The Chronicle of Philanthropy

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Salaries of Fund Raisers Stagnate at Charities and Turnover Starts to Slow, Study Finds

By Holly Hall

Salaries of fund raisers in the United States stagnated last year as the recession deepened, according to the annual compensation survey of the Association of Fundraising Professionals.

The median salary in 2008 was $63,500 among the 2,571 American fund raisers in the survey — meaning that half earned more and half less. That figure is virtually the same as in 2007.

The highest-paid fund raisers, those in the top 25 percent, earned at least $85,000 last year, the same as in 2007, and those in the bottom quarter earned $47,500, down slightly from $48,000 in 2007.

In Canada, salaries declined faster than in the United States. The median salary of the 395 Canadian fund raisers in the survey fell by 4.4 percent last year, to $53,192.

Economy's Impact

Association officials attributed the drop in pay to the turbulent economy.

They said that the recession has also prompted a sharp drop in the number of people changing jobs: 28 percent of American fund raisers in the survey said they had been in their current jobs for one year or less, down from 45 percent in the previous survey.

The average time that fund raisers had spent in a single position was four years.

Among other findings based on the survey of fund raisers in the United States:

A full copy of the survey, "2009 Compensation and Benefits Study," is available free online to members of the Association of Fundraising Professionals on the organization's Web site. Nonmembers may purchase a copy of the survey for $85. To order a copy, send an e-mail message to profadv@afpnet.org.

Salary and Benefits Paid to Fund Raisers


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