TovanaBloom · Free Resource

5 Questions Every
Family Foundation
Should Be Asking.

The conversations most advisors skip — and why they matter more than any governance document, grant strategy, or succession plan you've ever written.

The foundations that fail don't usually fail because of inadequate funding, poor governance, or disengaged boards. They fail because somewhere along the way, the family stopped asking the questions that kept the mission alive — and started only asking the questions that kept the organization running.

01

What do we actually believe about why this family has this money?

Not what we say publicly. Not the mission statement. The real answer — the one that has lived in the founder's head for decades, that has never been formally articulated, that everyone in the family sort of knows but has never said out loud in a room together.

Why this question matters

Every governance structure, every grant framework, every succession plan is built on top of an answer to this question. If the answer is implicit, unstated, and unexamined, everything built on top of it is at risk. The families who navigate generational transitions successfully are the ones who made this answer explicit — who excavated it, documented it, and made it accessible to every future decision-maker.

Your answer / notes
If you don't have an answer

That's the work. This is where TovanaBloom begins every engagement — not with governance design, but with this conversation. It typically takes 45 minutes to a full session to answer well. It changes everything that comes after.

02

Does our next generation know this foundation as a calling or as an obligation?

There is a difference between heirs who give because they believe in the mission and heirs who give because they're expected to. Both show up to board meetings. Both vote on grants. Only one carries the mission forward with genuine conviction when things get hard.

Why this question matters

The #1 reason family foundations lose impact across generations isn't bad governance — it's disengaged heirs. And disengagement almost always begins with inheritance rather than invitation. When next-generation leaders are invited into the mission rather than handed it, they give differently. They stay engaged through transitions. They become advocates rather than custodians. This shift from obligation to calling is achievable — but it requires intentional, facilitated work.

Your answer / notes
03

If our founder stepped away tomorrow, would our giving continue in the same direction?

Not because of governance documents and board resolutions — but because the mission is genuinely embedded in the family's culture, the team's understanding, and the board's shared purpose.

Why this question matters

Many foundations are, without realizing it, one person deep. The vision, the relationships, the institutional knowledge, the "why" — all of it lives in the founder. When that person transitions, the organization continues mechanically but the soul goes with them. The work of succession isn't paperwork. It's the deliberate transmission of the story, the values, and the purpose — to every person who will carry them forward.

Your answer / notes
04

Are we measuring the impact that matters to us — or the impact that's easiest to measure?

Outputs are easy to count. Transformed lives, shifted community conditions, and strengthened family legacies are harder to quantify — but these are what most families actually care about when they give.

Why this question matters

The metrics that dominate most philanthropic reporting — grants made, dollars deployed, number of beneficiaries — tell you very little about whether your giving is creating the change you intended. Family-centered impact measurement starts from your own values and works outward: What does change look like in the communities you care about? How would you know if it was working? What would your grandchildren see differently in the world if your giving succeeded? These questions produce better measurement frameworks — and more meaningful giving.

Your answer / notes
05

What story do we want people to tell about this foundation — in 50 years?

Not the impact report. The story. The narrative that passes through families and communities about what this foundation stood for, what it changed, and who was behind it.

Why this question matters

Most organizations are very clear about what they do. Very few are clear about what they are. The story your foundation tells — about its origins, its values, its relationship to the communities it serves — is the most powerful legacy asset you have. It's what your next generation will carry into rooms you'll never enter. It's what will cause a future grantee to say, "We received support from that foundation, and this is why it mattered." Documenting and transmitting that story isn't a communications function. It's the core of legacy work.

Your answer / notes

What Happens When You Actually Answer These Questions

In our experience at TovanaBloom, the families who sit with these questions — really sit with them, together, with time and facilitation — almost always discover two things.

First: they know more than they thought they did. The answers are present in the family's stories, in the founder's motivations, in the things that make certain board conversations charged with meaning. The work is excavation, not invention.

Second: the answers change everything downstream. Grant criteria that weren't quite right become clear. Succession plans that were structurally sound but somehow hollow become animated. Next-generation leaders who were disengaged find their own authentic relationship to the mission.

If you'd like to explore what this work looks like in practice, TovanaBloom offers a confidential discovery conversation at no obligation — visit tovanabloom.com or reach out directly.