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Published byClyde Stevenson Modified over 9 years ago
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How to Get Money
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Where We’ve Been…Where We’re Going So far this semester we have spent a lot of time discussing strategy How to fundraise What to think about How to get people to donate Today, we move to the actual tactics This discussion will be more like what we have discussed with direct mail and appeal letters
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Special Events Examples Average: Bring in $1 for ever $1.33 spent Generate 15% of total individual contributions NOT all about money though Raise visibility, improve relationship with public, mobilize, celebrate, thank, kickoff larger campaign
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Types of Special Events Lunches, dinners, food Banquet fatigue Ad books Combo-platter events? Auctions Silent v. live 25 people—2 people per item—need value of items to be double your fundraising goal Create packages? Fairs and festivals Concerts and lectures
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More Types of Special Events Walkathons, tournaments, contests Can get boring Home and garden tours Garage sales, bake sales, used book sales Pricing czar
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Things to Think About Use your assets! Multiply time estimate by 3! Keep it green?
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Special Event Budgets and Calendars Be realistic! Add 20% for unanticipated costs Do NOT be cheap in the wrong places Income should exceed expenses by a healthy margin Run different scenarios Start early…but not too early with volunteers Calendars must have start AND end dates
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Last Thoughts Deal with risks and liabilities Delegate shamelessly if you are in charge! MUST send thank yous to EVERYONE Compare final budget to original budget…this will help so much in future years!
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Switching Gears…Business and Sales Over 50% of nonprofits are taking plunge into commercial enterprises No clear rules here regarding likelihood for success Advantage is that the money comes in with NO strings IRS involvement: 501(c)3 status is important Activities within your mission, activities not part of an ongoing business, many exceptions as well (p. 299) Will pay tax otherwise (even if all proceeds go back to charitable activities) No way to tell clearly when IRS will tank your 501(c)3
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Two Main Options Client-bases business Low worker efficiency and high turnover Difficulty in finding good managers Conflicts in goals Risk that business failure will harm client lives Sales of goods and services Outside expertise of staff Conflict in goals
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Development What goods and services you can offer What customers want or need Gaps? Different source? Brainstorm with others Measure our ideas with reality Talk to owners of similar businesses Observe customers Survey likely customers Research demographics Closed businesses that are similar Check on price and competition Three year business plan Best, break-even, worst
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Printed Communications Brochures What do we want to include? Why make them fairly general? Newsletters What to include? Do we have to do this? Annual reports What to include? Do we have to do this? When to start?
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Websites! Checklist on p. 407 is the key! What do we want a website to do? Contact info Personality Freshness This can hurt you!!! Content Your agency v. more general stuff Donation info and ease is a key! Tell them how, how you have protected them, that it’s confidential, and that they don’t have to give online!
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Media What makes a good story Must present a hook People or animals = advantage Presentation of stories Breaking news, features, arts/other events Who to approach Print, Radio, TV
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More Media Know those around you Give them stories that you know fit Background research Have experts available How to pitch Press release Know where, when, and how to send Publicity for special events Stunts Phone calls Op-eds
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Other Thoughts Protect yourself!!! Lots of time for little reward? What if the piece is unflattering? You won’t get a copy May be surprised by side the journalist is on May get stuck defending your organization
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Social Media Fastest growing Facebook demographics Say goodbye to control Do not be less than genuine with social media This will NOT be a replacement! Mobile text message donations
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