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Published byShannon Warner Modified over 9 years ago
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2007 JAA National Conference The Road To The Big O Nate Hearn Associate Director Major Gifts-Santa Clara University
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DEVELOPING PARENT INVESTMENT: How to inspire parents to give the most of their time or money
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SCU Case Study: Parent Philanthropy Senior Management mandates renewed focus on non-alumni parent fundraising July 2004; Research; – Analyze current state of affairs; SWOT Analysis Identify campus stakeholders; – Identify industry best practices (see exhibits); – Identify unique target market, i.e. who are your parents. Conclusions; – More engaged contact with parents will raise their expectations for community involvement; – How can the development function create this dynamic and still maintain core focus, i.e. dollars and donors.
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SCU Case Study: Parent Philanthropy Strengths Parents very satisfied with SCU experience for the most part; Parent Weekend tradition dates back to 1980’s; History of parent involvement (Trustees, Regents, Fellows, etc.). Weaknesses No dedicated staff; Limited budget; Lack of awareness on campus; Lack of a campus wide strategic marketing mix. Opportunities Untapped resource; Very engaged generation of parents (helicopter); Many have already received philanthropic education. Threats Intense competition from philanthropic community; Child could leave school; Post-campaign revenue.
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SCU Case Study: Parent Philanthropy Build consensus on campus; – Convene internal parent group; – Mutual agreement that parents are a critical constituency; – Identified needs: Unified strategic message; Stronger marketing mix; Smoother communication transitions; Improved data collection; Improved information sharing; Where does the buck stop; – Question of ownership; – Ability to make investment in a central parent office.
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SCU Case Study: Parent Philanthropy Initial steps; – Maintain internal parent group; Strengthen collective marketing approach; – Identify current efforts for parent engagement; Eliminate redundancy; Leverage resources that already exist; Development specific; – 0-based budgeting/no full-time support; – Define parent specific philanthropic message; – Streamline/strengthen Parent Weekend; – Create/refine direct mail segments and strategically align with telefund;
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SCU Case Study: Parent Philanthropy Outcomes v. Raised Expectations; – Internal group improved marketing message/mix; Created parent specific web-portal w/link from home page; Improved timing of all communications; Clarified message/experience transitions and owners; Prospective parents-admissions; First-year parents-Office of First Year Programs; All current parents/past parent donors-Alumni Office All current parents/past parent donors-Development Office; Senior Parents-University Event Planning Office; – Identified opportunities for parent involvement; Admissions; Alumni Relations; Athletics; Career Center; Development.
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SCU Case Study: Parent Philanthropy Non-Alumni Parent Results (VSE Report) FYNo. Record No. Solicited No. Donors Amount$ 200331,67730,3753,169$717,142 200433,47331,9733,466$1,193,401 200535,33433,5363,844$2,208,251 200637,71135,6394,573$1,544,867
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SCU Case Study: Parent Philanthropy Shifting resources in Development; – Completed $350M campaign; – Renewed focus by Santa Clara Fund on disciplined reunion strategy—no field staff resources for parent fundraising; – Personal transition to MG Team with new director; – Opportunity for MG Team to absorb parent fundraising through alignment with group goals. Parent Leadership Council; – $50,000 and up—alignment with major gift threshold; – $100,000 for chairs; – Built in ask/strategy for MG Officers; – Manageable group of high-level donors with little program management required.
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SCU Case Study: Parent Philanthropy Exhibits posted on JAA website; – Jesuit parent survey circa 2004; – Notes from meeting with Stanford Parent Program; – Draft of Parents Leadership Council initiative. Contact info; – Email: ehearn@scu.edu;ehearn@scu.edu – Phone: 408-554-6979.
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