Nov 2, 2015
Davy Irby the founder of Surge International is our guest in
this episode of the Nonprofit Leaders Network Podcast series. Dave
has travelled the world as a soccer coach, or football coach as it
would be called in other parts of the world. He is a missionary
using the powerful platform of soccer to share a message of love
and hope in over fifty countries. Holder of a USA Soccer A Coaching
license and a Masters degree in Teaching, Dave founded Surge
International in 1991. Surge currently works in eight countries,
including Burundi, where Dave is headed next.
To access a transcript and links to resources mentioned in today’s
interview visit http://nonprofitleadersnetwork.com/nln10/.
We covered a wide range of subjects in our discussion. Here are some of the highlights.
DEVELOPING A VISION
Often, vision is a process. The vision for me was God given. I was
coaching soccer and I began praying for what God would want me to
do, and one of my players said. “Why don’t you bring the soccer
team down to Mexicali with our outreach group to play some games …a
game in the men’s prison and the boy’s prison in the village?” So
we did, and that first step of faith of a five-day trip led on the
following year to a twenty-three-day jaunt to five or six
countries. I felt called into youth soccer full time without
knowing hardly He was doing it. I think the vision shapes over time
and it changes and morphs as you stay with it.
MEASURING IMPACT
We measure the impact that our work is having both through informal
feedback that we receive by staying, for example, in the trenches
looking into peoples eyes and seeing the how privileged we have
been to bless them, and through some formal processes we have in
place. We get written reports from, say, Burundi of things which
are happening when we are not there and other forms of feedback.
Mostly though we kind of have a feel after years of doing this
what’s working and what’s not, and that combined with the feedback
helps us decide whether to continue with a project or not.
KEEP FAMILY FIRST
I am what I’d call a random visionary. I am all over the place, and
there are no set hours. When you run nonprofits I think you really
need to manage your time. You need to ensure that you make time for
your family, as well as everyone else you tend to want to help. Set
aside time, make formal appointments in your diary, carve them out
time; sit down face to face as a family communicating with no other
distractions, which in this day and age is hard. These are things
that I think have really helped.
Find more information on the podcast at www.SocialGoodInstigators.com.