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Annual Fund
Giving & "Getting" Guidelines For Your Organization's
Board Of Trustees
All of your organization's
fund-raising campaigns must have the leadership and the financial
support of your Board of Trustees. The most important of those
development efforts should be the raising of funds necessary to maintain
and enhance your organization's programs and services year after year.
This is accomplished through the Annual Fund Campaign. The annual fund
provides the "bedrock" of reasonably predictable renewed
support and is the entry-level for larger gifts possible for future
endowment, capital, sponsorship and underwriting campaigns and planned
giving programs. Thus, the annual fund especially requires that your
trustees be in the forefront as they contribute their own funds and as
they personally raise other money. To successfully raise money
externally, you must first raise money internally, and that starts with
your board.
Principal
Guidelines
Know
the giving capability of each of your trustees
-
Each trustee should be rated and evaluated for his or her best
giving potential in the same way other non-board individuals are
rated and evaluated for their suggested giving to the annual fund
campaign. You always seek a realistically large---hopefully the
maximum---potential gift from each of your trustees.
A
minimum gift requirement to be a trustee is usually not a good idea
- The
minimum amount could be more than some trustees are capable of
giving who can provide other, non-financial, benefits to your
organization. It is necessary to have as many trustees as possible
on your board who have the potential to to make significant
financial contributions. However, you should also encourage and
accommodate a select and controlled number of others who, while they
are not as financially able as the other trustees, have special
skills enabling them to contribute their valuable expertise and
leadership to your organization's marketing, finance, law,
accounting, etc., activities.
- The
minimum amount might be much less than some trustees could actually
give. Being asked for donations well under what they could provide
usually means your trustees will settle at those lower amounts. In
those instances, when you ask small, you get small from trustees who
have the capability to give you much bigger gifts.
A
"give and get" minimum requirement combination of personal
giving and personal raising of funds to be a trustee, is also not a
good idea
- The
minimum total amount "quota" you set for them could be far
less than some trustees might account for in total by way of their
own gifts and from what they could personally raise from other
sources. As a result, they will most likely relax their efforts when
meeting their lower "goal." They will, in effect, have
done the job as you asked---and chances are they will not do more.
A
"give and get---something"---or go off the board, is a good
idea
- Even those trustees with limited resources should be able to
contribute some modest amounts of money. As well, they should be in
position to provide their endorsements and participation to assist
in solicitations of prospects assigned to other volunteers.
General
Guidelines
- External giving to your annual fund will be positively
influenced if you can demonstrate to non-board prospects that your
trustees support the campaign with their 100% participation. The
philanthropic spirit is infectious. Giving is definitely influenced
by the example of others---and your board is capable of setting the
very best example for others to follow.
- You should not readily accept from any trustee---one capable
of making a sizable cash contribution but does not choose to do
so---the idea that the giving of his or her time is the same as the
giving of money.
- Try to have each trustee personally solicited by the board
president, rather than by his or her peers. Trustees were brought on
the board by the president, and that is where the accountability
lies. If this is not practical due to a large number of board
prospects, other officers of your organization may assist the
president with the solicitations.
- It would be desirable to have the trustees' total gift amount
represent 20% to 33% of the total annual funds raised.
- Look to other similar size and/or similar-mission
organizations for their trustees' average gifts to their annual fund
campaigns which could justify setting a higher average level
donation for your own trustees to target. This could help to
reinforce and rationalize your individual ratings of the trustees.
The premise of comparing favorably with organizations similar to
yours is usually a compelling selling point with boards of trustees.
When it comes to
successfully conducting your annual fund-raising campaign, you need an
attainable goal, a plan for getting to that goal and the tools to
execute that plan. But in the end, the success or failure of that
campaign hinges on leadership and pace-setting contributions, and that
governance responsibility and financial commitment starts on your Board
of Trustees. Those
are my views on the subject. What are yours? I welcome your comments and
suggestions. tony@raise-funds.com
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