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Re: FIRST has $8 Million?!? What did I miss?
If you really think about it, the $6 thousand dollars of reg. is almost nothing for what get in the K.O.P. Have you ever been on the side of BUYING 10seats(is it 10?) of Inventor, to my knowage it is alot more than $6grand, and thats only one thing.
As far as the regional goes, I have heard from multiple sources that FIRST runs their own production crew to do these, that in its self cost WAY more than you can ever image(cough...Pipe and Drape...cough), I can see them keeping little more money in the bank to keep in mind that if some one would want to make a regional they would have the money to purchase everything for it. Soooo....if you think about the amount it takes to run a show like that for three days the cost just goes out the roof. Thats why you don't see every regional being runned like the boston regional(who--ah....big screens). |
Re: FIRST has $8 Million?!? What did I miss?
From what I see in the published annual reports, it looks like FIRST used to carry a cash reserve right around $3 million about 4 or 5 years ago. Since then, they've been generating a little over a Million in profit each of the last 4 years, which is how they've gotten up to a cash reserve of over $8 million.
I understand the $3 million reserve, and I would understand trying to have it raise 10% or so a year. But over $1 million a year does seem excessive, especially if the schools are supplying some of that reserve in registration fees. [quote=Boydean;734911]If you really think about it, the $6 thousand dollars of reg. is almost nothing for what get in the K.O.P. Have you ever been on the side of BUYING 10seats(is it 10?) of Inventor, to my knowage it is alot more than $6grand. As far as the regional goes, I have heard from multiple sources that FIRST runs their own production crew to do theseQUOTE] - much of the kit of parts, including all the software is donated and totally free for FIRST, so there's no expense there - I know our committee had to raise around $70k to cover the A/V production of the regional contracted by FIRST, so that and almost all regional expenses are paid by the regional planning committee and local sponsors, not by FIRST |
Re: FIRST has $8 Million?!? What did I miss?
I also have worked with a planning committee here for a bit and I'll say I've been troubled by two main things in FIRST the past couple years, the financials of FIRST as being discussed here and some issues with the FLL - FTC programs, but that's another issue.
My problem with the financials is if you look back to when FIRST had a $3 Million Cash reserve (which I think all agree is prudent), they raised the FRC registration fee $1,000 per team. They had about 1000 teams then, and about 1500 now. The cash reserve went up about a milion a few years ago, and about 1.4 million last year. It bothers me that the registration fee increase has generated about an extra $1-1.4 million in revenue for FIRST each year and the cash reserve has gone up almost exactly the same amount each year. To me, the fee should go back down to $5,000 if the reserve is well over $5mil. I can see no justification for maintaining the increased fee when it clearly isn't needed anymore. |
Re: FIRST has $8 Million?!? What did I miss?
The one that's always gotten me was the extra $4000 for extra regionals/championships. That to me seems like using the richer teams to subsidize the poorer ones, which I personally don't really agree with. Especially since many offseason events charge AT MAX $300 per team, an amount I feel is much more reasonable, and I could even stomach as much as $2000 with alot less difficulty than the $4000 they do ask.
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Re: FIRST has $8 Million?!? What did I miss?
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I'm not convinced this is what happens, by the way. Regionals don't make money, as a rule, and cost a fortune to stage. The entry fee doesn't really cover the cost of the event -- I'm on the FIRSTWA committee and I know how much fund-raising went into the Seattle event. EDITED: Someone mentioned that the fee to participate in FLL and FTC is $1,000. I don't know about FLL, but we paid $275 each to register our FTC teams. Since we already had some Vex parts, our budget for the year was about $3,000 (not including championships), with more than $2k of that going to IFI for parts, not to FIRST. This came to $150 a student, which is much more cost-effective than the typical FRC team. When I was still with 1294 we spent about $8,000 and had 20 students involved, which comes to $400 a student. This is why I think FTC is the growth program for high school students: FRC is just too expensive to have a program in every high school. |
Re: FIRST has $8 Million?!? What did I miss?
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Re: FIRST has $8 Million?!? What did I miss?
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All in all, it's completely unfair to this program's management and staff to assume that they're simply charging teams for the sake of charging them... FIRST is lucky to have the Finance and Development departments that they do, which have worked hard to keep up with the growth of the program (a feat in itself). And think of what is demanded from them:
Every time something breaks, every time teams ask to have something changed, even every time an honest mistake is made, it's probably liable to cost FIRST money. That's just business. Someone has to eat that cost. For FRC alone:
I'm just throwing out numbers here to help show you how large the responsibilities of FIRST really are (and this is only the FRC program, FLL is at least 8-9 times the size of FRC and much more international). And hey, even if they budget every year, I'm sure they have the same problems as every company where budgeted costs don't cover everything. I'm just trying to play devil's advocate here to show you that there's a lot more to FIRST than what they let show at events... and it probably is even more than I wrote here. Unlike you guys, I have a hard time believing that they run on as little as they do. |
Re: FIRST has $8 Million?!? What did I miss?
Amanda, it sounds like you have a solid grasp on what's going on here, thank you for clearing up some of the misconceptions. :D
This thread, along with many of the preceding ones, seem to bring up 1 big point: there are a lot of questions and misconceptions about FIRST's financial situation. I don't think that these questions will be cleared up on here, and I would hate to see potentially wrong information getting people worked up over nothing. This year, FIRST has done an excellent job at increased communication. Using this initiative as indication of intent, I have an idea. FIRST frequently hosts conference calls on miscellaneous topics. Would people be interested in (something that would definitely need to be done after Championships) doing some sort of a conference call where, in a non-attacking and non-aggressive manner, someone from FIRST's financial department would be able to answer questions? This seems like something that, if requested properly, I would imagine FIRST would consent to, rather than have incorrect information floating around, and people getting angry about it. I by no means have the ability to say that this will happen, but perhaps if there is substantial interest, a few of us could write into FIRST, requesting such a call to be held. This seems like the productive way for those who are concerned to voice concerns and to get answers. Is this something that people would be interested in? |
Re: FIRST has $8 Million?!? What did I miss?
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Also, they are not generating profit. They are by definition a non-profit. A for-profit pays the profit to shareholders/owners. Since FIRST is a non-profit the cash remainder reserve rolls over to the next year. |
Re: FIRST has $8 Million?!? What did I miss?
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Re: FIRST has $8 Million?!? What did I miss?
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That would be cool. The business plan/package is a large part of every team, every event and regional planning committee, and FIRST. If they were to share some of their thoughts and expertise with the FIRST community, it would be beneficial and clear away myth and misperceptions. |
Re: FIRST has $8 Million?!? What did I miss?
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Re: FIRST has $8 Million?!? What did I miss?
I think setting up a call would be a great idea. Have everyone submit questions here on Chief Delphi and then have a couple mentors select the best questions to be asked on the call.
For a second, pretend you are the person running all of FIRST. You goal - your hope - is that someday you will create a self-sustaining program that doesn't rely on goodwill and contributions to continue functioning. Then you see financial statements like you see on the FIRST site, that clearly show without all that good will, your awesome program wouldn't exist. Then you sit down with your program leaders and start talking about things like... liability. Insurance. Acts-of-God. You compare your balance sheet and your $8 million in the pocket to what you're hearing: One lawsuit (say from a major injury at a competition.. like a lost finger, or lost eyesight, etc etc) could wipe you out in legal fees. One major sponsor pulling out could bankrupt you inside 2 years. One act-of-god could destroy your National Championship (like...say a tornado) and you would either have to refund all that money or pay out-of-pocket to get another location on incredibly short notice.... In my opinion, $8 million isn't much cash. I'd say FIRST is healthy - but if I were running it I'd still be pretty darn nervous that a single event could spell disaster. |
Re: FIRST has $8 Million?!? What did I miss?
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Re: FIRST has $8 Million?!? What did I miss?
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Take a look at some of these articles (most of them are a quick read): http://www.compasspoint.org/askgenie/details.php?id=65 http://www.nonprofitissues.com/publi.../point/67.html http://www.nonprofitsassistancefund....Reserves06.pdf and especially http://www.proctorconsulting.org/cashreserves.html So, it appears this standard procedure for many non-profits - after all, they need to have some cash flow to survive - and it seems as though the basic understanding is that FIRST is operating with as much cash-on-hand as they believe that they need in an emergency. What's an emergency? Well, this year's tornado scare was a pretty big emergency. Imagine FIRST and FIRST's event management folks trying to reserve a new venue and get all considerations complete in just a few weeks (if it would have come to that). Imagine if something major went wrong with the Kit and a drastic, expensive change needed to be made last minute. Imagine if they needed to cancel a season of FRC for some drastic and terrible reason and refund all teams' money. Imagine if FIRST was sued. So... I guess I'll be the first one to go out on a limb and say... hey FIRST Finance and Development folks, thanks for thinking ahead (and thinking of us). |
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