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HBS Community Partners: California YMCA Youth & Government Consulting Project Final Presentation and Discussion January 25, 2019

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Page 1: HBS Community Partners: California YMCA Youth & …

HBS Community Partners: California YMCA Youth & Government

Consulting Project

Final Presentation and Discussion

January 25, 2019

Page 2: HBS Community Partners: California YMCA Youth & …

The Volunteer Team

Kunal Merchant

• Managing Director of Lotus Advisory.• HBS MBA ‘07

Jim MillsConsulting Partner

• Consultant

• HBS MBA ‘86

John Senaldi

• CEO and Founder of Freeslate, Inc.• HBS MBA ‘93

Cindy WangProject Liaison

• VP Marketing & E-Commerce, Tea

Collection.

• HBS MBA ‘03

Page 3: HBS Community Partners: California YMCA Youth & …

Context

3

● CYYG initially engaged HBS Community Partners (HBSCP) to help assess how CYYG might elevate its brand, expand its participant base, and optimize its relationship with Y.

● HBSCP’s midterm presentation in November 2018 provided early thinking on competitive analysis, market positioning and Y affiliation.

● Based on CYYG feedback, HBSCP shifted its focus for the second half of the engagement to examine two areas:○ Further analysis of competitive landscape.○ “Dabbling” with a new program model in Fresno.

Page 4: HBS Community Partners: California YMCA Youth & …

Executive Summary

4

Recommendations are in two areas:

• Differentiating CYYG vs competitors.

o Depth of Civic Skills via progressive, experiential knowledge.

o Solid partnerships provide strong “cost-to-student” advantage.

• Learning roadmap for exploring new approaches in Fresno (vs. specific plan and programming direction).

o Prioritization of desired “strategic insights” and early learning drive specific program choice(s).

o Checklist to ensure prepared for success.

Page 5: HBS Community Partners: California YMCA Youth & …

Competitive Analysis

John Senaldi, Cindy Wang

Page 6: HBS Community Partners: California YMCA Youth & …

CYYG Sits Within Two Crowded Markets

YOUTH DEVELOPMENT CIVIC ENGAGEMENT

6

Page 7: HBS Community Partners: California YMCA Youth & …

CYYG’s Primary “Sub-segment” is “Civic Skills”

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Page 8: HBS Community Partners: California YMCA Youth & …

Competitive Comparision

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• Program strength aside, CYYG in general compares unfavorably against competitors in driving awareness.

CYYGBoys (Girls) State

US Senate Youth

Mock Trial (ConstRights Fndtn)

Junior State of America

(JSA)

Model UN

Duration / Depth

Inclusion (= GOOD)

Awareness M-L High M-H M-L High M-H

Cost (to Student)

Partner Strength

Worst Fair Better Note: Exclusivity, Student Cost and partner strength linked

Page 9: HBS Community Partners: California YMCA Youth & …

Current Positioning: Cost-Challenged

9

PR

OG

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EP

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: K

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wle

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ev

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d

COST (to student/delegate)D

EE

P:

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ex

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rie

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al l

ea

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g

LOW HIGH

LOW

: sh

ort

con

fere

nce

s

While depth is strong,

inclusion goal presents

cost (per delegate)

challenge

Mock Trial

Page 10: HBS Community Partners: California YMCA Youth & …

CYYG Needs to Focus on Its Strengths

10

• Current promotional material (including website) is too broadly focused on youth development, diluting its biggest differentiation and strength in civic skills.

• Clearly articulate mission and differential values in all promotional materials.

– Purpose: to “strengthen our democracy” – is this what will resonate

with target customer?

– Focus is to build: solid civic skills.

– By building deep knowledge of how our government (democracy) works.

– By providing progressive learning and deep experiential activities over long term (6 months).

• And highlight more specific differentiation vs. more comprehensive programs.

Page 11: HBS Community Partners: California YMCA Youth & …

Develop a More Holistic Approach to Partnerships

11

• Network/partnerships critical to driving awareness and fundraising.

• Look into development of deeper partnerships?

– Constitutional Rights Foundation seems to have teachers “locked in” through professional development and other programs, Common Core, etc.

– Explore CA Foundations with focus on Civic skills?

– Explore complimentary collaboration with / introductions by Youth Leadership Institute (YLI) (strong presence in Fresno).

– Explore CA “law” that sponsors Y&G tied to Foundation funding of Sacramento week?

Page 12: HBS Community Partners: California YMCA Youth & …

And Expand Access to Students

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• CYYG seeks to expand accessibility to lower income student populations.

• To do so, CYYG must reduce cost to students in one of two ways:

- Reduce actual costs of program (e.g. less depth, shorter program).

- Decrease cost to students (e.g., subsidize via fundraising, partnerships).

• Fresno offers opportunity to experiment with an alternative program model along one or both of these lines.

Page 13: HBS Community Partners: California YMCA Youth & …

Fresno “Dabble” Roadmap

Kunal Merchant, Cindy Wang

Page 14: HBS Community Partners: California YMCA Youth & …

Why Fresno?

14

Fresno is an attractive “test market” for an alternative program model for several reasons:

- Existing presence (CYYG already has some relationships and infrastructure in place).

- Open sandbox (limited Y presence).

- Target population (73,000 students in Fresno USD, including many who meet target demographic profiles).

- Proximity (<3 hour drive from main CYYG HQ in Sacramento).

Page 15: HBS Community Partners: California YMCA Youth & …

Target Market: Fresno County

15

Total Population: 989,255

Total Households: 301,824

% Population Under 18: 28.5%

Median HH income: $48,730

Primary School District: Fresno Unified

Total enrollment: 73,000

Page 16: HBS Community Partners: California YMCA Youth & …

Fresno: Defining Success

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What would it take for a Fresno “dabble” to be successful?

IMPACTFUL

CYYG able to serve new higher need population in meaningful way.

SELF-SUSTAINING

Fresno program can pay and run itself without undue strain on broader CYYG finances and operations.

INSIGHTFUL

CYYG gathers meaningful insights to inform broader questions of growth, strategy, marketing, partnerships, and programming

Page 17: HBS Community Partners: California YMCA Youth & …

Fresno: Checklist Before Embarking

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STEP 1: SQUARE UP WITH THE Y

CYYG gets clearance and blessing of Y to embark on different program model in Fresno.

• Incubation of Fresno program within existing CYYG entity?

• Formal MOU or equivalent to cover use of Y marks, branding and other IP?

• Notification and consent from state alliance and other key actors?

• Other legal, financial and administrative considerations?

Page 18: HBS Community Partners: California YMCA Youth & …

Fresno: Checklist Before Embarking

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STEP 2: FIND A LOCAL CHAMPION

CYYG identifies one or more influential individuals in Fresno market to open doors and raise awareness of CYYG’s desired plans.

Potential options:

• Hon. Lee Brand (current Mayor).• Hon. Ashley Swearengin (former Mayor, current ED of Central

Valley Community Foundation).• Fresno USD Board and Superintendent.• Prominent CYYG alumni?• Other prominent residents.

Page 19: HBS Community Partners: California YMCA Youth & …

Fresno: Checklist Before Embarking (cont’d)

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STEP 3: SECURE STRONG LOCAL PARTNERS

In absence of Y infrastructure, CYYG will need strong local partners to accelerate access in four areas:

• Access to STUDENTS: school district, youth programs, etc.

• Access to MONEY: foundations, individuals, corporations, etc.

• Access to FACILITIES: government, universities, High Schools, etc.

• Access to TALENT: sources of potential staff, volunteers, administrators, etc.

CURRENT PARTNERS● City of Fresno● Fresno Convention & Visitors

Bureau● Fresno Downtown Association

POTENTIAL PARTNERS● Fresno State University● Fresno Unified School District● County of Fresno● Downtown Fresno Foundation● Fresno Regional Foundation● Center Valley Community

Foundation● Local companies & HNW

individuals

Page 20: HBS Community Partners: California YMCA Youth & …

Fresno: Checklist Before Embarking (cont’d)

20

STEP 4: MAKE IT PENCIL

CYYG should expect Fresno to quickly achieve a “break-even” or better financial position within 2-3 years.

• Raise a minimum amount of seed funding - ideally multi-year.

• Optimize economies of scale from existing CYYG (shared staff, resources, materials, etc.).

• Reduced or distributed cost model.

Page 21: HBS Community Partners: California YMCA Youth & …

Fresno: Checklist Before Embarking (cont’d)

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STEP 5: BUILD THE RIGHT TEAM

CYYG needs a solid management and operations team in market, and/or create a plausible method to leverage economies of scale from nearby (i.e. Sacramento) resources.

STEP 6: PREPARE A TIGHT COMMUNICATION PLAN

CYYG needs a strong narrative to articulate the Fresno decision to three key audiences:

• Internal CYYG and Y stakeholders’• Fresno partners and intermediaries (current and new).• Fresno students, parents and public as a whole.

STEP 7: ESTABLISH CHECKPOINTS UPFRONT

CYYG needs to set a clear calendar of checkpoints/milestones to regularly assess whether the Fresno is achieving intended goals.

Page 22: HBS Community Partners: California YMCA Youth & …

Fresno: Potential Approaches

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As CYYG works to fulfill the checklist, it will also face a choice on how best to approach Fresno.

Approach 1: Same Depth, Same Cost

• Replicate current model in Fresno with minimal changes.• Key insight for broader CYYG strategy: can we execute our current model without

the Y?

Approach 2: Same Depth, Less Cost

- Replicate current model in Fresno but leverage partners to reduce or distribute cost.

- Key insight for broader CYYG strategy: can we cut costs by partnering more

effectively?

Approach 3: Less Depth, Less Cost

- Pilot new “leaner” model that is more affordable to target students .- Key insight for broader CYYG strategy: can we run cheaper programs that still

have enough impact / alignment with our mission?

Decision Driver: Prioritize the key insights and couple that with early Fresno learnings to drive the decision on which approach to pursue.

Decision Driver: Prioritize the key insights and couple that with early Fresno learnings to drive the decision on which approach to pursue.

Page 23: HBS Community Partners: California YMCA Youth & …

Thank You

Page 24: HBS Community Partners: California YMCA Youth & …

Appendix

Page 25: HBS Community Partners: California YMCA Youth & …

Competitive Comparison: Program Scope

25

Boys (Girls) State

US Senate Youth

Mock Trial (Const Rights

Fndtn)

Junior State of America (JSA)

Model UN

Year Founded 1935 1962 1978 1934 1952 and later

National HQIndianapolis, IN

CA: SD (SF)San Francisco,

CALos Angeles, CA Burlingame, CA Varies

Program(s) Boys (Girls) State / Nation

Washington Week

Mock Trial, Appellate Court,

etc

Chapters & conventions;

summer school @ elite colleges

Model UN conferences

Duration / Depth 1 week 1 week Extended (months)

School year/3 nights; summer:

3 weeks

1-2 days depending on

conference

Sponsor American Legion (&

Aux)

US Senate (Law = Res. 324)

Constitutional Rights

Foundation

N/A N/A

Target Customer(s) HS Juniors HS Juniors High school and middle school

High school students

High school and middle school

Exclusivity (# of delegates)

High (2/school)

1000 boys, 540 girls in CA

Very High(2/state)

Low (8000 in CA)156 teams

Middle/HS in LA

Self-select; 12,000 across US

Self-select

Awareness High Medium-High Medium-Low High Medium-High

Regional Strength? 49 States 50 States (incl DC)

Los Angeles 420 chapters in 28 states (SoCal,

NorCal, Mid-Atlantic)

Usually @ elite colleges’ campus

(i.e. SCMUN, BMUN, HMUN)

Page 26: HBS Community Partners: California YMCA Youth & …

Competitive Comparison: Funding

26

Boys/Girls State

US Senate Youth

Mock Trial (Const Rights

Fndtn)

Junior State of America (JSA)

Model UN

Cost (to delegate) Free Free + $10K scholarship

<$100 Convention: by state & package;

$165-$460Summer: $5,650

- $7,500

As low as $15 delegate fee (SCMUN) to

$105 (NHSMUN) + school/del

fees

Funded by American Legion (local

chapters) approx.

$500/delegate

Hearst Foundation (in

perpetuity)

student,foundation,

school volunteer

Fundraising, gov’t grants

Student

Fundraising Total Dispersed into local units (but $>4.8M

nationally)

N/A $1.9M (across programs)

$1.38M * N/A

Revenue N/A N/A $3.2M across programs

$5.59M * N/A

# of Staff 8* for CA Boys

N/A (Hearst Foundation)

16 staff (many programs)

27 employees21 volunteers

N/A

Page 27: HBS Community Partners: California YMCA Youth & …

Competitive Comparison: Implementation

27

Boys/Girls State

US Senate Youth

Mock Trial (Const Rights

Fndtn) Junior State of America (JSA)

Model UN

Model AL/volunteer led

Volunteer led/run

Teacher-led with Attorney

Student-led, student-run

School clubs –student run

Nominated by? Local HS: counselor, Principal

Local HS: Principals

Open participation

Open participation

Open participation

Partnerships? Loose: Teachers/guid

ance counselors

Strong: US Senate, Lawyer

association, Dept of Defense

Strong: 3000 judge/lawyer /

teacher volunteers,

County Office of Education

Elite colleges + Beijing Union

Univ

Elite colleges

Other? CRF…gives professional dev

to teachers

Key Stakeholders? guidance counselors,

HS Principles

US gov’t, Lawyers, Judges

Teacher advisors Teacher advisors Teacher advisors

Page 28: HBS Community Partners: California YMCA Youth & …

Competition

28

Explored Competition from several perspectives:

• Y&G is competing for scarce resources: both fundraising or family expense dollars AND for youths’ extracurricular time

• Sports programs, Music/Arts, Jobs, Social Media, Gaming, etc

• Within Youth Development field, Y&G is competing against:

• Other Youth Development organizations

o Even within YMCA

• Other Civic Engagement organizations Youth Development

Civic Engagement

Page 29: HBS Community Partners: California YMCA Youth & …

Fresno Unified School District

29

HIGH SCHOOLS

● Philip J. Patino High School of Entrepreneurship

● Bullard High School

● The Center for Advanced Research and Technology

● Design Science High School

● Duncan Polytechnical High School

● Edison High School

● Fresno High School

● Hoover High School

● McLane High School

● Roosevelt High School

● Sunnyside High School

● University High School

MIDDLE SCHOOLS

● Ahwahnee Middle School

● Baird Middle School

● Bullard Talent Middle School

● Computech Middle School

● Cooper Academy

● Fort Miller Middle School

● Hamilton Middle School

● Kings Canyon Middle School

● Lawless Middle School

● Rutherford B. Gaston Middle School

● Scandinavian Middle School

● Sequoia Middle School

● Tehipite Middle School

● Tenaya Middle School

● Terronez Middle School

● Tioga Middle School

● Wawona Middle School

● William John Cooper Academy

● Yosemite Middle School