Career Guide

Jewish Nonprofit Leadership: Paths, Roles & How to Get There

Leading a Jewish organization is unlike running almost any other kind of institution. Here's what the path looks like, what boards want, and what top executives earn.

Andrew MargolinAndrew Margolin
·May 28, 2026·10 min read

The Executive Director of a midsize Jewish Federation runs a $15 million budget, manages a professional staff of 40, works with a volunteer board of 30 community leaders, overseas allocations to a dozen local agencies, and is simultaneously the public face of the Jewish community to civic leaders, media, and donors. The CEO of a major Federation does all of that — at 5x the scale.

Jewish nonprofit leadership is among the most complex executive roles in the nonprofit world. If you're pursuing it, you need to understand what the path looks like and what boards are actually looking for when they hire.

What Makes Jewish Nonprofit Leadership Distinctive

Three things separate Jewish nonprofit leadership from secular nonprofit management:

The lay-professional relationship is central to the job. Jewish nonprofits are governed by volunteer lay leaders — board members and committee chairs who often have strong views, long histories with the organization, and significant donor relationships of their own. Managing that relationship productively is a core competency for every Jewish nonprofit executive. You're not just managing staff; you're managing the relationship between paid professionals and committed volunteers.

You're a community figure, not just an executive. The ED of a Jewish Federation or major JCC is a visible public figure in the community — representing the organization at community events, speaking at public functions, maintaining relationships with local government, interfaith partners, and the media. This is especially true in smaller markets where the Jewish community is tight-knit.

The mission is existential, not just aspirational. Jewish organizational leaders often describe the weight of historical responsibility — serving a community whose continuity has never been guaranteed. That's motivating for the right person, and overwhelming for the wrong one. The leaders who thrive in this sector genuinely internalize that weight.

The Leadership Roles: What They Actually Are

Executive Director (ED)

The top professional at most Jewish nonprofits. Responsible for strategy, budget, staff, board relations, fundraising partnerships, community standing, and day-to-day operations. At a community JCC or mid-size Federation, this is a $90,000–$150,000 role. At a large JCC or regional Federation, $150,000–$220,000. At a major market Federation, the President/CEO title and total compensation can exceed $400,000.

Chief Operating Officer (COO)

Runs the operational machine while the ED focuses on strategy, fundraising, and community relations. Common at organizations with $5M+ budgets. The COO manages department heads, oversees HR, facilities, and process. Pay: $100,000–$175,000.

Vice President / Senior VP

Division-level leadership at national organizations and larger Federations. VPs of Development, VPs of Planning, VPs of Marketing are common titles. Pay: $90,000–$160,000. These are senior individual contributor/manager roles that feed the pipeline for C-suite positions.

Managing Director

Increasingly common title for a deputy-ED level role — full operational responsibility below the CEO/ED, often with a specific portfolio (programming, community impact, operations). Pay: $85,000–$130,000.

The Career Path: How Jewish Nonprofit Executives Get There

There is no single prescribed path, but there are clear patterns:

The program pathway. Many EDs came up through program and community engagement roles — they know the work deeply, they have relationships with the community the organization serves, and they've demonstrated the ability to build and lead teams. Hillel executive directors, for example, frequently follow this path: campus staff → director → area director → regional VP → campus ED → organizational ED.

The development pathway. Major gift fundraisers and development directors who build strong board relationships and demonstrate organizational understanding often get tapped for senior leadership. Development experience gives them financial literacy, donor relations skills, and board fluency that translate directly to executive roles.

The outside hire. Increasingly, Jewish organizations recruit senior leaders from outside the sector — corporate executives, government officials, or leaders from related nonprofit fields. These hires typically have specific operational or strategic skills the organization needs (turnaround expertise, government relations, tech transformation). They usually have a strong personal connection to Jewish community even without professional background in it.

The Jewish professional pipeline matters more than credentials.

A graduate degree in Jewish Communal Service (Brandeis, Hebrew Union College, Jewish Theological Seminary, Yeshiva University) signals serious commitment and opens doors — but successful Jewish nonprofit executives also came up through Hillel, BBYO, Federation campaigns, JCC management, and summer camps. The network you build along the way often matters more than the degree.

What Boards Look For When They Hire

Search committees for Jewish nonprofit executives typically evaluate candidates on:

The Compensation Reality

Jewish nonprofit executive pay has improved significantly over the past decade as the sector has competed harder for talent. A realistic range:

Benefits typically include health insurance, retirement contribution (403b), generous vacation, and accommodation for Shabbat and Jewish holidays. Some senior roles include housing allowances or professional development budgets.

Getting Positioned for Leadership

If you're mid-career and aiming at executive roles, the moves that matter:

Browse Jewish Nonprofit Leadership & Executive Jobs

76+ open positions — Executive Directors, CEOs, COOs, VPs, and senior leadership roles at Jewish Federations, JCCs, and nonprofits nationwide.

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Andrew Margolin

About Andrew Margolin

Founder, AllJewishJobs.com

Andrew Margolin is the founder of AllJewishJobs.com, the modern job board built exclusively for Jewish professionals and the organizations that serve them.

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