How to use this: Each phase explains the decision you're making, how to run it, what "done" looks like, and when to move forward. Short callouts at the end of each phase show the minimum documentation and a practical Georgia action to ground the work locally. Georgia's UPMIFA (the law that governs charitable investments here) expects boards to balance return, risk, and mission. This roadmap helps you do that in a way a congregation can understand.
| Asset Size | Priority Phases | Key Focus |
|---|---|---|
| Under $500K | Phases 1, 2, 5 | Start with cash and simple swaps. Focus on insured deposits at CDFIs and one screened fund. Skip complex governance for now. |
| $500K - $2M | Phases 1-5, 7 | Add community notes and proxy voting. Build a simple IPS. Annual review matters more than quarterly metrics. |
| $2M - $10M | All phases | Full implementation makes sense. Consider an advisor RFP. Build measurement rhythm. Explore pooled opportunities. |
| Above $10M | All phases, emphasis on 4, 6, 8 | Robust governance and measurement essential. Lead collaborative efforts. Consider direct investments and private placements. |
Do we have the will and the capacity to align our money with our mission, and who will lead?
Start with a practical inventory: every account that holds cash or investments, the custodians and advisors, any current screens or proxy-voting practices, and how much cash must stay available over the next 3, 6, and 12 months. In parallel, schedule three short conversations in Georgia: one with a peer congregation, one with a denominational foundation, and one with an intermediary you could actually use (for example, a Georgia-serving community lender or GIPL for energy upgrades). These conversations turn vague ideas into names, forms, and timelines.
Pull it together in a short board deck that makes the fiduciary case: where holdings conflict with your values; what lower-friction alternatives exist (insured deposits, diversified community notes, screened funds); how return and liquidity stay intact; and what UPMIFA expects of stewards. Include a modest budget for the next phase.
A short landscape scan, two or three peer briefs with real numbers, and a board-ready presentation that answers the common objections without hand-waving.
Leadership agrees to continue and releases a modest budget.
Ask GSIC for introductions. Book a 30-minute consult with GIPL or a Georgia CDFI to see their process.
Which teachings guide our investing, and how do we express them in clear, workable terms?
Hold two or three short sessions that connect your faith to money: creation care, fair access to credit, dignity of work, and stewardship. From those sessions, draft a two-page values statement that names your focus areas (for example, affordable housing, small-business lending, clean energy) and your exclusions (for example, predatory lending). Decide if you intend market-rate returns across the portfolio. If you are open to a small portion with a lower return for mission reasons, say where and why. Invite a few voices who are not usually at the investment table—young adults and neighbors directly affected by housing or credit—to react to the draft. Then write a one-page explainer in your own voice for the congregation.
The board adopts a short values and screens statement. The congregation hears the "why" in plain language.
Values and screens are approved and shared internally.
Link creation-care commitments to work that GIPL can help you finance and maintain.
How far are we from our compass, and what small changes will move us the farthest with the least risk?
Pull complete holdings. Where possible, look into what your largest funds actually hold. Use public tools to spot obvious misalignments. Read your Investment Policy Statement, bylaws, gift agreements, and your advisor's engagement letter. Flag "maximum return" language that ignores mission, note donor restrictions, and list what's missing (for example, no proxy-voting direction). Ask your advisor, plainly, if they can implement your screens, find Georgia-relevant options, and report on impact. If not, plan a short RFP in the next phase.
A baseline report that shows the largest misalignments and the easiest fixes, a memo on governance gaps, and a clear view of whether your advisor can execute.
Leadership accepts the baseline and authorizes policy updates (and an advisor RFP if needed).
Add local deposit or bond options to your "easy fixes," not just national funds.
What are our rules of the road, and what is our plan for the next three years?
Rewrite your IPS in plain English. State your purpose under UPMIFA. Set targets for each asset class and for cash you need in the short, medium, and long term. Include your screens and focus areas. Create a set-aside for mission-driven investments (for example, 1-10% in community lenders, diversified notes, or green bonds). Say how you will vote proxies and when you will report. Keep reporting lean so it actually happens.
If your current advisor cannot implement the mandate, run a focused RFP. Ask for example portfolios with tickers, how they vote proxies, how they will source Georgia-relevant options, and the full fee schedule. Keep responses short and ask for a live walk-through.
A readable IPS with a one-page summary, a three-year roadmap, a first-year budget, and an advisor who agrees in writing to your mandate.
The board adopts the IPS and the Year-1 plan.
Confirm which Georgia-serving banks/CDFIs, bond issuers, and energy partners your advisor will include.
Choose first moves that build confidence, comfortably stretch your culture around risk, and excite key stakeholders.
Begin where friction is lowest. Move a slice of idle cash into federally insured, mission-aligned deposits at Georgia-serving community banks or credit unions, or at national community lenders that work in Georgia. Buy a small ladder of diversified community notes with terms of one to three years. In public equities, replace your largest general index fund with a faith-screened fund already available on your platform. None of these changes should alter your overall risk. They change what your money enables.
As confidence builds, add a green or social bond sleeve and term notes that match your cash needs. Adopt your proxy-voting approach and either align with denominational guidance or join a coalition for shared engagement. Larger pools can explore private or real-asset options only if they fit your plan and you can size them prudently.
Three confidence-building moves executed (deposits, one note ladder, one screened-fund swap), a simple pipeline in motion, and five minutes on every committee agenda to make add/hold/drop decisions.
The first reallocations are complete and the pipeline rhythm is in place.
For creation-care projects, pair a GIPL assessment with a Georgia BRIGHT financing conversation so finance and facilities move together.
How will we stay accountable without turning into a data factory?
Pick three to five indicators that match your focus areas and that partners can report. Examples: jobs supported (with a simple breakdown for lower-income or minority-owned businesses), affordable units created or preserved, small-business loans in your county, kilowatt-hours of clean energy and emissions avoided. Track two alignment indicators: the share of the portfolio that meets your screens and the number of proxy votes cast in line with your policy. Pair the numbers with one human story each year, with permission.
Publish a two-to-three-page annual update that sits next to your financials. Plain charts. Two photos. One page on what's next.
A one-page quarterly dashboard for the committee and an annual update the congregation can read and share.
Indicators are selected, populated, and the first annual update is published.
Ask each Georgia partner for the specific metrics they can deliver and how often.
Is the portfolio doing its financial job and telling a mission-honest story? What should we adjust?
Once a year, look at returns against benchmarks and your cash targets. Look at values and impact against the IPS. Review governance. Are meetings regular and useful? Do you have the right skills at the table? Is the advisor doing what they promised? Invite a trusted peer reviewer from your denomination or from GSIC to one meeting for candid feedback. Make a small number of changes unless a manager has broken a rule.
A concise annual review that names what worked, what did not, and the few changes you will make next year.
The board acknowledges the review and approves Year-2 adjustments.
Share your review highlights at a GSIC session and ask two peers for one improvement suggestion each.
How open will we be, and who will we partner with so costs go down and results grow?
Package your journey into a short case study with your IPS excerpt, a diligence template, and one dashboard. Share it through your judicatory, GSIC, or an evening roundtable. Consider pooled actions with peers: a deposit campaign, a coordinated purchase of community notes, or joint diligence on a Georgia affordable-housing vehicle.
Peers save time because you shared. Your own pipeline grows because collaborators bring ideas you would not have seen.
Your toolkit is published and at least one pooled action is scoped.
Convene two to three nearby congregations and pick one pooled effort to test in the next six months.