Transcript Annual Fund
The Annual Fund
Our gateway to all giving and the
foundation of the fund raising program
Kathleen Hanson
Senior Consultant and Principal
Leader – Schools Practice Group
Editor, The NAIS Handbook on Marketing Independent Schools
NESA Leadership Conference – October 2011
Copyright Marts & Lundy
Our focus
The Annual Fund
Purpose and Value
Structure & Planning
Creativity in Approach
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Annual Fund’s Function
Provide operating income
Acquire new donors
Re-acquire lapsed donors
Upgrade current donors
Identify and involve future volunteers
Identify and engage major donor
prospects
Provide a training ground for “givers” and
“getters”
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Most Importantly
Provides the school with a venue
for illustrating its worthiness on an
annual basis.
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Today’s Annual Fund
Purist view: all dollars must go to
the operating budget
Reality view: today’s donor likes to
see the impact of his or her gift-some
gifts are designated
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Benefits of the Annual Fund
Revenue is often significant
Opportunity to educate
Promotes the “case for support” and
the culture of philanthropy
Strengthens relationships
Donors often move from annual
support to capital support
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Data Needed for Planning
Three years of annual fund giving data
Donor acquisition; retention and attrition
Results of screening
Discussions with Admission regarding new
families entering the school
Leadership donor pipeline
Reunion class prospects
Pledge fulfillment over past five years
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Material Needed
Volunteer role description
Training materials
Annual Fund Facts
Matching Gift Opportunities
Payment options
Frequently Asked questions
School Statistics
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Structure
Depends upon your constituency…….
You can organize by gift levels:
Leadership Gifts
Non-Leadership Gifts
Reunion Giving
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Structure
You can organize by constituency:
Alumni
Reunion Classes
Current Parents – by division or grade
Parents of Alumni
Grandparents
Friends
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Giving Levels
a) $1,000 and up
a) Some schools have levels up to
$25,000
b) Special levels for young alumni
c) Special levels for continuous donors
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The volunteer leadership structure
The volunteer leadership of the annual
fund is a vitally important component in
achieving success.
They need to be part of the planning
They need to recruit other volunteers
They need to assist with stewardship
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Leadership Gift Committee
For large institutions, consider a
Leadership Gift Committee
Composed of trustees, alumni, and
parent leaders to help identify, qualify,
and solicit $1,000 prospects and above
Set a goal of soliciting as many
leadership donors as possible face-toface
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The Annual Fund Business Plan
Begins with the case for support
Moves to setting strategy
Becomes a blueprint with a timeline
Is evaluated after each annual fund
cycle
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Gift Scale or not?
Some schools develop a scale of gifts to
inform their planning
Other schools develop specific strategies
for leadership donors to move them to the
next level
Leadership giving, for the most part, will
drive the success of the annual fund
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Making the Case
oThe case for supporting the annual
fund is vitally important
oOne page, if possible
oCarried in all materials
oUnderstood by the volunteers
oAuthentic to the prospective donors
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Where should time and $$ go?
The plan for the annual fund will direct
staff time and energy.
There is good research which suggests there
is no difference in outcome when an annual
fund appeal is in a letter format or a fourcolor brochure.
A personal approach to leadership giving
does suggest a more positive outcome
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Acknowledgement
Gifts must be acknowledged immediately
Set up a process for gift crediting and
acknowledgement
When does the Head of School write a personal
note?
Who signs which letters?
Donors need to feel as though their gift
matters
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Tracking Progress
Track against prior year or prior two years
Track donors who typically give at a
certain time of year
Track % of giving at each level
Track average size of gift against prior
year
Track results from every approach
Don’t be afraid to “test” an approach
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Reporting Process
What will your reports of progress look
like?
To whom do they go and how frequently?
Manage expectations up front
What do you wish the report to
accomplish?
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Creativity
Models for Faculty and Staff Solicitations
Can create real energy internally
Models for “get it done in 31” for parent
participation
Focused approach on parents in a single
month, with high visibility for the fund
Models for Grandparent solicitations
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Creativity
Letters to donors on impact of their gift
Special letters to first-time donors
Special letters to donors who have made
five years of consecutive gifts; 10 years
Video clips with students expressing
thanks
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Creativity
Social Media
On Line Giving
Challenges
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