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How Fundraising Plans Help Build Relationships, Raise More Money and

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Presentation on theme: "How Fundraising Plans Help Build Relationships, Raise More Money and"— Presentation transcript:

1 How Fundraising Plans Help Build Relationships, Raise More Money and
Stay True to Mission With Kim Klein Real money. Real people. Real change.

2 About the Presenter Kim Klein is the author of five books, including the classic text, Fundraising for Social Change, recently released in a SEVENTH edition. She also wrote Reliable Fundraising in Unreliable Times, which won the McAdam Book Award in She has provided training and consultation in all 50 United States, five Canadian provinces and 21 other countries. She is a lecturer at the School of Social Welfare at the University of California, Berkeley, and has served as guest faculty at the Haas School of Business at UC Berkeley and Concordia University in Montreal. Kim co-founded the Grassroots Fundraising Journal in 1981.

3 Plans Are Built on a Foundation

4 Sources of Revenue TOTAL $1.4 trillion
Earned Income: 50% Government: 32% Philanthropy: 13% Investment Income: 5%

5 Philanthropic Giving: 2015
TOTAL GIVING:  $ billion Individuals:   $264.58      72% Bequests:                  8% Foundations         15% Corporations            5% Source: Giving USA

6 The People Who Give: Most people: 70% of adults give away $$
Give to 5-10 organizations each year, most of which are fairly similar. Equal numbers of men and women. # 1 reason people make a donation: someone asked them. #1 reason people don’t give: they say they were not asked.

7 Move into an “EXCHANGE” Frame
Go from this: “Please, please, please…” To this: “I think you would be interested….”

8 The Purpose of Fundraising is to Build Relationships
Invite a legacy gift (bequest): information repeated over time in various ways. Invite the donor to give thoughtfully: (personal calls, visits, personal asking) Invite the donor to give over and over: mail, phone, e-alerts, signature events, personal notes on letters, thank you notes Invite the first gift: (mail, on-line, special events, thank yous)

9 Plans Start with Evaluation

10 Evaluating your Relationship Building Efforts
1. We invite people to make their first gift through: (ie events, direct mail, door to door, on-line) 2. We invite people to give a second, third, fourth gift by: (ie thank you notes, newsletter, fall appeal, gala) 3. We ask people to consider increasing their gift by: (ie upgrading campaigns)

11 Know What You Need to Raise

12 Questions to Establish Goals
How much money do you need to raise from individuals in this time period? How many new donors do you want? How many donors can you expect to renew their gifts? How much $$ is that? Which donors will be asked to increase their gifts?

13 Changing Donor Pyramid

14 A Simple Chart Goal: $50,000 # of gifts size # of prospects* 2 $5000 8
$ $ $ $ $ 76 gifts X = 152 prospects *You will need 2 times the number of prospects as the number of gifts

15 Gift Range Chart: $200,000 Lead gifts: 1 gift @ $25,000 $ 25,000
Total lead gifts $ 65,000 Other gifts:  5, $50,000 2, ,000 1, ,000 ,000 ,000 Rest various 20,000 Subtotal $135,000  

16 Donor Trajectory “This is one of the organizations I support” “I like this organization a lot” “This is one of my top three giving priorities”

17 The most likely giver is someone who has given already
Send a thank you note within 72 hours Record the donation in a database Personalize whenever possible Send the donor some kind of information at least 3 times a year Use social media appropriately Keep your website up to date

18 Do You Have the Right Mix?
Sources/Strategies Social media Religious Major Donors Members House parties Fees/Products Foundations Board and Volunteers

19 How are you building skills of your board and volunteers?
Planned Gifts Heading Major Gifts Team Soliciting large gifts as part of a team Asking donors likely to say yes; working on a campaign Meaningful but not scary fundraising tasks

20 Every Board Needs: A way for every board member to participate. Some people: will ask for money and some won’t love events, and some don’t enjoy working alone, others in teams prefer approaching strangers prefer working with institutions Who are you? Is your board balanced amongst all the styles?

21 Every Board Member Should be Able To:
State a one sentence, easy to remember mission or vision statement Name three important accomplishments from the previous year Name three goals for the current year Know the total budget and some budget detail Talk about how the organization raises $.

22 How well is your board doing?

23 One Thing Will Never Change: Personal face to face asking
Standard Slide Nothing takes the place of face to face asking

24 Tips on asking Success is asking

25 2. Be OK with no

26 3. Focus on what you believe,
not what you fear.

27 4. You don’t have to ask everyone

28 Identifying Prospects
Ability: Gives away money Belief: Cares about this cause or something similar Contact: How you know A and B is that you or someone you trust knows the prospect. You have access to this person.

29 Set a goal for yourself Example: $10,000 Need: 10 at $1,000 Or 1 at $5,000 1 at 2,000 3 at 1,000 Need 3X as many prospects as gifts.

30 Break it down into small bites:
Create a chart of possible prospects: Name Relationship Gives $ Cares? Ask for: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.

31 Make a list, work the list
Create a chart of possible prospects: Name Relationship Gives $ Cares? Ask for: Max ex-boyfriend never hardly time of day Mary cousin Yes yes $150 Jose friend Yes lobbyist houseparty Susan colleague ?? Sort of comedy night Georgia book club Yes probably not book fair? Milagros neighbor Yes definitely $500 Tiffany best friend Yes already gives? $1,000

32 Steps in asking: kleinandroth.com

33 Preparation Have ready: Stories Statistics, including comparisons
Philosophical reasons why this is important Responses to common objections and questions Budget and fundraising success so far

34 Don’t do all the talking…
Ask different types of questions: How did you first hear about us ? How long have you lived here? How is that donut shop that just opened? What is most compelling about this issue to you?

35 Tell Your Own Story I got involved in this because…. The most surprising thing to me about this issue is…. I loved meeting people who have been giving for a long time because…. I have a dog, too….

36 The CLOSE

37 Elements of a Successful Donor Program
What’s Working/ What’s in Place What Needs to Change/Improve Next Steps Compelling Sense of Exchange (Why should someone make a donation to your organization?) Willingness to ask for money (Do you have people to ask and people willing to ask them?) 37

38 What’s Working/ What’s in Place What Needs to Change/Improve
Next Steps Strategies for Building Relationships: Acquiring, Retaining, Upgrading Team of People Involved (Board, Volunteers, Staff) 38

39 What’s Working/ What’s in Place What Needs to Change/Improve
Next Steps Fundraising Goals (SMART) Infrastructure & Technology (Database, systems, shared knowledge) 39

40 LEAD PERSON RESPONSIBLE
Fundraising Plan for ___________________________ January – December, 2017 STRATEGY GOALS Audience or Prospects WHEN LEAD PERSON RESPONSIBLE Role of Board Comments

41 Summary of Planning Elements
Start with what you most need Pick a strategy Set a goal: break this down by season, strategy, or program Create materials as needed Recruit and train volunteers Evaluate and move to your next need, i.e. return to #1.

42 Helpful Resources from Kim Klein
Magazine and e-newsletter Grassroots Fundraising Journal Books by Kim Klein Fundraising for Social Change, Seventh Edition Reliable Fundraising in Unreliable Times Sign up for our free e-newsletter:


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