Fund Raising
PAít~
a sign of weakness. We fear it will
obligate us to do something in return
C] ow many of you," I ask, that we don't really want to do.
" . "would be uncomfortable Let's be honest - when we're
.,~ asking friends and family to raising money, we are asking for help.
donate to your favorite group?" If we individually had enough money
Most of the people in the room _ or energy or power to solve cammu-
dozens and dozens of them _ raise nity problems alone, we'd probably
their hands. just do it ourselves.
"Why?" Unfortunately, big challenges such
"I don't want to take advantage of as making art and culture accessible
my friends," says one. to everyone require big solutions.
"I don't want to be seen as None of use can solve them individu-
mercenary," responds another. ally. We need each other.
"Friendship Let me suggest a way of asking
and money that might ease your mind. "Maxine,"
don't mix." you say, "I'm involved with a great
"They're going cause. We're doing terrific work to
to turn around and ask improve our community and we need
me to support their groups," your help. If you could support us
says a third, and everyone laughs with a $500 donation, it would mean
appreciatively. "I can't afford to say a great deal to me. If you choose not
yes to everyone." to participate, that's OK - we'll still
"How many of you have done it be friends no matter
anyway?" I ask. what. But I sure
Nearly every hand goes up. hope you can help."
"So has anyone ever lost or In other words,
damaged a friendship because of a when you ask, you
charitable request?" give the person
The room goes quiet. We all look at explicit permission
each other, sitting on our hands. to say no. There's no
I've asked this question of thou· pressure involved.
sands of people. Perhaps one out of 50 Given your
will talk about a friendship gone sour passion and the
due to miscommunication or inappro- power of your cause, some will say yes.
priate expectations. The other 49 of us I promise you that they will be grateful
sit silently, wondering why our fears for the opportunity to participate.
are so disconnected from reality. "But I don't know anyone who
Most of us have been raised to has money!"
solve our own problems and not Almost a decade ago, after several
trouble anyone else. Independence, positions with a variety of grassroots
we've been told, is the great American groups, I left a steady job to start a
virtue. Asking for help somehow consulting practice. Financially
implies we're not clever speaking, I leapt into the void. My wife
enough or strong enough _ it's was working at the time, finishing up a
,ç""", REACH . www.artsreach.com. 1·415·883·3414
"I Can't
Ask
My Friends!"
And Other
Board Fundraising Fallacies
Thisl\ftide is a~ted from
BiI'~ ~ $,!nijiGI'OU~:
'A ~~ Membllr'S I~
Çã¡¡øe :to ~~\I,,",~ of
$§Ðå·tðß;OØØ.I;~W\tñ
permission of Emerson
& Church. publisherS. To order.
caU5Oa.359.ool'tOrvisit
www.c°Mribution!t~~.riM.cOm.
long career as a Montessori preschool
teacher - another highly paid profes·
sion. The two of us, working full·time,
had a combined income of about
$35,000, which I guess landed us
somewhere in the middle class.
We gave away money: $25 to one
group, $50 to another, sometimes as
much as $100. At the end of the year I
added up our donations and discovered
we had contributed a total of $2,500.
That startled me. I added the numbers
twice, because I didn't believe it.
Apparently we were "major donors."
Let me tell you about our lives. We
lived with our daughter in a tiny
rented house; a sweet and comfy home,
but less than one thousand square feet.
Many of my trousers were (and are)
frayed, because I hate to go shopping. I
drove a 1981 Toyota with 200,000
miles and no air conditioning - in
Tucson, Arizona. If you saw me in that
car, the last thing you would have said
is, "There goes a major donor!"
I'm happy to report that business is
good. I now earn about twice what my
wife and I used to earn together, which
has made it possible
for her to stop
working. We have a
policy of tithing, or
giving away 10
percent of our
earnings. In a recent
year, this totaled
about $7,500 in
charitable donations
distributed among
nearly one hundred groups.
Until a few years ago, when we
abandoned the desert for the woods of
Vermont. I continued to drive my hard·
working (and very warm) Toyota because
I wanted to prove a point. There's only
one way to figure out how much money
individuals can give you - and it's not
what they drive, not where they live, not
what they wear. You don't have access to
your neighbor's bank statement. right?
The only way to find out how much
someone can give you is to ask.
In my ongoing campaign to
demystify fundraising, I tell a lot of
groups about my income, car, house,
giving, and so on, and it generates some
interesting responses. One man stood
up and talked about his grandfather, a
farmer in North Dakota. "He lives pretty
simply," he said, "but I know he
supports his favorite organizations. If
my grandfather knew that people were
sitting across town saying, 'We can't ask
Pete for money. He's too poor. Look at
his tractor,' it would make him crazy.
He would say, 'Have you studied my
checkbook? Have you looked at my
bank account? How dare you make that
decision for me.'''
So let's keep this simple.
Fundraising boils down to two jobs:
. The asker - that's you - asks for
the gift.
. The decider says, "Yes, I choose to
give," or "No, I'm sorry, I choose
not to give."
Do not confuse these two jobs. Don't
make decisions for other people based
on your extremely limited knowledge of
their finances. Don't screen them in Of
out based on rumor, hearsay, or the
condition of their automobiles.
You may have seen a story in the
New York Times that profiled the work
of two philanthropists: Ted Turner
(you know who he is) and Oseola
McCarty, an African-American woman
from Mississippi. She made her living
as a domestic worker, taking in
laundry. When she reached her
eighties, she donated her life savings -
$150,000! - to create a scholarship
fund for black students at the local
university. "I can't do everything," she
said, "but I can do something to help
somebody. And what I can do, I will do.
I wish I could do more."
When you hear "major donor" and
"philanthropist," you probably don't
think of people like Oseola McCarty,
and that's too bad. For every story
like hers featured in the news media,
hundreds of thousands remain untold.
Remember, 70 percent of American
families donate to nonprofits. You're
surrounded by philanthropists.
Knowing people who have money is
Ready for
professional
e-marketing?
Are you still using Outlook? Are you building
segmented e-mail lists? Is your e-mail getting deliv-
ered? Are you complying with the anti-spam law?
Let us show you why over 350 arts & cultural organi-
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irrelevant; the question is, do you
know people who give money?
Of course you do. And you won't
know how much they can give until
you ask.
Prospecting:
Looking Beyond the Locals
We often use the word prospect to
describe potential donors. Generally
speaking, prospects meet the follow·
ing criteria, which are arranged in
order of importance:
· Contact: Do they have relationships
with you, other board members,
staff, key volunteers, or other
donors to your group? A direct
personal relationship is best, but an
indirect relationship - for example,
a friend in common who opens the
door - is often sufficient.
· Belief: Do they care about
your cause, issue, programs,
or constituency?
· Ability: Do they have money or
other resources to give? It's wise to
See ASK, page 4
~ttJuJidu
.-
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TIll follo:nri.., data an
alDlllltJolIkuI:
_....,.'..1..
(V.....IIo~'. Uo~'
s....)"...u
s._.,......2aI
Contact us to request a free
1 S-minute demonstration
and see how easy and affordable PatronMail is.
(212) 271-4328 ext.117
info@patrontechnology.com
¡:aLrg~!:gy.com
,cr,úREACH. www.artsreach.com. 1-415-883-3414
ASK
continued from page 3
assume the answer is yes, since you
won't really know until you ask.
People who meet these three
criteria are prospects and should be
asked for support. According to
demographers, the average American
adult knows roughly 200 people, so
most of us have the raw material to
develop a good list.
When looking for prospects, it's
appropriate to start with your
neighbors, since you probably have
the strongest relationships with
people who live in your community.
These folks are most affected by the
problem you're trying to solve.
They're the ones most likely to use
your services.
However, savvy fundraisers
understand that relationships are
more important than geography.
Don't limit yourself to the locals. In
compiling your prospect list, consider
the following folks.
Former locals. About twenty percent
of Americans move each year, but many
retain ties to their former homes.
Children grow up and move away, but
still feel connected to the places they
were raised. Even if they see no direct
benefit from your work, these people
appreciate what you do from a distance.
Friends and family elsewhere. Stay
in touch with family and friends who
live somewhere else. They might
surprise you.
Part-time locals. Many rural areas
include second home owners. Some of
these folks spend long periods in their
second home: Florida all winter,
www.artsreach.com
SUBSCRIBE TODAY 1-888-881-5861
LQÍdJ
REACH
.-
John Zorn
Publisher & Editor
Kira Ruvo
Art Director
-
Volume XIII
Issue 4. 2005
Advisorv Council
Carl Bloom, Carl Bloom Associates, Inc.
Bob Budlow, Consultant
Josi Callan, Museum of Glass
Robert J. Cohen, STIR Project
Mark Grimes. Grimes Communications, Inc.
Judith Heir, New York Philharmonic
David Kitto. Kennedy Center
for the Performing Arts
Jim Kouzes, The Tom Peters Group
Charlie Wade, Atlanta Symphony Orchestra
cçý"k,REACH. www,artsreach.com. 1·415·883·3414
Maine all summer, and so on. Others
visit their vacation home nearly every
weekend and holiday. Many second
home owners intend to move or retire
there and identify strongJy with the
landscape, people, and values of their
adopted community. Given their
financial circumstances - it's not
cheap maintaining two residences -
these people are also candidates for
major gifts.
Keep flipping through your mental
Rolodex. (Going through your real
Rolodex, personal database, or little
black book is a good idea, too.) Who do
you know who might be willing to help?
Thy Neighbor's Donor
If the word you hear most often in
fundraising is "no," then my vote for
the most annoying word is "competi·
tion." With more than one million
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Arts Reach serves as an interactive forum far arts management
professionals, and it wekomes articles, opinions. questions. and
letters. Please send typed manuscripts or letters to Arts Reach,
38 Holliday Drive. Novato, CA 9';949. To be returned,
all materials must be accompanied by a self_addressed,stamped
envelope.Thank you. Arts Reach.lsSN \065-81 30, is published
eight times each year (january, March. April, May,July,
September, October, November.) by Arts Reach Unlimited.
38 Holliday Drive, Novato, CA 94949. Phone 1-800-793-3342,
Fax 415-883-7565, email ceo@ArtsReach.çom.Copyright2003.
Third-class postage paid at San Anselmo, CA. POSTMASTER:
Send address changes to: Arts Reoch, 524 San Anselmo Ave.,
San Anselmo, CA 94960. Annual Subscriptions: $119 USA.
Canada and foreign:$129 (U.S. funds only). Back issues are avail-
able at $11.90 each. Reproduction in whole or in part is allowed
with written consent only. Views expressed herein are those
of the author exclusively. All articles are true and factual to
the Publisher's knowledge: however. the Publisher accepts no
responsibility for any errors contained herein.
nonprofits in the U.S., it's undeniably
true that donors have a lot of options.
They also have to sort through a
maddening degree of duplication, since
thousands upon thousands of organi-
zations have overlapping missions.
Unfortunately, "competition"
implies winners and losers fighting for
finite resources. As I hope you've seen
by now, philanthropic scarcity is a
myth - individual Americans give
away more than $200 billion per year.
There's plenty of money to take care
of us all, especially if you're willing to
invest some time and energy in the
$500·$5,000 neighborhood.
Most people who donate money
spread it around. According to some
studies, the typical donor family
supports five to eight organizations
per year, and millions of contributors
support ten or more charities annu-
ally. They often cluster their giving by
category: some focus on the arts,
others on health, still others on
education or the environment.
So how do you find the names of
likely supporters outside of your
immediate circle or network?
Fortunately, most nonprofits
are nice enough to acknowledge
their donors in their newsletters,
annual reports, event programs,
and other publications. They often
sort their donors by gift levels -
Benefactor, Angel, Archangel, Suo
preme Deity - which gives you a
pretty clear idea about how much
each person contributes.
To expand your own prospect pool,
consider the following:
Contact all nonprofits operating in
your area whose mission or constitu-
ency overlaps yours in any way,
including local, regional, and national
organizations. Ask for their most
recent annual report and request to
be put on their mailing list for
newsletters. If they only distribute
newsletters to paid members, consider
a donation to join the group.
Photocopy donor lists from these
publications and share them with
Our campaigns are
known for stimulating
growth.
your board, staff, key volunteers, and
significant contributors. Ask them to
mark off any names they know,
especially if they have postal ad·
dresses, phone numbers, and/or
email addresses.
Compare these lists to your own. If
you see any of your supporters, note
how much they give to other groups.
With luck, you'll discover that some of
your $50 members are giving $500 or
more to other organizations. These
folks should be prioritized for major
gifts visits.
If you diligently collect lists and
"screen" names, your fundraising effort
will benefit in at least two ways: you'll
have lots of people to solicit, and you'll
begin to build your fundraising team
by engaging board, staff, and volun·
teers in the process. I!I]
Andy Robinson is a trainer and
consultant based in PlainfieJd,Ver-
mont. His other books include
Grassroots Grants, Second Edition
and Sellin. Social Chan.e fWithout
Selline Out).You can reach him at
andyfund@earthlink.net.
..,'
.~
f, ~
... ... '..~".
At SD&A, we understand
that the arts are about people:
those who perform, those who attend,
and those who provide the resources
and infrastructure to make each
performance possible.
SD&A Teleservices, Inc.
The Industry's Only Provider of Call Mattager,
a Computerized Lead Management and
Dialing System that Delivers Increased Speed,
Performance and Efficiency to Onsite Campaigns
For more than 20 years, our people
have been working with great success to
meet the marketing and fundraising needs
of arts organizations across the country,
striving to make the world a little brighter
with every campaign we design.
For more information contact Mary Jane Avans
(678) 904-1583 or mjavans@sdatel.com.
Visit us on the Web at www sdats com
.""~ + ._"m"","w" + wõ"~~" II
Before
ou Begin Your
Fundraising Campaign
ead This
$ Gift Range # Gifts # Prospects Total $/Range Prospects Solicitors
g,. ~ uccessful fundraising begins
_ ],,>_ with an interesting conun·
,. drum. The most effective
strategy - face to face solicitation -
tends to make board members and
volunteers (not to mention many
professionals) the most uncomfortable.
In other words, we tend to avoid the
approach that raises the most money for
the time and energy invested. Instead,
we focus on less effective strategies that
feel less risky but offer smaller rewards.
(For an analysis of these barriers and
how to work through them, see Arts
Reach, Volume XIII, Issue 4.)
Face to face fund raising has
several advantages:
,/ You can talk with prospects to learn
how their interests dovetail with the
work of your organization.
.I By communicating your passion for the
mission, you make the case in a
personal way.
./ You can respond directly to questions
or concerns.
.¡ You can bring visual aids - maps,
charts, photos, site plans, or blueprints.
,/ It demonstrates your commitment to
the cause. Not only are you giving your
time and money, you're showing
courage by meeting with donors to
solicit their support.
When making visits to your
prospects, in most cases you'll
have better luck going out in
teams of two.
Novices are some-
times afraid the
donor will feel
"ganged up on"
when two
solicitors
$5,000
Chart 2
"¡",,,REACH. www.artsreach.com. 1·415·883·3414
$ Gift Range # Gifts # Prospects Total $/Range
PA~~
. . .
come to call, but the advantages far
outweigh any potential problems.
./ In the traditional model, one solicitor -
often a board member - "opens the
door," while the other solicitor -
typically a staff member - provides more
detailed knowledge of the program.
./ At any given moment, one of you can be
the "designated listener" and fully
concentrate on what the prospect is
saying, rather than thinking three steps
ahead in the conversation.
,¡ It helps to ensure continuity with the
donor. If one solicitor moves on to a new
job or a new city, someone within your
group (the other solicitor) still knows the
donor on a face-to-face basis.
./ Prospects are sometimes flattered by
all the attention: "They sent a
delegation to see me, so I must
be important."
II' Finally, two solicitors strengthen each
other's resolve and provide moral support
Regardless of whether you make
these visits alone or bring a colleague
along, do everything you can to meet
with your donors and prospective
donors in person.
If You Don't Have a Goal,
You Won't Reach It
When raising money from individu-
als, we're concerned about two sets of
numbers: how many danors participate
and how
many dollars
they contrib·
ute. In a
typical annual
campaign,
$5,000
$2,500
$1,000
$ 500
Chart 1
3
15 (5.1)
$15,000
This article is adapted froII'I
8\2 Gifts for Small Groups:
A Board Member's I-Hour
Guide to SecurinC Gifts Qf
$590 to s.s,Q(Q,l\eprin~ with
permission of Emerson
& Church, publishers. To order,
call 508-359-00 19 or visit
www.contributionsman:zine.com.
,¡ The top 10 percent of your donors
contribute 60 percent of the
financial goal;
,¡ The next 20 percent of donors
contribute 20 percent of the goal;
./ The remaining 70 percent of donors
provide the balance: 20 percent of
the goal.
In other words, most organizations
rely on a handful of major donors to
generate the majority of their unre·
stricted income. Using this principle,
you can set a campaign goal and then
calculate how many donations at each
level you'll need to meet that goal.
With the title of this book as a
guide, it would be possible to create a
$50,000 gift chart focusing on major
gifts of $500 to $5,000 (see Chart 1).
This is a flexible model. sO adapt it
to your own circumstances. Note the
ratios: 5: 1, 4: 1 and 3: 1, These are
estimates, but the implication is clear:
for every $5,000 donor, you will need
to identify about five $5,000 prospects.
After you have compiled a list of
prospects, a team of board, staff, and
other solicitors corne together to
review the list, match prospects to
amounts, and assign them to solicitors.
This is often called "rating" the
prospects. For example, the expanded
internal version of the first line of the
chart would look like Chart 2.
3
5
12
21
15 (5: I)
25 (5:1)
48 (4:1)
63 (3:1)
$15,000
$12,500
$12,000
$10,500
I.
2.
3.
(continue the list to include 15 slots)
Prospect rating is an exercise in
organized gossip. "Ed, you put Sandy
Yang on your list. How much do you
think we should ask her for? Does
anyone else know Sandy - maybe you
have an opinion? Okay, let's put her
down for $_. Ed, are you willing to
be the solicitor? Great - who would
like to help Ed with that one?"
Bring lots of pizza and beverages,
because the process takes awhile. It's
also a good way to test the feasibility of
your goal. From the sample chart
above, it should be evident that you'll
need lots of prospects - about 150 in
this case - so you'll want lots of
helpers combing through donors
lists, thinking about their own
contacts, and compiling names.
As mentioned before,
fundraising is a volume busi-
ness. If you can't fill all the
slots - in other words, if you're
lacking enough prospects,
solicitors, or both - you may
have to lower your sights or
delay your campaign.
Before You Ask Others,
Give Money Yourself
There's karma in
fundraising, and I can pretty
much guarantee that if you're
not giving, you're not getting.
I don't believe in setting board
quotas - in other words, "Every
board member has to give at least
$1,000" - but I strongly believe
that all board members must give
to the best of their abilities.
Here's appropriate language:
"Because you're a leader in this
organization, we expect to be one
of the top three charities you
support this year."
There's no way to enforce
this - you're not going to
subpoena everyone's check·
books - but it sets the right
tone. It also means that if
$100 is a stretch for you, your
organization should graciously
accept your check for $100 or
perhaps your commitment of
$8 per month.
Maybe you're one of those
board members who say, "I
give my time, which is more valuable,
so why should I give money, too?"
You're right about the time commit-
ment: it is more valuable than money.
But in your role as board member you
need to give both time and money.
Here's why.
.t Fundraising is part of your job, and
you'll be more effective if you do what
you're asking others to do.
.t Despite what you've heard, time and
money are not convertible - neither
the phone company nor the landlord
are willing to accept your time in lieu
of cash.
¡ Sooner or later, you'll be asked this
question by an individual prospect,
foundation officer, or corporate funder:
"How many of your board members give
to the organization?" And if you can't
say, "One hundred percent - every
single one of us!" the prospect will
reply, "Well, if you can't get your own
folks to give, why should I?"
To put it bluntly, board members who
refuse to financially support their own
organizations can end up costing their
groups a lot more money than they can
give themselves. Before you ask others,
please be as generous as you can be.
See CAMPAIGN, page 8
CAMPMGN
continued from page 7
Three Keys:
Honesty, Follow· Through, and
Reasonable Expectations
The process of soliciting a big gift
generally includes three stages:
I) A letter requesting a meeting.
2) A phone call following the letter to
set up an appointment.
3) A visit to solicit the gift.
In the next Arts Reach issue, we will
walk through each step in more detail.
Before we travel that road together, I
must emphasize three key points.
.I Honesty and transparency generate the
best results. At each stage - letter,
phone call, and visit - you must be
completely clear about your purpose,
which is to raise money for your
organization. If you ambush people -
if you go to see them on other
pretenses and then spring the
fundraising question like a loaded trap
- you will annoy them and conse-
quently not raise much money.
"Transparency" means naming
numbers right from the start: "Alice, I
am writing because we're launching
our first major gifts campaign and I
would like to have the chance to meet
with you to discuss a gift of $1,000."
If that seems too direct for your
comfort - or perhaps you don't know
how much to ask for - try this: "Alice, I
am writing because we are launching
our first major gifts campaign and we're
looking for gifts of $500 to $5,000. I'm
not sure how much to ask you for, so
let's sit down together and talk about it."
./ Don't start what you can't finish. Once
you begin, you must follow through.
The worst thing you can do is to mail a
letter to prospect that says, "I will call
you," and then studiously avoid the
telephone. If you plan to lose your
nerve, do so before you begin. The
credibility of your organization (not to
mention your personal credibility)
depends on you and your teammates
honoring your commitments.
,/' Begin with reasonable expectations. The
beauty of a straightforward approach is
that it screens out those who are less
likely to give. True, you will lose some
candidates at each stage, but the ones
who remain will be strong prospects. If
you start with a letter that focuses on
fundraising, and follow up with a phone
call that also explicitly mentions
fundraising, any prospects who agree to
meet will seriously consider your request
before you even walk in the door.
Furthermore, if you mention numbers in
advance, they won't be shocked by the
amounts when you sit down together.
As for what you might expect, if you
send ten letters to legitimate prospects, you
will eventually reach six or seven by phone,
and three to five will agree to meet.
As they say in the commercials,
your results may vary. With persistence
and a little luck, they may be signifi·
cantly better. I!'I]
Andy Robinson is a trainer and consult-
ant based in Plainfield,Vermont. His
other books include Gras,roots Grants,
Second Edition and Sellin~ Social Chan~e
(Without Sellin~ Out).You can reach him
at andyfund@earthlink.net.
I
-UPDATE
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IIEElI
EXF.! ESS
®
Paige Bridges
(212) 640·4994
paige.l.bridges@aexp.com
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automaticbill.lfyouwouldliketo
become an American Express merchant,
please call 1-800-528-5200. In order to
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