Nonprofit Mergers & Strategic Alliances
CONSULTING FOR ORGANIZATIONS EXPLORING COLLABORATION AS A GROWTH OR SUSTAINABILITY STRATEGY
Could your organization advance its mission more effectively by partnering with others?

Whether you’re exploring shared programs, back-office services, or full merger discussions, the right alliance can transform what’s possible for your mission.

Strategic partnerships can take many forms—from loose coordination to formal collaboration to consolidation—and the most effective ones begin with a foundation of mutual respect and a shared vision for the work and its impact. Our alliance development process helps organizations build that foundation while clarifying the partnership’s purpose and structure.

We facilitate thoughtful conversations, maintain confidentiality, and guide partners through the relationship-building needed for success. Together, we identify opportunities that create value for everyone involved—whether through joint programming that expands reach, shared services that reduce costs, new funding opportunities, or deeper forms of integration.

The goal is always the same: designing partnerships where each organization’s strengths are recognized and the greatest benefit is felt by the communities you serve together.

"We greatly appreciate the thoughtful guidance from Fio Partners to ensure that the leadership from our respective United Ways made a thoughtful and well-informed decision. We were able to move forward with genuine excitement from the community thanks to the facilitated process and due diligence guidance that was provided."  
ERIC HARRISON, President & CEO, United Way of Central and Northeastern Connecticut
We bring three decades of proven alliance development experience to your partnership goals.

As experienced nonprofit merger consultants, our role as decision architects means we facilitate partnership conversations while ensuring every organization maintains control over its choices and builds toward mutual benefit.

Fio Partners has supported the creation of:

  • Program partnerships and joint ventures
  • Networks that share state contracts
  • Management service organizations (MSOs) for cost savings and sharing back-office functions and systems
  • Parent corporations that link individual nonprofits capable of pursuing market opportunities jointly
  • Mergers, when outright consolidation is necessary
Fio’s Strategic Alliance Development Process
Build Internal Clarity
Together, we assess your organization’s current context through a comprehensive evaluation of your financial position, environmental factors, market position, leadership situation, and strategic goals. This might include staff surveys, financial analysis, stakeholder interviews, or market research that clarifies your “why” for collaboration.
Assess Relationships
We help you map potential partners who share your values and complement your capabilities. This includes identifying who has decision-making authority, evaluating existing trust levels, and developing criteria for partnership assessment based on your strategic needs.
Envision Shared Work
We facilitate conversations to articulate your shared purpose and hoped-for outcomes with potential partners. This step focuses on the specific work you want to do together, your shared values about that work, and what infrastructure is needed to support your collaborative vision.
Structure Selection & Implement Planning
Based on your timeline and collaborative vision, we help you determine what type of structure best matches your purpose. We guide you through the decision-making process and support developing governance agreements. Once decisions are made, we help you create clear implementation steps.
Fio Partners brought a knowledgeable and experienced perspective to our transformation... There were moments when the challenge of our task seemed overwhelming and the Fio team did an amazing job at lifting our spirits and keeping us on track towards success. We’re grateful for their support and positive orientation towards change.”
JEAN PAUL WARMOES, Chief Executive Officer, Myriad USA
A History of Proven Expertise
Fio Partners began building and supporting strategic alliances in the 1980s, with the consolidation of health care organizations due to managed care. As the drive toward consolidation threatened more community nonprofits in addition to hospitals, Fio Principal and Co-Founder, Jane Arsenault, recognized the need to gather her experiences and share them with the capacity-building field. Her book, Forging Nonprofit Alliances, was published in 1998 and was the first in the field to codify this learning.
FAQs

Strategic Alliances encompass the full spectrum of collaboration from informal coordination to formal partnerships. This includes joint programming, shared services, management service organizations (MSOs), and various forms of resource sharing that maintain separate organizational identities

Mergers involve the consolidation of two or more organizations into a single legal entity. This is typically considered when organizations share very similar missions and when consolidation creates clear operational or strategic advantages that other forms of collaboration cannot achieve.

Most organizations find that some form of strategic alliance meets their collaboration goals without requiring the complexity of a full merger. At Fio, we help you match the appropriate structure to your specific purpose and circumstances.

This is a concern we take seriously as nonprofit merger consultants. All alliance discussions include confidentiality protections, and we help organizations communicate appropriately with their boards and staff throughout the exploration process. Our incremental testing approach means you’re never committed to a collaboration before you’ve had a chance to evaluate how it works in practice. We build in checkpoints where any organization can exit gracefully if the partnership isn’t serving their goals.

We facilitate conversations that acknowledge each organization’s unique value and ensure collaborative decisions serve all parties. Our process focuses on creating win-win-win scenarios (you + your strategic partner + your community) rather than creating an environment where one organization controls the terms of the partnership.

Sometimes, the most valuable outcome of our alliance development process is a confident decision that collaboration isn’t the right strategy for your current circumstances. This saves organizations significant time and resources while preserving relationships for potential future partnerships

Our assessment process is designed to identify when collaboration serves organizational goals and when independent operation might be more effective. We’re equally skilled at helping organizations recognize good partnerships and wise declines.

Organizations that complete our process with a decision not to collaborate often refer other potential partners to us, knowing we facilitated respectful, professional conversations that preserved everyone’s reputation and relationships.

Alliance development timelines depend on the type of collaboration being explored and the number of organizations involved. Simple coordination agreements may take 2-3 months, while full merger discussions typically require 6-12 months (or longer) of careful planning. Our incremental approach allows organizations to move at a pace that feels sustainable while maintaining their ongoing operations and commitments. We work within your timeline constraints while ensuring thoroughness in relationship building and strategic planning.

Board involvement focuses on strategic oversight and approval of partnership terms that align with organizational governance requirements. We design board engagement that keeps trustees informed without overwhelming them with operational details.

Staff involvement varies based on the type of collaboration being explored. We structure participation to gather input and address concerns while minimizing disruption to daily operations.

While our primary expertise focuses on nonprofit-to-nonprofit alliances, we have experience facilitating collaborations that include mission-aligned private sector organizations. These partnerships often require additional attention to regulatory compliance and operational differences.