector colleagues, I believe charities should focus on five clear actions to strengthen their position:

  • Review income dependencies and stress-test against different funding scenarios.
  • Explore partnerships to diversify capability and spread risk.
  • Embed digital skills across teams, not just within specialist roles.
  • Use AI and social tools to strengthen engagement, while remaining alert to reputational risks.
  • Ensure governance structures are robust and agile enough to respond to sudden change.

Each of these steps reflects a proactive mindset, moving away from reactive firefighting towards deliberate planning.

Conclusion: from survival to sustainability

Sustainability is about far more than financial stability. Charities that embrace diversification, collaboration, and innovation will be better placed to weather uncertainty and continue delivering impact for their communities.

As the sector faces an increasingly complex landscape, boards and leaders must ask themselves tough questions about resilience. The challenge is not only to survive, but to thrive, and to do so in a way that secures trust, confidence, and long-term sustainability.

If your organisation is exploring new ways to strengthen its financial resilience, our Charity team can help you assess opportunities and manage risks with confidence.

Key contact

Harriet Morgan

Partner

Harriet specialises in giving advice to the charity and not for profit sector on governance structures and property advice. Her practice focuses on social housing developments, supported living investment based portfolios, retail and commercial leases for not for profit clients as well as advising charities and not for profits on their governance structures.

Her knowledge of the disposal requirements in the Charities Act 2011 allow her to advise charities of the requirements of that Act, as well as on complex issues with designated land and permanent endowment.

Disclaimer: The information on the Hugh James website is for general information only and reflects the position at the date of publication. It does not constitute legal advice and should not be treated as such. If you would like to ensure the commentary reflects current legislation, case law or best practice, please contact the blog author.

 

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