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Wednesday
May122010

New Guiding Principles for Fundraising

New Guiding Principles for Fundraising

What are the new guiding principles to fundraising? According to Mal Warwick, a respected fundraising consultant and thought leader in the nonprofit world, nonprofits need to stop thinking in terms of fundraising silos (monthly donors, one time donors, etc) and start looking at fundraising from a holistic perspective. During the 2010 IFC Online Conference, Warwick discussed his four guiding principles that nonprofits should adapt as part of their fundraising practices.

Principle 1: Donor Choice

Nonprofits must recognize that no single channel will bring in the big bucks. Donors want choices so nonprofits should be using multiple channels to connect with supporters through email appeals, telemarketing, direct mail, etc. Multi-channel fundraising will raise the most amount of money for nonprofits.

Principle 2: Provide Information

Tell donors what they want to know, not what you want them to know.  This was one of my favorite take-aways from the presentation and a critical point that many nonprofits often miss. Staff is typically so focused on getting their own agenda out to supporters, that they forget to share what’s really going on with the organization – its successes and yes even its failures. “Level with them,” said Warwick.

Posting annual reports is also important to committed donors who want to look at the organizations budget, staff, and Board of Directors. Don’t make annual reports hard for your donors to find.

Is your nonprofit tracking your donors’ gifts and involvement with the organization? If not, start now. You should have a snapshot of each of your donors at your fingertips and be able to share their personal info with them.

Principle 3: Engagement is Key

How much time do you spend on developing engagement strategies for your donors or prospects? For example, did you know that having a strong volunteer program could have a positive impact on your fundraising efforts? Why? Because volunteers are 3x more likely to donate money to charity. On the flip side, a poorly run volunteer program could hurt your fundraising.

Nonprofits should always be thinking about reinforcing relationships with their donors. Online advocacy is an inexpensive way to help achieve this by involving supporters in your organizations advocacy work, and recruiting new supporters, said Warwick.

How often does your nonprofit consult its donors? “If you want money, ask for advice,” said Warwick. Solicit their feedback and opinions by phone, email, etc.

Another great engagement tactic that organizations don’t utilize enough is giving donors access to staff and yes at times even the Board of Directors. Encouraging donors to engage with these key people shows donors that their support is truly valued and can have a big impact on word of mouth marketing.

Check out part two of this series in New Guiding Principles for Fundraising where we discuss deepening supporters commitment to your nonprofit.


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Reader Comments (2)

I think that creative, modern new principles of fundraising are totally essential for non-profits in this day and age. Particularly interesting is your take on how organizations should communicate with donors: by giving them information that they want, not information that you want them to have. More and more non-profits these days are taking that advice and communicating more honestly about the financial needs of the organization and how the money will be spent and I think this is incredibly wise: donors don't want a sales pitch, they want to feel like their hard-earned cash is making a difference in their chosen cause. Great post, I'll look forward to part 2!
check out our posts on online fundraising here:
http://donationpay.org/blog/category/online-fundraising/
May 12, 2010 | Unregistered CommenterAJ
I continue to be impressed with the quality of the posts here. Fantastic information.
May 13, 2010 | Unregistered CommenterCharles

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