Travis Smith: my resume, bio and photos back to the main blog page

I was emailed a really interesting question about fundraising in the wake of large disasters, and wondered, in addition to my own response, what you all might have in the way of advice.

I read your article, “Why Give to Victims of Katrina?”.  I am interested in your commentary from the perspective of a fundraiser. What, if anything, can you suggest for fundraisers in attempting to overcome some of the reasons why people will not donate.  It seems that ideology is getting in the way of humanitarianism.

On a personal level, I agree with the attitude that many of your friends are adopting.  But I am concerned for the implications these attitudes have on fundraising efforts.  Do you have any suggestions on how to overcome these attitudes?  What can we do, as fundraisers, to convince people to put their ideology, often political, aside?

- Stephanie Crispino

Stefanie,

I’ve always felt that people donate to make themselves feel better. If they have mixed feelings or hesitation about donating to you, they’ll find someone they can donate to that gives them a better “good feeling,” something that’s more pure, so that they get a better result for their money.

That’s why children’s hospitals are better at fundraising than regular hospitals—because no one can object to healing a sick kid, but regular hospitals treat drug addicts and stabbing victims and smokers and CEOs who’ve had heart attacks in their hot tubs.

I think there are ways to make people feel like a donation to you is “more pure”—show them that money given will go directly to help those who ought to get it, not to alternative projects or middlemen or red tape. You can also help them understand your organization’s role and history— especially important if you’ve previously “allied” or intertwined yourself with a cause or agency that no longer is as pure as it once was.

For example, many people I met overseas thought that “FedEx” was a government service in the U.S.—that probably helped them win business, but could also prove a liability in certain countries.

I don’t think you’re going to get someone to put their ideology aside to give to you.  You need to show them YOUR ideology is not mis-aligned (at least to their way of thinking).

Overheard

“Let us face a pluralistic world in which there are no universal churches, no single remedy for all diseases, no one way to teach or write or sing, no magic diet, no world poets, and no chosen races, but only the wretched and wonderfully diversified human race.”

...who said it?

“Music is all about timing”

...who said it?

“I do something wrong: accident. You do something wrong: character flaw.”

...who said it?

“If you climb in the saddle, be ready for the ride”

...who said it?

“Finding oneself was a misnomer; a self is not found but made.”

...who said it?

Comments

 

 

There are no comments for this entry ... yet. So leave one already! Go on!

Add a Comment

 

 

Name:


Email:


Location:


URL:


Submit the word you see below:


 

 

 

Your comment:


Remember my personal info


Email me about follow-ups


 

Syndication Links


Click here for the main
XML feed for this blog.



Column only



Side links only



Quotes only

 

I'm Listening To

2007/07/29 11:50

Zero 7
Garden State

MetaBlogs

AboutBlogs

Clients

Humor

Journalism

Los Angeles

Mac

News

Personal 1

Personal 2

Photos

Politics

Other A-F

Other G-Q

Other R-Z

SocialNetworking

Tech 1

Tech 2

Travel

Vancouver 1

Vancouver 2

Vancouver 3

Vancouver 4

BizBlogs

Back to Main

 

Powered by
Expression Engine

 

Copyright 1995 - 2005

 

 

Want Column?

Enter your email address:


It will NEVER be shared.
Unsubscribe

You can scroll right easily by holding down the SHIFT key and using your scroll wheel. (Firefox users trying this will end up jumping to old Web pages until a) Firefox releases a fix, b) they change their settings like so.)