PRESS CLIPPINGS
More and more, women are being asked to raise money for good causes, says the magazine Money for Women (May-June).
The magazine asked two women who are full-time fund-raising professionals to offer advice to volunteers who are working on small projects.
Toni Goodale, a fund-raising consultant in New York, said she advises getting over potential embarrassment by focusing on the cause. "If you think you are raising money for yourself, you will feel as if you're begging and you will feel personally rejected," she told the magazine.
Good fund raising, especially when it comes to face-to-face solicitations, is like salesmanship, Ms. Goodale said. Her suggestions for improving meetings between donors and volunteers:
Lee Ann Kingham, executive director of the Epilepsy Foundation of the Chesapeake Region/Abilities Network, advises reducing the number of fund-raising events a group holds.
She says her organization has increased its revenue by eliminating all events except for a golf tournament and a polo match. "People hated the chicken dinners," she said.