The Keys to Fundraising Success

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Sistema Universitario Ana G. Méndez The Keys to Fundraising Success June, 2015 Richard Tollefson The Phoenix Philanthropy Group

A Culture of Philanthropy Agenda Fundraising Fundamentals - What are they? How do they work? Where do you fit in? Effective Strategies for Prospect and Donor Relationship Building, Engagement, Cultivation What it Takes to be a Successful Fundraiser Overview and Goals of the E=MC2 Campaign Your Case Studies and Questions

The Importance and Characteristics of a Culture of Philanthropy

Philanthropy in the United States $358.38 Billion by Sources of Contributions 87% of all giving is from individuals (includes bequests and family foundations) +7.1% Total estimated US charitable giving +5.7% Giving by Individuals +8.2% Giving by Foundations (in billions of dollars all figures are rounded) +15.5% Giving by Bequest +13.7% Giving by Corporations Source: Giving USA Foundation/Giving USA 2015

Philanthropy in the United States $358.38 Billion by Type of Recipient Organization

Why People Give To meet critical, basic needs To give back to society To make the community a better place Change someone s life Emotionally moved by someone s story To bring about a desired impact or result Someone I know asked me, and I wanted to help!

Key Characteristics of a Culture of Philanthropy 1. Clear and compelling mission, vision, and strategic plan 2. Strong organizational leadership 3. Quality programs and services 4. Fundraising goals aligned with mission and strategic plan 5. Quality and reputation of the staff

Key Characteristics of a Culture of Philanthropy 6. Demonstrated need for philanthropic support 7. Engaged volunteers and donors 8. Donors with capacity and interest in making major gifts 9. Commitment to accountability and stewardship 10. Opportunities for continued engagement

How Do We Establish Our Culture? Engagement and fundraising becomes everyone s job The impact and potential of engagement and philanthropy is understood, valued, and modeled by the entire organization

How Do We Establish Our Culture? Constituents first the public, our alumni, volunteers, donors Personalized communications, engagement, and investment opportunities and strategies Outstanding client/constituent service

How Do We Establish Our Culture? Value volunteers, donors for more than just their money Distinguish ourselves as a unique solution and a trusted partner Ensure accountability, inspire donor confidence about the return on their investments

How Do We Establish Our Culture? Build stakeholder, volunteer, and investor confidence that they are making a difference, providing solutions, achieving impact

Evolving Our Culture of Philanthropy To One Truly Based on Relationships, Investment, Impact

Relationship-based Fundraising Donor centric Mission-based Communications and engagement intensive Solutions-oriented Impact-based Building mutually-beneficial relationships for the long-term!

Relationship-based Fundraising Speak in terms of Engagement versus participation Philanthropy/investment versus gifts, charity Opportunity versus need Vision versus operations/tactics Lives touched! Measureable, scalable, sustainable, transformational impact!

Relationship-based Fundraising Evolve your donors into investors who are active participants in the dialogue, active partners in the solution!

The Relationship Management Cycle Identification Renewal Evaluation/ Qualification Volunteer, Donor Stewardship Engagement /Cultivation Solicitation

The Relationship Management Cycle Identification Renewal Evaluation/ Qualification Stakeholder, Partner, Investor Stewardship Engagement /Cultivation Solicitation

Fundraising Fundamentals What Are They? How Do They Work? Where Do You Fit In?

Fundraising is Interdependent It is Not Done in a Vacuum!

Foundation of Fundraising Leadership Embrace the mission, vision, values Ensure institutional responsibility Be active advocates for the University Understand and participate in development Lead by example

Foundation of Fundraising Mission, Vision, Values What the University stands for What it seeks to accomplish Brand, Marketing, Communications Establish how the University is perceived in the marketplace Unique Position Distinct position or niche in marketplace Competitive advantage

Foundation of Fundraising Funding Priorities and Goals Inventory, prioritize Focus energy and work Be realistic but assertive Seek agreement throughout University Remain open to opportunities

Foundation of Fundraising Case for Support Clear and compelling Relevant and urgent Appeal to different motivations Talk about: Investments Capacity-building, replication, scale Growing and building for the future NOT save a sinking ship or needs

Foundation of Fundraising Alumni and Constituent Relations Systematic and disciplined outreach to and engagement of key stakeholders Prospect and Donor Base Gather leads from research, screening, staff, volunteers Build lists of key contacts and high potentials Determine who to cultivate and ask

Foundation of Fundraising Infrastructure Prospect and donor research Moves management Gift and pledge processing Donor acknowledgment Donor recognition and stewardship Internal financial accountability and transparency Performance measurement and evaluation

Components of a Comprehensive Fundraising Program

The Relationship and Moves Management Cycle Identification Renewal Evaluation/ Qualification Stakeholder, Partner, Investor Stewardship Engagement /Cultivation Solicitation

Comprehensive Fundraising Program Planned Gifts Enhance donors engagement Major Gifts and Grants Increase ROI Leadership Annual Giving Annual Fund and Special Events Expand the donor base

The Culture and Commitment Integrated Advancement Operations Commitment of the Entire University Fundraising: A Strategic Imperative Disciplined Relationship Management Leadership of Key Stakeholders

Donor centric Approach Compelling case -Investment opportunities -Sustainable outcomes and impact Alignment of mission, vision, and values Long-term, mutually beneficial relationships Service and accountability

Roles and Responsibilities of Leading Fundraising Partners

Role of the Board of Directors Advisors, resources, advocates Financial stewards Open contact lists and doors Lead by example (give, get, ask) 100% participation

Role of the President Understand, embrace, promote a culture of engagement and philanthropy at all levels Invest resources in staff and activities that advance fundraising and alumni relations Maintain a portfolio of highpotential donors and prospects Partner with Advancement to develop/execute strategies to engage prospects and donors Lead by example (give, get, ask)

Role of the Chancellors, Deans, Academic Directors, Faculty, and Staff Create a compelling vision Determine meaningful, compelling priorities Create/embrace a culture of engagement and philanthropy Talk about SUAGM (anywhere, everywhere, all the time)

Role of the Chancellors, Deans, Academic Directors, Faculty, and Staff Know/embrace fundraising fundamentals Dedicate time to alumni and fundraising activities Partner with the Advancement team Heighten your awareness of fundraising opportunities

Role of the Chancellors, Deans, Academic Directors, Faculty, and Staff Be consistent in communications and engagement Talk in terms of investment/impact vs. needs/charity Engage, inspire, listen to donors and prospects Lead by example (give, get, ask)

Advancement Team Priority setting and vetting Goal setting Prospect development (identification, qualification, clearance, assignments) Prospect and donor relationship management

Advancement Team Information management Donor accountability Coaching and training Lead by example (give, get, ask)

Recipe for a Perfect Match for donor cultivation Donor s trust Excellent relationship with donor Historian Chancellor Leadership Trust In internal partnership Engaged Strong listening skills Passion Development Professional Persistency Execution

In Your Roles as Advocates and Fundraisers Be ready. Be prepared. Be confident. Be aware. Be authentic. Be excited.

Identification Suspects: Unproven potential/possible linkages Expressed passing interest Friend or colleague of a key influencer Involved/support education Has resources

Identification Prospects: Reasonable potential to contribute Alumni Corporate recruiter Attended an event, expressed interest in involvement Actively involved in the University Close relationship to a key influencer Has resources and is philanthropic

Qualification Formal/ Informal Research Formal/ Informal Screening, Tracking Determine capacity, propensity, readiness Up-to-date contact information Giving and engagement history Confidential biographical information Information for conversation starters (or to avoid) Personal peer screening Confidential anecdotal information Contacts: six degrees of separation Information to prepare initial strategies Defines the target gift and project Defines the strategy

Effective Strategies for Prospect and Donor Relationship-building, Engagement, and Cultivation

What is Donor and Prospect Cultivation? Friend -raising and fundraising Opening doors, establishing a bond, initiating a relationship Planned moves to increase awareness, engagement, motivation Strategic moves toward an ask and close

What it Takes to Succeed in Cultivation Compelling vision Qualified prospect Meaningful engagement activities/connection to vision Appropriate and prepared solicitation team Effective ask Confidence to overcome blocks/objections Ongoing communication/involvement

Cultivation Strategies Determine desired outcomes Assign relationship managers Identify strategic moves and actions Establish timelines Create opportunities for engagement Highlight reasons for giving Articulate impact and return on investment

Capacity Propensity Readiness The Three Indicators of Donor Potential

Capacity Propensity Readiness Capacity How much is the donor worth? What is their income, what investments do they have, and what assets do they hold? What are their financial obligations family, business, other nonprofit organizations? How much can he or she give?

Capacity Propensity Readiness Propensity How involved are they in education, civic affairs? Are they involved with organizations with a similar mission to yours? Are they philanthropic? Do they give to nonprofits? How generous are they as donors? Are their interests in line with SUAGM s mission and programs?

Capacity Propensity Readiness Readiness Does this person have a significant connection to SUAGM? Have they been meaningfully engaged to the point where a significant ask is appropriate? If not, and they need more interaction with you and your organization, do you have a plan to engage them and get them invested in your mission?

Key Questions to Develop Your Cultivation Strategy What are your priority projects for which private funding is needed? What is your case for support? Who are your best prospective donors/investors? What s your current relationship with them? Why are they the right potential donors for this project? What do you know about their capacity, propensity? How best do you engage them? Who are their key influencers? How do we start the dialogue?

People Make Their Philanthropic Decisions with their Heads and their Hearts

Donors Make Decisions with Their Heads and Their Hearts Listen, understand, build trust Align donor s and institution s mission, vision, values Develop long-term, mutually beneficial relationships Frame the discussion on opportunity, investment, achieving outcomes/impact Ensure highest levels of service and accountability

Donors Make Decisions with Their Heads and Their Hearts Be authentic Be donor-centric Be community-centric

The Numbers. The Stories. The Impact.

What it Takes to be a Successful Fundraiser

In Your Roles as Advocates and Fundraisers Be ready. Be prepared. Be confident. Be aware. Be authentic. Be excited.

Express your commitment and passion. Build relationships. Share the vision. Articulate the impact. Speak from your head and your heart!

When done correctly, donors will anticipate and appreciate the opportunity to invest and make a difference!

The E=MC 2 Campaign Status and Update

Capital Campaign 2009-2015 Total Goal: $23.4 million 64

Fondo Anual: UNE -UMET -UT $189,394 JTP-UNE $145,357 ERES-UNE, $- Fondo Anual SISTEMA TV $280,195 FPB $208,656 BGPR-UT $195,012 BECAS ESP-UT $309,450 MCEH-UT $502,760 Recaudos del año fiscal 2014-2015 Observatorio de Arecibo UMET $502,334.25 Instituto de Fotónica UMET $2,500,568 $4,833.726 Superamos en un 16% la meta del 95%, establecida en el informe de 2013-2014. 65

Jesús T. Piñero Library Goal: $3 M Funds raised: $3 M 66

Centro ERES space for Introspection, Spirituality and Solidarity Goal: $1 M Funds raised: $490,000 67

Dr. Pedro Roselló Library Museum (Construction) Goal: $4.9 M Funds raised: $6.2M 68

Dr. Pedro Roselló Library Museum (Digitalization) Goal: $2 M Funds raised: $1M 69

Special Scholarship Fund Goal: $1 M Funds raised: $1M 70

Dr. Josefina Camacho de la Nuez Museum & Center for Humanistic Studies Goal: $2 M Funds raised: $751,201 71

Puerto Rico Photonics Institute Goal: $3.5 M Funds raised: $5.5 M 72

Arecibo Observatory s Angel Ramos Foundation Visitors Center Goal: $2 M Funds raised: $1.4 M 73

Annual Fund Goal: $250,000 Funds raised: $958,000 74

UNE - Permanent Scholarship Fund Goal: $ 1 M Funds raised: $1 M UT - Permanent Scholarship Fund Goal: $1 M Funds raised: $1.6 M UMET - Permanent Scholarship Fund Goal: $ 1 M Funds raised: $694,000 75

Annual Fund Goal: $250,000 Funds raised: $380,000 Annual Fund Goal: $250,000 Funds raised: $252,000 Annual Fund Goal: $250,000 Funds raised: $211,000 76

Calidad y Efectividad Institucional Revista Exalumnos de la Junta de Directores del SUAGM 77

Alumni Engagement Charlas Motivacionales Por Exalumnos Firma acuerdo Total Petroleum y UMET Para internados (agosto 2014) Semana de Orientación Académica (Agosto 2014) 78

Alumni Engagement 79

Alumni Engagement Bienvenida a padres de estudiantes de nuevo ingreso Shop for a Cause de Macys con Equipo Carro Formula Presentación de Libro y Lectura de cuentos por Exalumna en MCEH 80

Thank You!