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This Role Connects Financial Oversight With Fundraising Impact
At Tell My Truth and Shame the Devil C.I.C., every donation, grant, and sponsorship contributes to real-world change. The Finance Liaison Officer ensures that the C.I.C’s fundraising income, allocations, and financial reporting are accurate, transparent, and actionable, serving both operational needs and strategic decision-making. You will act as the bridge between fundraising activities and financial accountability, ensuring resources are optimally managed to maximise impact. This is not a generic bookkeeping role. It is strategic, operational, and central to C.I.C sustainability.
Purpose of the Role
This role exists to:
- Monitor and reconcile fundraising income, donations, sponsorships, and grant payments
- Coordinate financial reporting with the Fundraising Director, Data Officer, and other relevant teams
- Ensure compliance with financial regulations, safeguarding, and CIC policies
- Support budgeting, forecasting, and resource allocation for campaigns and projects
- Provide financial insights to inform fundraising strategy and decision-making
- Help maintain accurate, auditable records for transparency and accountability
You are the guardian of financial integrity for all fundraising activities.
Why This Role Matters
Accurate and transparent financial management:
- Builds trust with donors, sponsors, and partners
- Ensures funds are allocated ethically and efficiently
- Enables strategic growth and sustainable operations
Without this role, financial oversight risks errors, inefficiency, or reputational harm. With it, the CIC can operate with confidence, clarity, and credibility.
About the role:
To manage and reconcile all income streams, track donations and grants, and provide accurate financial reporting, ensuring compliance with C.I.C policies, safeguarding, statutory requirements, and supporting effective fundraising and organisational decision-making.
Experience Qualification and Requirements
Essential / Highly Valued Experience
- Experience in bookkeeping, accounting, or finance management.
- Competence in tracking, reconciling, and reporting income streams.
- Budgeting and financial forecasting experience.
- Familiarity with non-profit or CIC financial operations.
- Knowledge of donor fund tracking and reporting.
- Competence using Microsoft Excel, Google Sheets, or accounting software.
- Awareness of statutory compliance, safeguarding, and financial controls.
- Ability to advise on financial implications of campaigns or initiatives.
- Strong attention to detail and organisational skills.
- Collaborative skills to work with fundraising, data, and volunteer teams.
- Ability to identify discrepancies, risks, or inefficiencies in financial processes.
Desirable / Can Be Developed
- Experience integrating financial data with donor CRM or data systems.
- Familiarity with grant funding or sponsorship reporting.
- Experience working in volunteer-led or grassroots organisations.
- Ability to contribute to financial process improvement.
Qualifications
- Formal qualifications not required.
- Equivalent professional experience in finance, accounting, or bookkeeping is highly valued.
Main Responsibilities/ Key Duties
Essential / Highly Valued Experience
- Experience in bookkeeping, accounting, or finance management.
- Competence in tracking, reconciling, and reporting income streams.
- Budgeting and financial forecasting experience.
- Familiarity with non-profit or C.I.C financial operations.
- Knowledge of donor fund tracking and reporting.
- Competence using Microsoft Excel, Google Sheets, or accounting software.
- Awareness of statutory compliance, safeguarding, and financial controls.
- Ability to advise on financial implications of campaigns or initiatives.
- Strong attention to detail and organisational skills.
- Collaborative skills to work with fundraising, data, and volunteer teams.
- Ability to identify discrepancies, risks, or inefficiencies in financial processes
What You Gain
- Founding-level experience in financial oversight for a high-impact C.I.C
- Strategic insight into fundraising, resource allocation, and operational finance
- Leadership exposure in cross-functional collaboration
- Priority consideration for future paid roles
- Direct contribution to community empowerment and sustainable growth
This role builds financial stewardship, strategic planning and ethical management skills.
This role is not suitable if you:
- Prefer low-responsibility volunteer work
- Avoid handling sensitive financial data
- Are seeking immediate paid employment
- Are uncomfortable applying finance to ethical decision-making
Important to be clear:
- This is a volunteer role during the C.I.C’s build phase
- It carries real responsibility for financial integrity and accountability
- Paid roles will emerge as funding and sustainability allows
Formal qualifications are not required, but desirable.
Essential equivalent experience mandatory.
Next Steps:
Shortlisted applicants will be invited to:
- A values-led conversation
- A practical discussion about event planning, coordination, and execution
If you believe that well-organised, purposeful events can change communities, and that experiences inspire action, this role is for you.
A Final Word
Transparency is protection.
If you know that:
- Money must serve the mission
- Accountability builds trust
- Strong systems protect vulnerable people
The client requests no contact from agencies or media sales.
Join CAP's Board and help transform the UK's relationship with alcohol.
Applications close: Monday 2nd March 2026
Location: Hybrid/London Bridge
Time commitment: Equivalent of 1 day per month
After 18 years of proven local impact, Community Alcohol Partnerships (CAP) stands at an extraordinary inflexion point. What began as a pioneering pilot in 2007 has grown into the UK’s most effective approach to tackling underage drinking, with over 300 partnerships already established across England, Scotland and Wales. But our greatest achievements may still lie ahead.
Who we are
The numbers tell a compelling story. Across our network, we’ve achieved a 63% reduction in weekly drinking among under-18s, a 44% reduction in anti-social behaviour and 98% pass rates in Challenge 25 compliance tests following our training. We’ve surveyed over 42,000 young people, gathering evidence that has shaped policy and practice nationwide. Yet perhaps our most significant discovery came through groundbreaking research into the issue that remained stubbornly resistant to change: parental supply of alcohol to children.
While we celebrated success after success in reducing underage drinking through retailer training and youth engagement, one statistic troubled us. More than 6 in 10 children aged 11-15 who drink regularly still obtained their alcohol from their parents. Despite all our community interventions, this remained the single biggest driver of underage alcohol consumption.
That challenge led us to commission to conduct the most comprehensive review ever undertaken of why parents supply alcohol to their children and what interventions might change this behaviour. Parents aren’t acting from malice or ignorance alone – they’re driven by complex beliefs about protection, social norms, and misplaced confidence in their ability to teach “responsible drinking” to their children by allowing them to sample alcohol while their brains are still developing.
Armed with these insights, CAP secured unprecedented funding increases from our industry partners, who recognised that addressing parental supply could transform the landscape of underage drinking. Our annual income has doubled, our team has expanded significantly, and we’re now positioned to pilot evidence-based interventions that could change parental behaviour at scale.
This is where our story becomes your opportunity. CAP is transitioning from a programme with significant local impact to one with genuine national reach. Our analysis suggests we need to double our current coverage – establishing perhaps 250-300 additional partnerships in high-harm areas across the UK. We’re developing the first systematic campaign to tackle parental supply, with pilots planned across six locations that could lay the groundwork for national policy change and action.
We’ve also expanded our remit to support 18–25-year-olds, recognising that our work with under-18s creates a perfect foundation for promoting safer drinking cultures in universities and young adult communities. Projects like our Cardiff CAP’s groundbreaking work on alcohol-free student activities show the potential for reshaping social norms around alcohol throughout young adulthood.
About the roles
To realise this vision, we need new Board Directors who can provide both strategic wisdom and operational insight during our most ambitious period of growth. We’re particularly seeking individuals with deep expertise in
- Finance (ideally a qualified accountant)
- Marketing and public influence
- Government relations at local or national level
- Adolescent development or education
Experience in Scotland or Wales would be especially valuable as we prioritise expansion in these high-harm regions.
This isn’t a typical non-executive role. You’ll be helping to steer an organisation that’s pioneering new approaches to one of the UK’s most persistent public health and social challenges.
You’ll work alongside an independent chair in Derek Lewis, industry representatives who are committed to our mission, and fellow independent directors who bring diverse expertise to our governance.
The policy landscape has never been more receptive to evidence-based approaches to alcohol harm reduction. The Westminster and devolved governments increasingly recognise that traditional enforcement-only approaches have limitations, and our track record of delivering measurable impact through partnership working positions us perfectly to influence national policy.
More importantly, we have the research foundation, funding commitments, and operational capacity to achieve transformational change. Our pilots on parental supply interventions, if successful, could influence how the UK approaches underage drinking prevention for generations to come. Our expansion into high-harm areas could bring effective prevention to communities that have struggled with alcohol-related problems for decades.
The commitment is manageable but meaningful: five board meetings annually (two in-person near London Bridge, three virtual), occasional evening events, and informal advisory support to our small but dynamic executive team. Overall we expect the time commitment to be the equivalent of a day a month.
If you’re someone who believes that evidence-based interventions can create lasting social change, who has experience in strategic leadership, and who wants to contribute to work that directly improves young people’s life chances, we’d welcome your interest. You’ll join a board that’s committed to CAP’s constitutional objectives while providing the strategic oversight needed to navigate our most ambitious period of growth.
CAP has spent 18 years building the foundations for this moment. We now have the tools, the team, and the momentum to achieve significant new progress. The question is whether you’ll join us in writing the next chapter of this story.
Please click 'Redirect to recruiter’ to be redirected to the Peridot Partners website, where you can find full details of the candidate profile and register your interest to apply.
Applications for this role close on Monday 2nd March 2026.
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