A few days back, Tom Groenfeldt, a contributor to Forbes, wrote about the intersection of technology and shopping patterns at Kroger’s grocery stores. If you missed it, it is a worthwhile read on how Kroger (and other major retailers) are getting to know your shopping habits better than you know them yourself. The article introduced…
Category: Fundraising
Counting, Reporting, Valuing, and Crediting Planned Gifts
In the most effective development programs, maturing planned gifts can account for 20 – 25% of total gift income in any given year. Whether in a campaign or during your institution’s annual giving efforts, you should have a clear understanding of and plan for how you will report, count, value, and credit planned gifts. The…
The Education of a Major Gift Prospect
There are 3 components that need to come together for a major gift prospect to become a major gift donor: Assets – The prospect must have the financial capacity to make the major gift commitment; Personal Relationship – The prospect must come to understand, appreciate, and value the mission and vision of the institution or…
That Feeling Of Finding Something We’ve Lost
There is something about finding something we feared we’ve lost. A couple of years ago on our annual family vacation, I was throwing a football in knee-high surf only to have my wedding band slip quietly off my suntan-lotioned finger. By the time I realized it was gone, the steady waves had shifted the sandy…
What Does A Donor Crave?
Why do donors make gifts? What motivates a donor to give? It’s not because your materials are the most eye-catching or compelling. It’s not because your institution has the most needs. It’s not because you serve the most disadvantaged populations. It’s not even because you have the most urgent and life-impacting case for support. If…
It’s Not What You Have Or What You Know
You’ve heard these well-worn proverbs before: “It’s not what you have, it’s who you have.” “It’s not what you know, its who you know.” The central theme of these old saws is, of course, that people matter more than things. The people who you count as close will have a larger impact on the quality…
The “Culture of Ought”
Recently I was presenting on the process of asking for a major gift before a diversified group of development professionals. The folks in the room that day spanned all levels of development leaders, gift officers, and support team members and ranged in experience from a few weeks on the job to seasoned pros. During a…
What Are You Selling?
Development officers are in the business of selling, right? So, what are you selling? The most ineffectual officers are selling themselves. Development folk of average effectiveness are selling a project, a building, a program, an initiative, or a campaign. The above average officers are selling institutional mission and vision. But the truly exceptional development professionals…
A Step Toward Integrative Prospect Research
What does the phrase “prospect research” mean to you? For most advancement professionals, I would suggest that the phrase conjures up thoughts about a process of gathering data on a donor or prospect from sources other than the prospect. Whether we use fee-based or free electronic databases, newspapers, other institutions’ donor lists, or peer screens,…
The 3 Problems with Fundraising Performance Metrics
Performance metrics are important. But performance metrics aren’t the work. Performance metrics represent a proxy for our work. And sometimes a poor proxy at that. Our work is not some number of moves, visits, or even the asks or the dollars committed we can claim. Our real work is qualitative in nature. It’s making people…