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I had my first fundraising experience when I was a kid. I supported an animal welfare organization as a member of their youth program and collected money door to door. After a few years I Read more…
I had my first fundraising experience when I was a kid. I supported an animal welfare organization as a member of their youth program and collected money door to door. After a few years I Read more…
And is this the right question? Of course we should question everything and assume nothing. But the questions fundraisers ask at times miss the point, sometimes by several miles. Like the perennial, ‘how long Read more…
Last week the Dutch Fundraising Institute announced the winner of the first Young Fundraising Talent essay contest: Marlous van Oorschot! The theme of the contest was “Donors don’t commit”, and the winning essay moved the Read more…
Here is an analogy to fundraising from the Sanskrit scriptures that I have derived many lessons from. It is about Ganesha and his brother Kartikeya, who were tasked by their parents to go around the world three times. While Kartikeya set out on the task immediately, circumambulating the globe as instructed, Ganesha chose to walked around his parents, Shiva and Parvati, with great devotion three times.
When asked by his brother to explain his action, Ganesha replied, “you chose to go around ‘the world’, I did so around ‘my world’. Ganesha was pronounced the victor of this task by his parents. (more…)
I’ve been reading Peter Drucker lately. In case you don’t know, Peter Drucker was one of the first management gurus of the 50’s, and one of the most influential of all times. As Mr. Drucker got older, he turned his talents to nonprofits, first opening a foundation for nonprofit management, and then donating his own time and energy to the social sector. His book, Managing the Nonprofit Organization, first published in 1990, was a seminal work in our field.
In 2005, just after he died, Bloomsberg News posted a fundraising challenge to the NGO world: “Convert donors into contributors”, Drucker had said in his last days. “If nonprofit groups are to acquire more financial resources, those who give will need to feel more like participants.”
So, has this advice from the sage of NGO management held up? Are today’s NGOs creating more – or better – donors using methods of “engagement”? It’s definitely the buzzword of the social-media decade, but is it working? Or rather, how is it playing out? (more…)
Collecting Facebook pagelikes must not be your key objective any longer. In 2013, your focus should be on improving the interaction with your Fanbase. In this blog we’ll introduce IPP, an effective KPI to monitor Read more…
In 2011, I helped raise $30 million. In 2012, I helped raise $300,000. And I was just as proud. This was when I was on maternity leave. Toronto city council voted to close a number Read more…
For the past few months, we’ve been hearing about Lance Armstrong’s fall from grace and the aftermath of it. Barred from competing again, he has tried to win public opinion to support him in his Read more…
Three years ago, I didn’t even know fundraising was a profession. (Some of the contributors to this blog have been raising money for charity since I was a baby!) But when I arrived, I threw Read more…
Today, on the exact same day as our two-year blog anniversary, we have some EXCITING NEWS, because 101fundraising has been chosen as one of two Best Fundraising Blog honorees in FundRaising Success‘ 2013 Fundraising Professionals of the Read more…
There have been some wonderful, impassioned, thought provoking posts (and rants!) on this blog recently, all about issues very dear to my heart that often have me ranting too. There seems to be a lot Read more…
We had all hoped it would go better with time and we tried to ignore it. But the disease is still here, how is it possible? Is it me or is everyone experiencing the same? Everybody is tweeting and blogging about this virus eating away our income and infecting our database (among many see Roger Craver and Tom Belford and also the rants from Lucy Gower and Reinier Spruit). Notwithstanding the ‘prescriptions’ on donor’s loyalty and relationship by Adrian Sargeant and Ken Burnett we still sadly look mainly at the numbers: call it retention or attrition, loyalty or stewardship, donors are leaving us. (more…)
And if a house be divided against itself, that house cannot stand – but can you think of a more divided sector than ours? Despite shining exceptions on the whole we’re divided internally, divided from Read more…
By now, you have crunched your year-end numbers from leadership annual and major gifts and know exactly where you landed in 2012. What worked, and what didn’t work. For too many of us, we track Read more…
When I moved houses last year I used the postal company to forward my mail to my new address. This service also allowed me to let my utility suppliers, insurance companies and charities know that Read more…
Last week Esta Magazine (a Dutch glossy) published an article on three ‘professions of the future’. And guess what? According to them ‘fundraiser’ is one of these professions. A journalist approached me (and my dog) Read more…
About 12 years ago I was stopped by a street fundraiser, who asked me to sign up for a Direct Debit. The charity that they were fundraising for will remain nameless. However I had volunteered Read more…
I recently received an “exclusive” invitation for “select” guests to participate in a live webinar aimed at getting prospective students to enroll at a distance learning institution. Participants were promised the opportunity to interact with faculty members as they outlined their syllabus, connect with current students and even to discuss career paths with past students. In general the 60 minutes online were agreeable: informative, fun and, yes, a little pushy – with incentives designed to get prospective students signed up to a course of study as soon as possible. While I decided against this particular course of study I realized there is a lot of potential in this webinar format for making sales and I wondered how it could be used for fundraising? (more…)
Why once a year at least we should all revisit the basics of our trade. I remember being told, a while ago, that you don’t get to be a martial arts black belt by Read more…
We’re baaaaack! Happy new year! And may the fundraising force be with you in 2013! While you were resting, skiing, wining and dining, the 101fundraising team was busy with their abacus to present you the Read more…
Before we’ll give you the top 10, we say a short word of thanks at the end of 2012! Thank you READERS for your continuous and ever growing appetite for fundraising knowledge. Keep reading, learning Read more…
This is the very last 101fundraising blog post of 2012 and incidentally also our 200th. It therefore seems doubly appropriate to round out the year with a retrospective look at the year (almost) gone by. Read more…
This post is about Passion (with a capital “P”)…and about my good friend Luca Gaggianese that is missing in the French Alp since several weeks now. I always considered Luca a great fundraiser and a Read more…
Before I left Toronto and moved to London last year, friends, family and fellow fundraisers sent me off with words of wisdom, plenty of hugs, and a few thoughtful parting gifts, small enough to fit Read more…
By the time you read this hopefully you will be full of festive spirit, unwinding and celebrating another year, but are you celebrating success or survival? I love the festive season as communities, families and Read more…