July 30, 2010, 04:00 PM ET
Rethinking How to Calculate Mobile-Giving's Benefits
Seen this recently? "Text 'WILDLIFE' to 20222."
You probably have, and others like it, as a growing number of nonprofit organizations, such as the National Wildlife Federation, have gravitated to mobile giving as a way to reach people with an easy way to donate.
Ten days after the Haiti earthquake, text-message donations accounted for more than $30-million, or 14 percent of all donations raised.
Yet the strategy can have its drawbacks. While mobile giving can be an inexpensive way to reach the more than 260 million wireless subscribers around the country, questions remain about its effectiveness and reliability as a long-term fund-raising tool.
Indeed, the National Wildlife Federation, which is running a mobile-giving campaign for animals affected by the Gulf oil spill, has recently pulled its text-to-donate message from its Web site.
The reason? The Reston, Va., conservation group ...
Read MoreJuly 30, 2010, 12:56 PM ET
American Red Cross Buys $2-Million in Ads to Raise Pre-Disaster Funds

In the next few weeks, major networks and cable channels, such as CNN and NBC, will be running a $2-million television and radio advertising campaign by the American Red Cross – but it won’t mention the name of a major disaster. Instead, it’ll simply ask for your donation.
“In the past, we’ve really initiated our fund-raising during a disaster based upon the anticipated needs of that disaster or series of disasters,” says Laura Howe, an American Red Cross spokeswoman. “This is a little bit different in that we decided to step back and really initiate our fund-raising efforts prior to great disasters.”
The new effort by the Washington organization to raise money preemptively stems from warnings of a busy and severe hurricane season from the National Weather Service. It also anticipates the needs of its disaster-preparedness teams, which respond to about 70,000 disasters each year, and...
Read MoreJuly 28, 2010, 03:40 PM ET
Do Fund Raisers Ignore Too Many Middle-Class Donors?

By most measures, Jill A. Warren (left) isn't wealthy.
She and her husband, the Rev. Robert D. Schoenhals, a United Methodist minister, together have never earned more than $112,000 per year. In some years, their combined income has totaled less than $40,000.
But they are diligent givers—they donate as much as 60 percent of their annual income to charity.
They're big givers, for sure. But they often aren't treated that way, especially by organizations that use database-screening tools to find wealthy donors.
"We’re the folks that fly under the radar, so we don’t fit the usual prospecting assumptions," Ms. Warren said in a live discussion today with Chronicle readers. "The most important thing—just thank us. Send an acknowledgment after each gift. A small gift might represent a significant proportion of someone’s income or assets—we’re not the one-time big-gift givers, but we give a...
Read MoreJuly 28, 2010, 01:36 PM ET
Pay for Professional Fund-Raising Companies Eyed by IRS
Editor's note: The following article has been corrected from the version that was posted on July 28. The previous version misstated the types of compensation the Internal Revenue Service is scrutinizing.
The Internal Revenue Service is now gathering and reviewing
information about the compensation of professional fund-raising
companies that charities hire to solicit for them, a tax agency
official told a gathering of nonprofit development and marketing
executives on Tuesday.
The official, Judith Kindell, noted that the newly redesigned
informational tax return seeks out information about professional
fund-raising companies and their ties to the top executives and
board members who run a charity. Charities are now starting to file
the new form, she said, and the tax agency's research unit is in
the middle of culling trends from the filings, the results of which
may or may not be...
July 28, 2010, 12:49 PM ET
3 Ways to Promote Planned Gifts
How you promote planned gifts is just as important as
identifying and cultivating people who want to make a charitable
bequest in their wills.
The result can be extraordinary, as the Nature Conservancy, the big environmental group in
Arlington, Va., has learned.
Simon Williams, who managed gift-planning strategy and stewardship
at the Nature Conservancy before he became a consultant to
charities, explained what worked this week at the Bridge to
Integrated Marketing and Fundraising Conference, held just outside
Washington.
His three tips:
* Develop a content-rich page about planned gifts for your
Web site, and promote the link all over your site and printed
materials. Also make sure you have an easy-to-remember address in
print pieces (www.Webname/bequest) as well as contact information
prominently displayed everywhere. Thanks to the Nature
Conservancy's planned-giving page, its Web...
July 26, 2010, 03:00 PM ET
The Art of the Elevator Pitch: Joanna L. Corbin
Most fund raisers and other nonprofit executives have an elevator pitch—a short speech about their organization that they give whenever they meet people on an elevator, at a social event, or at a conference.
But every pitch can be improved. To offer inspiration, The Chronicle has invited some charity veterans to share...
Read MoreJuly 23, 2010, 12:35 PM ET
Why Fund Raisers Should Pay Attention to a Donor's Art Collection
The philanthropist Ronald Lauder once said there are three categories of art: "Oh," "Oh my," and "Oh my God." He only collects the latter.
And that's the "OMG" prospect researchers should pay attention to, says Linlin Chen, a research analyst at the University of Chicago, in a presentation at the annual meeting of the Association of Prospect Researchers for Advancement, which is under way in Anaheim, Calif.
When trying to identify potential donors, it couldn't hurt to do a bit of digging about what art they're collecting. It's an important indication of wealth and provides insight to a prospective donor's interest, useful when starting a conversation and engaging donors at the cultivation stage. Such prospects tend to give to research programs, exhibitions, lectures, or institutions that house or show their art collections.
While there aren't easy ways to track and determine the value...
Read MoreJuly 23, 2010, 12:00 PM ET
Fund Raisers Worry About a Crackdown on Donor Research
Fund raisers who conduct research on potential donors are seeking to improve their images after The Wall Street Journal published an article raising questions about whether nonprofit groups were invading the privacy of affluent people. Some fear that the article could lead to a government crackdown on what information fund raisers can glean.
At the annual meeting of the Association of Prospect Researchers for Advancement, held this week in Anaheim, Calif., fund raisers expessed concerns about the article, "Is Your Favorite Charity Spying on You?"
Some worry that the article, which details how some hospitals immediately screen admissions records to find wealthy patients who have checked in, portrayed their profession in a negative light.
"We're not spying on people, for goodness' sakes," says Elizabeth Crabtree, who served as a previous president of the research association. She...
Read MoreJuly 19, 2010, 07:42 PM ET
How Much Did Giving Drop Because of the Downturn?
Giving USA, the widely cited measure of
giving, is re-examining the approach it uses to determine how much
Americans donate.
In a presentation to fund-raising consultants who belong to the
Giving Institute, Patrick Rooney, director of research at the
Indiana University Center on Philanthropy, acknowledged that
Giving USA's finding that individuals gave just as much
last year as they did in 2008 has generated much skepticism. The
Giving Institute finances the research done by Mr. Rooney and his
colleagues and makes the key findings available free.
Among the reasons questions are growing about the data: Last week
the Internal Revenue Service noted that the amount Americans
deducted for charitable gifts fell by 11 percent in 2008, the first
year of the recession. That was a far steeper sum than Giving
USA had estimated. It said donations dropped by 2.7 percent
that year.
And as The Chronicle
July 19, 2010, 06:00 PM ET
Advice for Grant Seekers From a Corporate CEO

Many fund raisers seem to think they will get a corporate or foundation grant simply because they wrote a proposal or made a phone call, says Richard K. Davis, chairman of U.S. Bancorp, a Minneapolis company that donates $40-million a year to charities.
But charity officials could do better if they first asked some
simple questions that could lead to a more meaningful relationship
with the foundation or corporation they are soliciting, he
says.
Mr. Davis, who spoke at a Park City, Utah, meeting of fund-raising
consultants over the past weekend, said that he would be delighted
if a nonprofit organization or a fund raiser opened a meeting with
him by asking two simple questions:
* What does he already know about the organization seeking a donation?
* And what he would like to see it accomplish?
But that never happens, he said.
Mr. Davis urged charities to "just come back once without a...






