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Creating, Cultivating and Expanding your Donor Base

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Creating, Cultivating and Expanding your Donor Base You can t make a good pickle by squirting vinegar on a cucumber it has to soak awhile. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Creating, Cultivating and Expanding your Donor Base


1
Creating, Cultivating and Expanding your Donor
Base
  • You cant make a good pickle by squirting
    vinegar on a cucumber it has to soak awhile.
  • Harold J. Seymour, Designs for Fund Raising, 2nd
    Edition

2
  • Peter Piper picked a peck of pickled peppers.
    How many pickled peppers did Peter Piper pick?
  • Nursery Rhyme
  • Peter Piper proved a pretty pampered pepper
    picker. Less privileged persons such as you or
    I are expected to pick produce unpickled and
    process it promptly ourselves.
  • Joy of Cooking, 1964, p. 781

3
Pickling can be accomplished in several ways,
some of them lengthy, but none of them difficult.
  • It is imperative that vegetables and fruits for
    pickling are in prime condition and were
    harvested no longer than 24 hours in advance.
  • Be sure of your equipment
  • Stoneware, pottery or glass for brining
  • Stainless steel or enamel for pickling
  • Long-handled spoons enamel or glass for
    stirring
  • Perfectly sterile glass jars with glass lids for
    packing
  • All equipment must be absolutely clean and
    grease-free.

4
  • If you are in hard water area, try to get some
    distilled water or use rainwater.
  • Distilled white vinegar gives the lightest
    color.
  • To make pickles crisp, use grape or cherry
    leaves during brining.
  • Since spices vary so greatly in strength, taste
    before bottling and correct the seasoning.
  • Joy of Cooking, 1964, p. 781

5
  • Most homemade pickles are of the less exacting
    short-brined type. They are soaked in a salt
    solution only 24 hours or so.
  • Joy of Cooking, 1964, p. 781
  • Pickles subjected to the long-brine process
    and held at 86 degrees from 2 to 6 weeks, turn,
    after appropriate seasoning, into dill types
    kosher and non-kosher. They may be desalted
    and further processed in a vinegar solution at
    126 degrees for 12 hours to make sour pickles and
    then in a sugar solution to become sweet-sours.
    To learn the details for these long and short
    processes, read Making Fermented Pickles, in
    the U.S.D.A. Farmers Bulletin, 1438.
  • Joy of Cooking, 1964, p. 786

6
What Does All This Mean?
  • How do we decide where to gather our cucumbers?
  • How can we focus on only the very best?
  • How do we turn a promising cucumber into a tasty
    pickle?
  • In short, how do we get people to give the first
    time, and then again, and again, and again?

7
Gather Your Cucumbers/Create a Data Base
  • Determine your most promising growing conditions
  • Prepare and cultivate the soil
  • Fertilize
  • Prune
  • Harvest on time not too early and not too late

8
Focus Your Search
  • Determine linkages to your organization
  • a contact
  • a bridge
  • a point of access through a peer
  • Research financial ability
  • Assess interest in you and your organization

9
Where to Begin?
  • Step 1
  • Current donors are your likeliest donors. Ask
    them for a gift first, starting with the board.
  • Step 2
  • Ask the senior staff
  • Ask the board
  • Ask your volunteers
  • Ask your major donors

10
Where to Begin?
  • Step 3
  • Ask your clients
  • Ask your members
  • Ask your general donors
  • Step 4
  • Identify donors to similar causes
  • Identify people who might care about you

11
Focus your Energy Turn your most likely suspects
into prospects
  • Through conversations with a friend of theirs who
    is also a friend of yours
  • Through a meeting with your CEO
  • Through a personal letter, followed by a phone
    call
  • Through a phone call followed by a letter
  • Through a phone call alone

12
Turn your most likely suspects into prospects
(cont.)
  • Through a special event
  • Through direct mail
  • Through telemarketing
  • Through printed materials
  • Through the media

13
Refine Your Focus Turn Prospects into Donors
  • Move prospects from
  • Information to interest
  • Interest to knowledge
  • Knowledge to caring
  • Caring to Giving

14
Signs of movement
  • Participation in a program/visit
  • Request for information
  • Attendance at an event
  • Information gained from personal contact
  • A gift
  • A repeat gift
  • An increased gift

15
Responses to movement
  • Appreciation
  • Recognition
  • Personal attention
  • Understanding donors motivation/needs
  • Updated records

16
Narrow Your Focus Again Turn Prospects to
Donors and Donors to Major Donors
  • How? Get people involved
  • As participants in a program
  • As volunteers (use their skills if possible)
  • As members of a committee
  • As members of the board
  • As contacts for other donors

17
Manage Your investment
  • The more personal, the better and the greater
    the chance of a gift, and of a larger gift.
  • Face to face is better than a phone call
  • A phone call is better than a form letter
  • A letter is better than a PSA
  • Major gifts may take several calls
  • How to ask?

18
AFP Quotation
  • Select the right person,
  • To ask the right question,
  • At the right time,
  • For the right amount,
  • In the right way,
  • For the right reason.

19
Appreciation should be
  • Appropriate to the donor
  • Appropriate to the size of the gift
  • Early and often

20
Why People Give?
  • Belief in the mission
  • Interest in program/project
  • Community responsibility/civic pride
  • Regard for staff leadership
  • Fiscal stability of your institution
  • Local respect for your institution
  • Leverage or influence of solicitor

21
Why People Dont Give
  • Not asked
  • Guilt
  • Appeal of Campaign Materials
  • Memorial Opportunity
  • Tax Considerations
  • Absence of future plans (the organizations)
  • Inadequate communication and cultivation
  • Wrong solicitors
  • Not asking for a specific amount relative to
    organizations need and donors ability
  • Jerry Panos, Megagifts

22
What Donors Want
  • To be thanked in a timely and appropriate way
  • To be recognized and treated as an investor in
    your organization
  • To achieve a meaningful impact/outcome on a
    social problem or cause
  • To be given assurance that the gift was stewarded
    properly
  • To be able to realize their own aspirations
    through giving

Karla A. Williams, Donor Focused Strategies for
Annual Giving, Aspen Publishers, 1997, p.74
23
Back to Pickles.
  • Determine the outcomes you want.
  • Do what you need to do to achieve them - follow a
    plan/recipe
  • Pay attention to detail
  • Savor the results.
  • Dont get discouraged if you dont get all you
    want.
  • Work hard.

24
Conclusion
  • In 2004, 76, of all charitable gifts came from
    individuals.
  • Americans over age 50 control 70 of the wealth.
  • There are 8 million millionaires living in the
    United States. Thus, if the population of the US
    is over 270 million and that of Virginia 7
    million, Virginia may have as many as 200,000
    millionaires.
  • This generation will inherit 10 trillion from
    their parents that transfer is expected to peak
    between 2010 and 2020.
  • 8 of charitable gifts are bequests 85 of
    Americans die without a valid will.
  • GO FOR IT!
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