FundClass October 2001
FundClass Archives:
Inner Workings
Edited Digest of Fund Class Topic #28, October 2001
Facilitated by Billie Rae Gillas
Welcome to our facilitator, Billie Rae Gillas, who will lead us in this topic entitled "Inner Workings." The class will benefit all who struggle with the day-to-day management of life in a nonprofit, showing us how to make the most of our time and our resources.
Billie Rae is a woman, wife, mother, and an Alaskan! She has been previously known as a Human Resources Manager for three start-up organizations for large, scale fishing and at-sea production facilities with 300+ employees. She has also been a Legislative Aide to the Speaker of the House, State of Alaska.
Billie Rae is currently the Finance/Membership Director for the Resource Development Council (RDC) for Alaska, Inc. RDC is a 501(c)(6) non-profit promoting the responsible growth and development of Alaska's natural resources. This organization also administers the Alaska Mineral & Energy Resource Education Fund, a 501(c)(3) educational non-profit providing teachers professional curriculum materials based upon natural resources specific to Alaska.
Join me in welcoming Billie Rae by participating actively in the discussions that arise as part of this interactive classroom.
Opening Statement - Inner Workings
Benefit from your strengths.
How many times have you heard, "do what comes naturally"?
After spending the majority of my career working in start-up situations, which really means do everything, and do it now, I really know what it means to benefit from your strengths.
Look at what you are trying to accomplish in your non-profit environment. You are trying to effectively reach the most people possible to obtain money for the goal. We all have different goals - and the appeal may differ, but the methods are the same. This is the inner working of the non-profit organization. The resounding focuses of Fund Class' discussions are how to acquire money.
Believe me - some of the strength of the organization lies in its efficiency. By becoming the most efficient in the method, you have more time to target money for your goal.
Let's be specific. In small organizations of 3-5 people, fundraising events, appeals, dues, issues, and lobbying usually are completed "in-house". To be frank, we do everything and time is definitely an issue. How do you make the most use of your time?
Look at the money.
- What accounting software are you using (i.e. functional accounting software complete with receivables system)? Or are you utilizing a database system?
- Have you analyzed your donor dollars for the "sure thing", "the begging dollars", and the event or "draw" income? If so, what proportion of time do you spend on each?
- How much of your annual income is in the form of dues?
- What is your annual membership dollars attrition versus new members? Are you replacing the membership lost with more donors or a fewer higher giving donors?
- How much time do you spend pursuing unpaid pledges/dues/events receivables?
- Have you established a minimum threshold for event net income? Please explain.
Please share your answers with the class. The "numbers" information can assist fundraising and marketing people as well as Executive Directors and the Board. The numbers tell us what we are doing well, what we are spending the most time doing (whether or not we should be) and often, what we need to remedy, equalize or cast aside.
If you don't know the numbers status, now is the time to learn what the numbers can tell you.
Benefit from your strengths.
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Liz |
"6. Have you established a minimum threshold for event net income? Please explain." |
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Linda |
We are in the process of reviewing several things within our small -- 4 people -- non-profit office. This is something we began several months ago as we realized we were careening towards disaster. We had too many projects, too little communication and way too much work related stress. We made a point of pausing in our work -- which has meant a series of retreats -- usually away from our offices -- and really getting "back to the basics". |
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Paul |
Linda, your thoughts were so on target for my organization that I forwarded to my board members as "food for thought". Also, your group is not the only one feeling frustration. |
Data Mining
Hopefully, we have started many of you thinking about "mining" data. Data mining and analysis requires a dedication to the unified input of raw data. In our organization, we allow only a single person to input the data, ensuring uniformity. We devise ways to pitch our message based upon region, membership status, previous donations or sponsorships, corporations versus individuals, etc. There are so many ways to identify a specific group and target fundraising messages. The time taken in data input will reap rewards!
Here is how data mining can save you time and dollars in fundraising efforts. For example:
1. We often use the last pitch ditch. This is the letter sent out right after the Thanksgiving holiday for end of the year dollars that some organizations hoard until the last minute. We typically exclude companies/individuals that have already donated during the year. Do you utilize this method or a variation?
2. At a sister organization's annual meeting banquet, our educational non-profit has pledge forms at each table, and several volunteers to round them up, with a matching donation from our sister organization if the pledges reach $5,000. Neon pledge forms, people really want them off of their tables! Anyone use a similar pledge drive, without mailings? Of course, the pledge cards are checked against the donor database, updated or added as necessary.
This is the time to share your mini-fundraising efforts, the ones that take the least of our time and money to compose.
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Jon |
We are a four year old small Christian School that acquires 54% of it's operating budget from tuition and fees (I guess you could call that our dues) and raises the rest from three annual events, a quarterly newsletter, plus the usual development office (if they breathe ask them) mentality. We use Peachtree for all our accounting and funds management and GifTrak for our donor info. |
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Tom |
I was interested in the "single port of entry" for all data idea. I know what you're talking about when you get different people adding data. Having one person who knows what has and hasn't been input really seems like a good idea. How do you insure that? Does everyone turn in hard copy to this data entry person or is there a way for people who think at the keyboard to forward their electronic input through the data entry person? |
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Don |
"How do you insure that? Does everyone turn in hard copy to this data entry person or is there a way for people who think at the keyboard to forward their electronic input through the data entry person?" |
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Billie Rae |
Preface: I am in the middle of our biggest fundraiser of the year, a two-day, statewide conference. It constitutes 1/3 or better of our annual income. Even with the tragedy of September 11th looming, my organization has surpassed our all-time-high sponsorship levels. We are using the trials and tribulations to pitch our sponsors. As a resource development organization, we have identified our members concerns with keeping our economy strong. Think Alaska's oil pipeline... |
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Maria |
"While the "single point access" has many benefits...it also makes an agency vulnerable in the event that the "single point" runs off to Central America with a bottle of Tequila and his/her soulmate on a brand new Harley, in search of the perfect beach and Margarita." |
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Penny |
I am another lurker who has finally decided to come out of the closet. I also really like the present format of the classes - I find them very useful. I am the Development Manager for a South African NPO working in crisis counseling, support and training, particularly in the field of HIV/AIDS. We are setting up a database from scratch, and I would like to make sure that we record as much information as we will need, even in the future. I would really appreciate it if you could share with me what fields you use in your database, besides name, title and contact details. I hope that if we research this adequately we can avoid having to review the whole thing in six months time when we realize we don't have the information we need for our queries. |
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Mark |
I am glad the lurkers are coming out of the closet. It is good. I would like to see less lurking on all the list-serves. Ultimately, fundraising is about relationship management and keeping the donors emotionally invested in the people and the cause. Our inner city school is also having trouble getting new donors BUT it is better to get the old donors to invest more for the emotional value, which they are doing. If people leave a cause I wonder if we have done the relationship management well. They usually leave because we haven't. Get leads from prior donors that is the key, then relationship management with them is essential. Even when donors leave keep them in the loop. We have found many return later or at least have a strong positive emotional memory about us. |
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Diane |
I too have been lurking on this list for quite awhile. I find it a valuable learning tool and have now decided to jump in with two points. I worked recently for a small museum with a very promising pool of donors. They have a wonderful database, which I segmented and coded carefully but it is still mainly used to generate mailing lists. There is no analysis or reporting done. I have been able to convince them of the importance of doing so but other more pressing issues always come up. Have others encountered this problem? |
Dragon Slayer
I thought I was in the dark - then the fire came.
The dark is a comfortable easy place to lay.
Coming close to fire is scary and fraught with danger.
Come closer to the fire.
Are you ready to slay the dragon?
The dragon is doing things the same way they have always been done.
The dragon is the tendency to mediocrity.
The dragon is the old way of doing business.
Slay the dragon.
You must.
You will.
You are now beginning to see the effects of terrorism and the U.S. war action taking place within your own organizations. How will you continue your efforts? What will move you forward? Where will your new goals lead? Who will hear your new message? When will you slay the dragon...
My own organization is revamping our logo, our newsletter and therefore, our "brand". We must be "seen" and our materials instantly "identifiable". So we are moving out of black and white to the world of color. It may seem like a simple thing, however black and white has worked for 25 years. Our data mining results tell us that our funders respond dramatically (with checks) to pitch messages in color. Our next dragon is moving away from manual input and into online event registration and payment.
The class would love to hear from you. What dragons have you slain?
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Don |
I have been procrastinating and now.... the dragon is in my sights. Our web site is currently being updated to accept on-line payments. Again...seems simple. But we need every advantage now. Our holiday appeal will now include several "more convenient" ways to give. |
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Michael |
No dragons slain here. The organization that I direct deals with an activist oriented issue that has virtually nothing to do with terrorism, the US war, etc. There is no way that we can re-define what we do in relation to the events of 9/11 because the events of 9/11 are in no way related to anything that we do. FYI: Our organization is an advocacy group focusing on animal issues. We have seen two effects since 9/11. First, since much of what we do is raising awareness to the issues that we focus on, 9/11 events (rightly so) have taken the main focus of almost ALL media attention. We had just completed a set of news conferences about 2 weeks before 9/11. These news conferences were extremely effective. The news briefings were presented in 3 sites. Associated Press, the Chronicle of Higher Education, 4 NPR radio stations, 3 television stations, 3 daily newspapers, and several college newspapers covered our efforts. Obviously since we can talk about this in terms of success, our next fundraising effort to our donors should be good. The letter is just about to go out. |
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Nancy |
The dragon I am trying to slay is to move from just newsletters and generalized appeals for money, to targeted and specific appeals. "Will you give $100 this year?" Many of our staff and supporters feel that this type of mail is annoying and they are resistant to trying that approach. I hope to have it in place this winter. |
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Tom |
One of the toughest dragons to slay is getting staff and boards out of their old ways of doing things and getting them to try something new. Often, when you try to make changes as simple as using a new logo or a consistent "look and feel", you find that by the time things filter through the layers of entrenched bureaucracies that the project gets done the same way as always. WELCOME TO THE WONDERFUL WORLD OF SMALL NONPROFIT DEVELOPMENT! Just remember that we do this because we love it, If you want job security and riches, go to work in a for profit business. Good luck! |
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Tom |
"From my position outside the US, I'd like to advise you to get people back as much as possible to their normal activities and ways of thinking. This was an incident, not an era!" |
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Vivian |
I concur with Tom's thinking and acknowledge that Nancy's perspective is indeed different and current events can be treated differently on her side of the ocean. |
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Vivian |
I am enjoying the comments of all the dragon slayers and wannabe dragon slayers. |
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Joni |
Hear hear to Tom's comments... is it really 15,000 children though? |
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Mary |
The dragon I've slain is greater understanding and appreciation of what I do (at a 70-student independent high school). As a volunteer-parent-development coordinator, I created my job -- kinda like a foreigner moving into a homogenous neighborhood. The dragon I'd like to slay is getting school staff and students (since they play key roles in the school) to trust that my recommendations aimed at improving or not ruining our public image are for good reasons. |
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Tom |
"... is it really 15,000 children though?" |
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Lew |
What I do not see is any effort to refocus a portion of the great Stewardship commitment that we are re-discovering to the home front. I am the Develop Director for an interdenominational child family "911 Center" in Altoona that offers child mentoring, parent ed., anger/stress management, and work with victims of domestic violence. All of these issues are beginning to be more of a problem as we get into the recession. Here large supporters of United Way have greatly reduced or closed, further putting stress on giving priorities. My project the Veterans Prayer Project which works vet-to-vet with vets in rehab has seen more interest as we prepare to deploy more of the PANG. My opinion is we need a national re-focus on some sort of Operation Home Front that would help people understand that particularly the non United Way agencies are part of the faith/social service infrastructure and are near crisis. Our normal income in Sept. is $60K this year it was $20! |
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Tom |
Lew pointed up the need for "a national re-focus on some sort of Operation Home Front that would help people understand that particularly the non United Way agencies are part of the faith/social service infrastructure and are near crisis." I would suggest that you find opportunities to get together with other npo's that share your geographical area and other npo's who share your mission. Try to find ways to work together to address problems in your communities rather than focusing on how to fund your agency! Try to find trustworthy partners. By that I mean agencies you can trust with the wallet for the project. I worked on a project once where a large agency took the financial lead and took all the money too! Partners literally got no flow through funds. We addressed the problem in the community by organizing small npo's and creating millions of dollars in new projects that left out the untrustworthy guys. Guess who got the message and changed their ways! Nobody trusts them with the money yet, but we've all learned to work the parameters of the projects we do with them so that we don't have to trust them very much. |
Collaborative Efforts
In Alaska, 1/3 of the population resides in our largest city, Anchorage. These people have heavy overlap as our state has the most NPO's per capita. YIKES! The increasing meeting and fundraising overlap has been noticed - both by the NPO's and especially those in corporate giving. NPO's here are rallying together. My own NPO has cut back weekly meetings to 1st and 3rd, while a sister organization cut back weekly's to 2nd and 4th. So just between us, a 1/2 reduction in similar meetings! These breakfast speakers had created quite the speaking circuit. Now we are careful not to schedule the same Speakers.
We co-host special events, sharing the revenue, sharing the work. One time, we do the event; they do the next year's. Each year, we share the revenue. This works especially well when Alaska gets a special Speaker like the Secretary of the Interior (these types don't get to our NW corner very often, if at all). Perhaps as many as 5 organizations will merge guest lists, and share the wealth. This way the infighting has halted. We only have to go out asking for money for our organization once or twice a year. Cutting back the requests has increased funds donated. Givers know they won't be hit up again until next year!
Collaborative efforts were nearly unheard of just 3 years ago. Now at every opportunity we are looking at who could best benefit and share the workload! Nearly every like-minded organization has a "complimentary" membership - just so we can keep in the loop. We "comp" each other at events, so while no money is changing hands, attendance is great and we learn from each other.
Best of luck to all of you. It's a little uneasy getting started, and loosening the cards you are holding so tightly to your chest! This is a BIG dragon!
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Mary Kay |
I'd like to know what size each of the collaborating organizations were in relation to each other . . . more precisely, the size of the development offices (number of people and amount of $$$ each brings in). We've tried similar collaborative efforts, but it always seems that the biggest org wants to take the biggest share of the profits--even when we smaller organizations offer to do the lion's share of the work on the particular event. |
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Don |
I think that your situation is not unique. I firmly believe that a significant shift in thinking must occur in order to survive. While I have shared your mentality for two decades (along with thousands of others), without a significant shift in thinking and a follow-up action plan to merge, marry, collaborate or in some other way, learn to work together....many otherwise viable organizations will simply disappear. |
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Cid |
Since there has been so much talk about the fear of gifting being down, I wanted to share this with you. |
Changing of the Guard
It seems that the dragon slayers are all busy. So we are on to the last post before the next class topic begins. We've covered Inner Workings, Data Mining, Collaborative Efforts, and Dragon Slaying.
Let us talk about the NEED for CHANGE.
If the bread in your cupboard gets stale, you either get creative with it and make croutons, or you throw it out.
So throw out the stale old ways you have been harboring.
In so many ways this is another dragon to be slain. Most of our time and energy is self-directed. Embrace the change. Whether the change lies in technology, or in methods of fundraising, we must present a fresh face, in keeping with the times, or go the way of buggy whips.
I have this to say. Our staff of four has one "institutional" member having just celebrated a 20-year anniversary with our organization. I am a relative newcomer and the bane of this man's existence. Not only do I force him to embrace the copier himself, but desktop faxing. More importantly, we went from putting on 3000 labels on our newsletters to utilizing a mail-out service with our printer, saving 8+ man hours, getting the publication out 2 days faster, and many paper cuts avoided! Yet, despite the upheaval caused to the gentleman, he is my personal advocate. WHY...because we can accomplish so much more than before. AND...no one else ever forced the issue.
It's change. Embrace it.
FundClass members, my administrative musing missives are finished. Give us your change, it adds up - for all of us.
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Don |
While events of our world may have taken some of my energy, I found your class to be informative and quite useful. As a matter of fact, it inspired me to change in several areas as well as providing ongoing inspiration. Thanks for a great class. And to those class Administrators...the silent heroes...thanks to you too for providing and administering this forum. |