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Kathryn W. Miree & Associates, Inc.. 1. Gift planning focuses you on donor relationships 2. Gift planning allows you to engage with donors 3. Gift planning.

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Presentation on theme: "Kathryn W. Miree & Associates, Inc.. 1. Gift planning focuses you on donor relationships 2. Gift planning allows you to engage with donors 3. Gift planning."— Presentation transcript:

1 Kathryn W. Miree & Associates, Inc.

2 1. Gift planning focuses you on donor relationships 2. Gift planning allows you to engage with donors 3. Gift planning increases donor gift capacity – it expands gift options 4. Making a planned gift commitment increases annual giving 5. Knowing about the planned gift (and stewarding) should increase the estate commitment

3  The role of planned giving  The benefits of gift planning to your development program  Looking at planning from the donor’s perspective  Elements for success in gift planning  Not a lot of grueling detail on gift forms – gift options are simply tools to facilitate donor conversations (not products!)

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5  You can’t do it alone  The internal case is for staff and board  Why should you engage in planned giving?  Where are the opportunities?  What do you expect to achieve?

6  Gift planning that considers ◦ Donor’s personal goals ◦ Donor’s charitable goals ◦ Most effective gifts  Effective planning enhances all gifts ◦ Expands opportunities for major gifts  No longer narrow definition ◦ Not deferred alone ◦ Involves donors, advisor, and charity

7  Annual fund  Major gifts  Planned gifts  Capital campaigns  A single donor – think of the maturity of the program and the maturity of the donor

8 ANNUAL GIVING MAJOR GIVING PLANNED GIVING Donor Commitment Donor Involvement

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10 StateNumber of Returns Number of Itemizers Number of Charitable Deductions Dollar Value of Charitable Deductions U.S.139,230,75 2 49,597,995 (35.62% of all filers) 41,366,929 (83.4% of all who itemized) $182.14 Billion

11 Individuals $229.03 Corporations $15.69 Foundations $38.52 Bequests $23.15 Total: $306.39 Billion

12 RecipientAmount (billions)% of Total Religion$102.3233.4% Education$43.3214.1% Human services$29.649.7% Foundations$27.739.1% Public society/benefit$22.657.4% Unallocated giving$23.737.1% Health$23.157.6% Arts, culture humanities $13.674.5% International affairs$13.224.3% Environment, animals$6.962.3%

13  Intergenerational transfer of wealth from 1998-2052  $41-$136 trillion in total dollars  $6-$25 trillion in gifts to charity  Interesting observations on giving attitudes and practices of wealthy

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15  2006 Study  Focused on philanthropic profile, motivations and goals of high net worth individuals (income >$200,000, assets >$1 million)  3.1% of all U. S. households  98% of group made gift to charity in 2005

16 Type of Gift% Who Have Created Capital campaign64.6% Bequest41.2% Stocks/mutual funds31.8% Created foundation19.5% Created donor advised fund15.9%

17 Motivation% of Respondents Citing Meet critical needs86.3% Giving back to society82.6% Reciprocity81.5% Bring about a desired impact68.5% Nonprofits should do what government cannot do 64.4%

18 Factor% of Respondents Citing Spent less money on administration 74.8% Donor can determine impact of gift 58.3% Donor felt more financial secure 52.0% Donor received better return on investments 46.6% Donor not already financially committed 40.2%

19  Three top reasons donors stopped giving: ◦ “No longer feel connected” ◦ Wanted to support other causes ◦ Solicited too often  Sources of advice: ◦ 2006: Peers and nonprofits ◦ 2008: Professional advisors  Donors cite the desire to “give back to the community” as the primary motivation for giving; public recognition was of little interest.

20  Setting an example for children is an important motivation in giving.  Parents are the leading source of philanthropic education.  Donors expect transparency, accountability, and protection of privacy from the charities they support.

21  Report in March 2007  Combined high net worth with surveys in Indiana, St. Louis, Memphis  Goal to identify potential bequest donors, and donor motivation  48.4% had a will ◦ FindLaw 44.4% (2002) ◦ NCPG 42% (2000)

22 AgeBequest StudyHNW Philanthropy Study 30-408.9%1.4% 40-5028.1%9.4% 50-6-21.9%19.3% 60-7020.6%27.5% 70-8011.0%25.1% 80+8.9%17.3%

23 AgeBequest Study% of Sample 30-4018%18.2% 40-5028%28.8% 50-6024%18.3% 60-705%10.9% 70-803%7.8% 80+1%3.7%

24 >$25,000$25,000 to $49,999 $50,000 to $74,999 $75,000 to $99,999 $100,000 + Bequest currently in place 6.6%7%7.6%6.5%10% Would consider putting a bequest in place 28.4%34.6%28.8%25.99%35.63%

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26  Assumption One: The individual wants to leave his or her entire estate to family.  Assumption Two: The individual is driven by tax avoidance.  Assumption Three: The individual has fully thought through the issues that impact estate planning.

27  A checklist for goal setting ◦ Providing for spouse ◦ Providing for family (children, grandchildren, extended family) ◦ Addressing special needs – educational, rehabilitation, medical, remedial ◦ Desire to maintain control ◦ Desire to allow flexibility ◦ Establishing (meeting) family values ◦ Support specific charities

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29  Accelerate gifts destined for charity that generate no income  Accelerate a gift of a home or farm by making a retained life interest gift. What if the client needs to leave? ◦ Bargain sale ◦ Bargain sale of the remainder interest ◦ Bargain sale of the remainder interest for a gift annuity ◦ Sale, splitting the proceeds

30  Make deferred gifts with tax burdened assets  Context for an IRA Rollover Gift  Use a gift to care for a disabled child

31 $100,000 6.1% Charitable Gift Annuity Couple Ages 78, 82 Principal amount$100,000.00 Charitable deduction$40,373.00 Annual income to parents$6,100.00 Tax-free portion$4,623.80 Ordinary income portion$1,476.20

32 Current Pay Annuity Couple Ages 70, 71 Contributed amount$25,000 Charitable deduction$6,741.75 Annuity (5.2%)$1,300.00 Tax-free amount$908.70 Ordinary income$391.30

33 $250,000 Bequest of Retirement Plan to Family $250,000 Bequest of Retirement Plan to 5% 20-Year CRUT Total Estate$5,000,000 Total Taxes on $250,000 IRA $160,625$71,490 Effective Tax Rate64.25%28.6% Net Bequest$89,375$250,000 Net Tax Savings$89,135

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35  Your role ◦ Engage the donor ◦ Develop a vision for the gift structure and impact ◦ Provide options to achieving the goal (optional)  The donor’s role ◦ Brings charitable intent ◦ The assets ◦ Determines the gift form

36  The donor’s advisors ◦ Attorney ◦ CPA ◦ Insurance professional ◦ Financial planner ◦ Trust officer ◦ Stock broker ◦ Real estate agent/broker

37  Do you have charitable organizations that you currently support on an annual basis?  Would you be interested in including any of these charities in your will or estate plan?  If there were a way to shift dollars from taxes to charity, would you be interested in exploring those options?

38  What are your values?  What charitable interests have you pursued as a result of your values?  What have you learned from your giving?  What is the most satisfying gift you have made?  What do you want to pass to your children?

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40  Publicly Traded Securities  Mutual Funds  Privately Traded Securities  Real Estate Tangible Personal Property Intellectual Property E-Bonds

41  Charitable Gift Annuities  Charitable Remainder Trusts  Pooled Income Funds

42  Benefits to the donor ◦ Allows the donor to plan the disposition of estate and to assign priorities to meet goals ◦ Allows donor to make a larger gift than with an outright gift ◦ Allows the donor to “invest” in the future of the nonprofit  Benefits to the nonprofit ◦ Simple ◦ Easy ask ◦ Builds commitment ◦ Builds future income stream

43 Form A specific dollar amount A percentage of the total estate A percentage of the residue A specific class of property A specific asset All of the remainder A contingent bequest A formula distribution

44  Beneficiary designation differs from gift of policy because decedent owns policy, and it’s in his estate. However, full amount passing to charity is deductible.  Life insurance policies have often extended beyond the need for which they were purchased. They’re easy to give up.  The “ask” is easy. Donors may not have considered this alternative.

45  Retirement accounts include pension plans, profit sharing plans, stock bonus plans, Keogh Plans, 401(k) plans and IRAs.  These assets have income tax consequences at death of owner in addition to estate tax consequences  Many individuals now have substantial assets in these plans  These plans are not disposed of through will (generally)

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47  You’ve got a relationship with the donor  Simply take it to the next level  How did you first get involved with Boys & Girls Clubs?  What is the most important thing we do?  Look out ten to twenty years – what is your greatest concern?  What can you do to help us address that concern?

48  Information is critical to all gift officers, now and in the future  Record it in the system, where others have access  Always check before making a call, so the info is fresh

49  Use the information you get to develop your relationship with that donor  Invite them to events in their area of interest  Tell them about advances in the field – by letter, e-mail, or phone  Continue to develop your knowledge  Share ways to meet their objectives

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51  Ask your 5+ year donors and major gift donors to become a member of the legacy society  Listen carefully to identify personal needs that may be met through planned gifts  Be sensitive (and ears and eyes open) for substantive financial transactions

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53  Governing documents and state law ◦ Articles of incorporation and by-laws ◦ Trust document ◦ Tax determination letter ◦ Board resolutions ◦ Other legal document ◦ Licensing ◦ UMIFA/trust investment standards ◦ Trustee laws ◦ Probate laws

54  Mission and purpose  Case for long-term support ◦ Compelling ◦ Urgent ◦ Outcome oriented ◦ Short  Strategic plan

55  Board structure ◦ Assess your needs ◦ Assess your structure (strengths/weaknesses) ◦ Fill in the gaps  Fiscal policies and procedures  Gift acceptance policies  Stewardship policies  Investment management policies

56  Endowment structure ◦ What happens to planned gifts? ◦ Is long-term funding a priority? ◦ Is long-term funding in strategic plan? ◦ How does board feel about endowment? How about staff?  Database and database management ◦ What records are maintained? ◦ How are those records maintained?

57  Reporting and measurement  Planned giving recognition society  Staff evaluation ◦ Staff structure ◦ Job description/evaluation ◦ Allocation of time

58  Staff ◦ Goals ◦ Annual Evaluation

59 Time Spent on PGPercentage 0%1.7% 1-24%39% 24-49%15.6% 50-74%11.8% 75-99%14.8% 100%17%

60  Donor potential ◦ Donor data ◦ Donor data collection ◦ Donor depth ◦ Segmentation of donors ◦ Top 100/200/300

61  Marketing ◦ Marketing strategy ◦ Marketing activities ◦ Marketing materials  Branding  Brochures  Newsletters  Other communications

62  Marketing ◦ Website  Easy to find?  Identify and mission clear?  Updated often?  Useful data for browsers?  Can you collect information?  Is staff on the site?  Does charity check regularly?  Calendar?  Monitoring traffic?  Information for advisors?

63  Marketing ◦ Professional advisor outreach  Database of top advisors in market  One page information sheet  Sample bequest language  Professional advisory council  Newsletters  Seminars

64  Marketing ◦ The marketing plan  Is there a plan?  When adopted and reviewed?  What are the key activities?  Do the activities  address key donor segments  reflect reality of geography  properly staffed  Measurable goals and objectives?  Staff responsible?  Timeline?

65  Marketing ◦ Annual evaluation  Objective review  Number of donor calls  Number of gifts or commitments  Dead end calls  Gift proposals  Seminars/attendees/follow up calls  Follow ups from mailings  Subjective review  Donors qualified before call?  Purpose of call clear?  Could you follow up?

66  Marketing ◦ Annual evaluation  Seminars  Collateral materials  Recognition society  Professional advisory board  Board training

67  Understand the importance of building relationships – long-term relationships – with donors  Think of gift planning as an extension of your current relationship.  No magic beans.  Steward your donors  Measure your results


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