All posts by Tony Martignetti

I’ll Pick Your Brain & Drop Your List

Photo courtesy of brain malfunction on Flickr

I’ve faced two letdowns recently, from people who “picked my brain” and then thanked me by leaving my email list. Not enough for a trend–and hardly monumental rejections–but they’ve got me thinking.

One gentleman came to a Planned Giving workshop at a local nonprofit support center. He joined my email list, as many do. About a year later he emailed me to ask for help finding an internship that would broaden his fundraising experience. We talked about his interests. I connected him with a former client and he got what he was seeking, with a very well known nonprofit. A few months later he unsubscribed from my list.

More recently, a friend whose business is real estate-related asked me for fundraising advice around a project she was taking on at a charity she’s active with. I counseled her for about an hour-and-a-half on the phone, then gave her feedback on an introduction letter she wrote. This month she unsubscribed from my list.

I think after I willingly helped them for free, the very least they could do is stay on my email list.

When I help someone, I never expect something in return. That is to say, I don’t expect any gain. Nor do I expect a diminution in our relationship.

It’s not exactly an expression of gratitude to unsubscribe.

I’ve got over a thousand committed people on my list and I’m grateful to each of them. They make links trend when I send my weekly radio show alerts; they come out to hear me speak; they come out to my stand-up comedy; they listen to my show and give me constructive feedback. I’m enormously grateful.

It’s not a matter of numbers. It’s a matter of simple courtesy.

Am I being unreasonable? Overly sensitive? I’d be grateful for your constructive feedback.

Nonprofit Radio for September 23, 2011: Research On Women Donors & Learning Lobbying Lessons

Big Nonprofit Ideas for the Other 95%

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Tony’s Guests:

Interviewing Samantha Cohen at Fundraising Day NY 2011
Samantha Cohen: Research On Women Donors

Recorded at the Fund Raising Day conference in June, Samantha Cohen of the American Civil Liberties Union reveals how to reveal the giving potential for your female prospects that is often hidden.
 

 

 

Gene Takagi and Emily Chan
Gene Takagi & Emily Chan: Learning Lobbying Lessons

Are you anxious to comment on the proposed Jobs Act? Our legal contributors Gene Takagi and Emily Chan explain the limitations on lobbying by charities. What activities are lobbying? How much can you do? And how do you report it?

 

Here is a link to the podcast: 060: Research on Women Donors & Learning Lobbying Limitations


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Here is a link to the podcast: 060: Research on Women Donors & Learning Lobbying Limitations
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Welcome to tony martignetti non-profit radio big non-profit ideas for the other ninety five percent. I’m your aptly named host and it’s friday, september twenty third, two thousand eleven i certainly hope you were with me last week when we talked about learning office lease lessons. First we talked through the walk through how do you find the best space and use different spaces to strategically head into your lease negotiations? My guest was george grace, who has done this work for dozens of non-profits then what least terms do you need to be careful about? And what are the negotiating points? I was joined by attorney robert j smith and kate piela, executive director of dance new amsterdam, and we talked through the dance companies less than desirable lease to bring out lessons to help you get the best lease next time this week, it’s prospect research on women donors recorded at the fund-raising day conference in june. Samantha cohen of the american civil liberties union is going to reveal how tow reveal reveal how to reveal wth e-giving potential for your female prospects that is often hidden and learning lobbying limitations are legal contributors jean takagi and emily chan explained the limitations on lobbying by non-profits what activities are lobbying, how much can you do, and how do you report all that on tony’s, take two in between the segments, thinking is underrated. My block post this week, the aptly named host of tony martignetti non-profit radio. We’re going to take a break. I hope you’ll stay with us and then prospect research on women donors. You’re listening to the talking alternative network. Are you suffering from aches and pains? Has traditional medicine let you down? Are you tired of taking toxic medications, then come to the double diamond wellness center and learn how our natural methods can help you, too? He’ll call us now at to one to seven to one eight, one eight, three that’s two one two, seven to one eight, one eight, three or find us on the web at www dot double diamond wellness dot com. We look forward to serving you. Is your marriage in trouble? Are you considering divorce? Hello, i’m lawrence bloom, a family law attorney in new york and new jersey. No one is happier than the day their divorce is final. My firm can help you. We take the nasty out of the divorce process and make people happy. Police call a set to one, two, nine six four three five zero two for a free consultation. That’s a lawrence h bloom two, one, two, nine, six, four, three, five zero two. We make people happy. Hey, are you crazy listeners looking to boost your business? Why not advertise on talking alternative with very reasonable rates? Interested simply email at info at talking alternative dot com. Hi there and welcome back right now i have a pre recorded segment for you from june at fund-raising day in new york, we talked with samantha cohen of the american civil liberties union about prospect research on women donors hears that pre recorded sessions welcome back to tony martignetti non-profit radio coverage of fund-raising day two thousand eleven at the marriott marquis in new york city. My guest right now is samantha cohen. She is director of principal giving at the american civil liberties union. Samantha welcome, welcome. Thank you. Pleasure to have you samantha’s topic is prospect researchers research on women donors how to research female donors and out of female research female, major and planned e-giving donors what is the importance of females in individual giving? Let’s start with that, samantha. Well, i think it’s very important to realize that women are outliving man, and at the end of the day, the wealth transfer is going from the man to the women. So a large proportion of e-giving will be directed by webbing, women, both outright and very much a steak gaps. Is it often hard to find the what the wealth of women? Is it often? In the husband’s name now the deceased husband’s name or is that a problem? That certainly can be a problem, but you can you can find some of the resources. I think the key with the research is to pay very close attention to the holistic picture when you’re doing a profile, not just looking at the particular name on the real estate records, but looking at all of the real estate records, looking at the names on the e-giving history when you could look at it as a whole, you get a much better sense of what the individual. Okay, so you’re advocating holistic prospect research? Absolutely okay, not only looking at the financial records you’re you’re part of the workshop was really about using the prospect research to on on women to best advantage, but what do you as a gift officer? What do you like to see as the product that’s that comes from the prospect researcher? So i am very dependent on prospect research. Sure, i am certainly interested in the wealth indicators i’m looking at the estimated wealth capacity, the gift capacity, but i am as interested in the indicators that tell me about e-giving. Priorities. So i’ll give you a very good example. We had a fabulous case study that i talked about today, and the research showed some great wealth. All of the real estate was in the husband’s name, all of the giving history was in both of their names and e-giving seemed to be to certain extent schizophrenic it seemed to be all too human and health services and education for half the guests, and the other half of the gifts were women’s rights and reproductive rights, and that didn’t make sense holistically. So i use that to drive a lot of questions, asking the couple individually what their priorities were came to find out the only thing they shared wass thie, my organization, and that, in fact, we were their single biggest shared priority, which, when i looked at their other giving based on research, were five figure gives suggested to me that there was a seven figure gift for us so that’s a great example of your talking about researching female prospects, but again, holistic approach. You have to be talking to the husband as well, if he’s still living? Absolutely, absolutely. What about other family? Are you often? Involved bringing in other family members aside from the spouse, we are very involved in doing multigenerational giving, and we actually talk sometimes two, three and four generations of families and it’s very interesting that families, when we’re dealing with wealth at the top one percent top ten percent that those families often erm having formal meetings, formal discussions and learning about who the power players are within those discussions within those families is incredibly valuable. We had done on older, older child, for instance, very influential to the mother and father. Absolutely. We had done some research and found that the man was in the health insurance business very, very wealthy. All of the money was his, and he had generated it. But in conversations with him came to find out that the family, he, his wife and the children make the decisions as a family, but that it’s, very democratic and the women in the family actually usually out vote the math. So instead of continuing to meet with him alone, i asked if i could come and meet with the women. So the role of women is not only because greater longevity no, not at all, they’re making a lot of the decision now you said you are very interested in the wealth indicators. What do you like? Sort of specifically like to see from prospect research in as you’re preparing? I want to see if there is political gether. If there is political giving, i’m looking not just amount, but who and what they’re giving it to. I want to see real estate, i want to see a publicly traded company information i’m also interested in news articles about why companies were founded as particularly valuable when i’m dealing with a woman and she has owned and founded her own company, finding out more about why she created that company and they’re often profiles business journals and community journals. That information could be very directive into how these in having these conversations is there. Is there value in? Well, clearly there is value in the financial information. Are you reluctant to meet with someone before you have some prospect research on them? What’s your what’s, your personal pride election that way so i want to have something i want to know some of what i’m going into, but i’m not going to have the lack of that information stop me from meeting. So with some people, you confined very little and some you confined, nothing is not going to stop me from having the meeting. There is nothing more powerful than standing face to face with someone and asking the questions, that thing. The thing you’re listening to the talking alternate network. E-giving thank you. Good. Are you stuck in your business or career, trying to take your business to the next level, and it keeps hitting a wall? This is sam liebowitz, the conscious consultant. I will help you get to the root cause of your abundance issues and help move you forward in your life. Call me now and let’s. Create the future you dream of. Two, one, two, seven, two, one, eight, one, eight, three, that’s to one to seven to one, eight one eight three. The conscious consultant helping conscious people. Be better business people. Dahna hi, this is psychic medium. Betsy cohen, host of the show. The power of intuition. Join me at talking alternative dot com mondays at eleven a. M call in for a free psychic reading. Learn how to tune into your intuition to feel better and to create your optimum life. I’m here to guide you and to assist you in creating life that you deserve. Listen every monday at eleven a, m on talking alternative dot com. Are you feeling overwhelmed in the current chaos of our changing times? A deeper understanding of authentic astrology can uncover solutions in every area of life. After all, metaphysics is just quantum physics, politically expressed, i and montgomery taylor and i offer lectures, seminars and private consultations. For more information, contact me at monte m o nt y at r l j media. Dot com talking alternative radio twenty four hours a day. Hi, i’m kate piela, executive director of dance, new amsterdam. And you’re listening to tony martignetti non-profit radio. Big non-profit ideas for the other ninety five percent. And how important do you find the meeting to be in feeding back to prospect research? I think that’s something that has been missing a lot in the business there’s a lot of push out of information from research officers are not very good at sharing it back. We tend to like to do a full circle, so i’ll come back and say, i heard that they were very involved, maybe in a different country, maybe in a different state. Can we do some research there? I’ll bring that back, our researcher will do more information, and it becomes his fabulous feedback loop that includes the donor that just creates this beautiful fall fall because there’s there’s nothing better than sitting with someone right over a meal for an hour, hour and a half or in their office for thirty minutes that i’ve always thought that’s the incredibly valuable prospect research you’re finding out wealth of information you find out more than you ever can from the database, and it sounds like you’re using the written material when you do have it to inform the questions that you’re going to ask, right? I mean, you’re you’re running the meeting? Absolutely. Talk a little about running them, running the prospect meeting for us. So for me, for the meeting, i don’t want to spend a lot of time talking about mission or about the organization. I already know the organization, they often know the organization and with our members, they’ve known it probably longer and better than i ever could. So i want to know about that. I want to ask questions like, how do you make your philanthropic decisions? Why do you give to us? Why did you first give to us? Do you and your husband make the same decision to have the same have the same priorities? Those of the questions i want to ask and learn about when do you make your decisions? I wanted to drill down and find out, are they ultimately are their assets that they can give that we couldn’t find? Have they considered including real estate, how they concluded considered including in a state gift? So i normally spend probably two thirds of the meeting asking those sorts of questions, finding out a lot more about what they do, why they do it, and then i’m going to make a solicitation, i don’t like meeting without making the ass outstanding gift officer. Of course, you mentioned the hard to find assets. What kinds of questions do you ask to try to find out about what’s? Not so public. So one of the things that we’re seeing a lot of now as the economy is starting to finally take up is an increase in pose cos they’re starting to go public again. Let’s, identify that now. Tony martignetti non-profit radio we have george in jail. I would hate for you to be subjected. Jog, jail, right? I don’t have my keys. I sometimes have warden. I don’t have them. So just define aipo for people. So when i po it’s, an initial public offering and it’s when a private company is listed on a public exchange, the dow jones, the nasdaq on a public exchange so the public can invest in it, brings in a huge influx of cash to the business and becomes often a liquidity event on opportunity for the owner before the company was private to get some of their investment out. Okay. And though so, there could be some significant tax benefits that can be syntax considerations if you think of it as a year in which you have more money. What do you do with that money? So so how do you how do you get to dahna? Well, you would know, i guess, from the research that they do own a privately held business, i will and that’s normally about all i know. Okay, so how do you go from there? I will ask questions about how the business is doing. What’s going on with the business from research, i will also often see an uptick in marketing material. So all of a sudden, there are more news articles on the business, there’s, more press and there’s no reason why, after ten years in business, they should be in every business journal for the last six months. It’s suggest to me they’re trying to build their brand and something is going on, so i’ll actually ask about that. And then at that point, someone could often say, well, we’re on the verge of going public, and then i can have a whole different conversation you want to give stock now, do you want to give stock after there’s a whole different conversation? So i’m looking for information. To know where the business is. Conversely, it could also be looking tio here that someone is divesting themselves of a private business. They’re retiring, they’re going to give it to their kids, that’s a whole different liquidity event. So i’m looking for those and that’s information that i confined sometimes for research, but much more from the conversations that’s an outstanding example of using the research to go much, much deeper in your meeting this’s tony martignetti non-profit radio coverage of the fund-raising fund-raising day two thousand eleven with samantha cohen, director of principle you have the right principle giving at the american civil liberties union, and we’re talking about prospect research for females with female prospects and using that using that research wisely, i’ll ask you sort of ah, you know, softball question, what else would you like to say about using the valuable research? I think that we need to use the research we have. We need to be careful. We need to be analytical in that research, but we can’t depend solely on recent okay, lack of research shouldn’t stop you from getting out the door. That’s right on. How much of your time would you say you spend out of the office not nearly enough, but i would like to be out of the office at least seventy five percent of the time. Okay? And what is it that keeps you in when you’d like to be out or if you if you don’t want to say that so much, what strategies do you have for getting more time out of the office in with donors and prospects? How do you minimize that office? Time to get you more out a targeted portfolio, so really weeding out the prospects in the in the portfolio that aren’t going to produce. So i’m doing a lot more qualifying meetings to look at people to figure out know this person is not going to be a major donor, and i’m removing them from the portfolio so that my portfolio is becoming much more targeted, which allows me to spend more time with fewer people, produce better results, okay? And as you’re as your meeting with those better prospects, let’s, go back to the cycle ing back of information to the prospect research team. You use a call report for that if you have a sit down what’s the what’s the mechanism for getting that information back to prospect research. So the formal mechanism is a contact report that i write within twenty four hours of the meeting meeting think memory things get lost, so i write it down very quickly. I get that into our database very quickly, and then i’ll often go and sit down with our prospect researcher when i’ve had a particularly illuminating meeting and share with her the types of things you wouldn’t necessarily put into writing. Yes, okay, and might that conversation include people that the person knows who? Maybe a c l u knows or doesn’t know your prospect knows them absolutely connectors and new prospects are things that regularly come up in our durney meetings that we share not just one on one with our prospect researchers, but as a major gifts team, we often have conversations about that and you’re your portfolio what’s the what’s, the age range of your portfolio. I have donors in their twenties, i have donors in their nineties, so we are full, full across the board are average, doner is in their sixties, but the age of our large donors is quickly decreasing, so we’re getting over forties and fifties, it has as much to do with our targeting and multi generational conversations. Is anything else? Okay? The conversations, the meetings that you have with women let’s, let’s focus on women that’s the subject of your seminar women in their eighties nineties how do you how do you talk about there? Differed or plant e-giving how do you open that conversation with them? So when somebody reaches their eighties and nineties, they’ve often already got their plans sorted out. So it’s a little late to be asking to be included in someone’s estate, although we certainly wouldn’t shy away from making the ask it is a little late, but if we if we talk about people women in there, maybe a little younger in their sixties and seventies, we’re talking about a similar generation. I’m often asking questions about what they want to leave behind as a legacy, and i’m asking questions about do they want their gifts and their legacy to reflect the life that the woman maybe shared with her husband? Is it about honoring his memory? Is it about honoring him or, as we often find, once the husband passes away, the woman has a different focus and wants to make gifts that matter. So asking about priorities and legacy and what they what message they want to leave behind to their families into the world that’s often what the conversation is about how do you manage it if you’re in that situation the husband has recently, he passed. Well, let me ask, is most of your portfolio women, or is there another proportion? I would say it’s probably sixty five percent women, okay, they’re slightly slightly when you’re when you’re dealing with a man or a woman whose spouses recently deceased, and you suspect that it was the spouse who was the primary giver, my mary-jo donorsearch too american civil liberties union. How do you approach that surviving spouse? Wait, i think the most important thing is we do approach them, we don’t assume because the spouse who was the instigator of the e-giving has deceased, we don’t see him that e-giving can’t continue, and i think that’s a very key point, you don’t just let people go away exactly, and we don’t leave them alone for months and years on end. Obviously you need to be respectful and not be there the next week, but we want to let them know that we’re still they are and that we still care and we’re still interested in them and so we try to have a meeting pretty quickly, and often it becomes a nostalgia conversation about this, about the husband, about why he gave, which will allow us to talk about what do you share those some of those same values? Are you as interested as your husband wass in civil liberties? That conversation can lead us while my husband was interested in a particular area, but i’m more interested in this area of your work, so we can recon target our messaging that’s good that’s a home run. They’re still interest in your work. Just a different part of it. Absolutely or we may find they may not be interested at all, at which point we can talk about the possibility of a gift in memory of they’re loved their loved one. Alright, so still keeping the door open until they absolutely say no more, no more giving to your organization, but it’s it’s nass ity tour you don’t really give up until you actually shown the door. How many years do you have in individual giving? I’ve been doing individual giving for fifteen years. Shows senior out senior senior gift officer c o l c a c l u is lucky to have you, samantha. Thank you. This is tony martignetti non-profit radio coverage of fund-raising day two thousand eleven. I’ve been with samantha cohen. She is director of principle e-giving yes, at the american civil liberties union and samantha, i want to thank you very much for being a guest was a pleasure. It was a pleasure. Thank you very much. That was my pre recorded segment from june fund-raising day here in new york city. Right now, we’ll take a break, then, after the break, it’s, tony’s, take two, and then after that, learning, lobbying limitations with our regular legal contributors, so stay with me. You’re listening to the talking alternative network. Yes. Are you feeling overwhelmed in the current chaos of our changing times? A deeper understanding of authentic astrology can uncover solutions in every area of life. After all, metaphysics is just quantum physics, politically expressed hi and montgomery taylor and i offer lectures, seminars and private consultations. For more information, contact me at monte m o nt y at r l j media. Dot com are you concerned about the future of your business or career? Would you like it all to just be better? Well, the way to do that is to better communication, and the best way to do that is training from the team at improving communications. This is larry sharp, host of the ivory tower radio program and director at improving communications. Does your office needs better leadership, customer service sales, or maybe better writing, are speaking skills. Could they be better at dealing with confrontation conflicts, touchy subjects all are covered here at improving communications. If you’re in the new york city area, stop by one of our public classes, or get your human resource is in touch with us. Website is improving communications, dot com, that’s, improving communications, dot com, improve your professional environment, be more effective, be happier, and make more money improving communications, that’s the answer. Hey, all you crazy listeners looking to boost your business? Why not advertise on talking alternative with very reasonable rates? Interested simply email at info at talking alternative dot com hello there. Welcome back, it’s. Time for tony’s. Take two. My block post this week is thinking is underrated back in what for me were dark days when i was a lawyer practicing law i usedto have to account for my time in six minute increments tenths of an hour and there were lots of billing codes for things like court appearances and drafting motion for summary judgment and responding to motion to dismiss and telephone conferences. But there was never a billing code four thinking about your case, and i always thought that a lawyer’s best contribution to a client’s situation, which is usually a problem situation not always, but usually would be thinking, i’ve spent my time thinking about your case strategically and the attorneys who were involved in the other parties that are involved and your needs. And but there was never a billing code for thinking, so my day’s got much brighter because i only practiced law for about two years. And now, in the brighter sonny your days, i do a lot of thinking, and i don’t have to account for my time anymore in increments of six minutes and that’s what the block post? Is all about encouraging you to think just spend time thinking actively consciously about things that are moving and important to you, whether their personal or professional. In the blood post, i mentioned a lot of things just as examples that i spend time thinking of an and that i spend a lot of time on vacation and also on the subways, actively just giving thought to things in my life and that’s. What the block post thinking is underrated is about encouraging you to do the same, and that is tony’s take two for friday, september twenty third, two thousand eleven want to welcome jean takagi and emily chan are regular legal contributors. Jean takagi is principal of neo the non-profit and exempt organizations law group in san francisco. He edits the popular non-profit law blawg at non-profit law blogged dot com. Emily chan is an attorney at neo-sage, the principal contributor to the no non-profit law blawg, gene and emily. Welcome back. I think it’s a pleasure to have you. We’re talking this week about lobbying limitations. So what? Gene are some of the activities that could constitutent lobbying just so people are are conscious of what they might be doing that could become lobbying great question tony and way to think about a lot of wealth, so jobs loving is essentially attempting to influence legislation and the activities that might constitute lobbying our writing legislation, trying to meet with legislators or legislative bodies and influence how they might act on a proposed bill and things of that that nature. We might do that with a ballot measure and go out to the people or talkto our members or the public and tell them to contact their legislatures about specific bill constitutent ok, and can also include the use of social media and blogging. Absolutely, tony, great point, so blogging is just on dh social media use is just another way to communicate, and if you’re communicating to legislative bodies or legislators, legislators better have have their own social media sites or have their own blog’s and websites, and many of them do that khun b lobbying and if you are getting your members or you’re encouraging the public to engage in the same types of activities to influence legislation and contact legislators, that could all be lobbying using social media and blog’s and twitter and facebook and all the rats, okay, so i want to come back to social media in a few minutes after we’ve talked about some of the some more details because that’s that’s really interesting and also the point of the possibility of someone posting on non-profits site and whether that might be considered lobbying, but i think we need to do a little detail work first, and emily, there are laws, there are no, they’re not laws yet there are bills and acts under consideration now that non-profits might be interested in commenting on one way or another, right? Yes, tony so loving is getting some renewed or re energized attention as of late because of some things that were seeing on both the federal and state level recently on the federal level, there was the budget control act that was fined and that’s calling for one point five trillion dollars cut decided by that twelve person bipartisan committee, and certainly there are many non-profits better concern that they’ll be at the chopping block with that cut. Additionally, we just saw the proposed job will act. I’m spoken about which will limit the charitable deduction for certain we’ll be individuals, and then on the state level, we’ve seen some pushback in massachusetts. The attorney general earlier this year tried to propose legislation that would require prior approval by the attorney general’s office before non-profit could compensate executives, but these are the types of legislation that non-profits may want teo voice an opinion on or put out communications that reflect the view on that, encourage others to contact legislators or for themselves to go ahead and do that as well. Right? So we’re not just talking about federal law, but also and any state initiatives that could impact non-profits and that they might want to comment on and emily so how do we decide how much lobbying a non-profit can do? So in the internal revenue code for public charities under five, oh, one, seat three, it says god, public charities cannot engage in more than an insubstantial amount of lobbying and the default test for that is really all facts and circumstances. The irs will look at everything, including the time spent the resource is such expenditures on decide whether the organization has now stepped over that line into substantial lobbying activity that really leaves many organizations uncertain and scared in many. Ways, because there is no strict percentage or limit on that. So what organizations can do is elect to be measured by something called an expenditure test, which is under section five a one eighth of the internal revenue code. And unlike the people in this one, is measured only on expenditures. So it really gives organizations a better gauge as how to measure their own lobbying limits within compliance with the law. Okay, holy cow. All right, so that’s a ton of stuff. So? So you have to do lobbying that’s? Well, i shouldn’t say less than substantial because that’s not what’s in the code. So you have to do lobbying, that’s insubstantial or or less if you’re a five a one c three. Right? Okay. Cancel amount of total activities. Another way too. Wait, i’m sorry. Say that one more time in a substantial amount of total activities. Ok? And so then there are two different tests you’re saying to measure whether you’re you’re meeting that threshold or your or your exceeding it, right? Is that that’s standard? I should say that standard or you’re exceeding it. Is that right? Yes. That’s correct. The default. Substantial part. Okay. There’s the expenditure testament organizations can elect to be measured by filing a one page form. Okay, before we go into too much detail. So let’s talk about the substantial part test you say substantial, substantial part of what substantial part as activities. So it goes back to the language and five oh one c three and saying that organization can army engaged in an insubstantial amount of lobbying and there’s no exact equation as to how the irs will do this, it will just look at all facts and circumstances. Okay? And you said that this is the default test. So careful around jargon jail, because for lawyers, default is very clear. But for others may not necessarily be. That means that everybody’s covered by this test, unless they choose the other one, right? Yes. That’s correct. And then that’s, when they would file a form form fifty seven sixty eight and elect into the expenditure. Okay. And jean, let me turn to you and ask when should a non-profit or what types of non-profits should try tio or should apply to be under the expenditure test. Well, it’s going to be most non-profits tony that are going to be benefiting from from falling under that test. The five oh one h expenditure test really works out for all charities, particularly if their annual budgets are under seventeen million dollars a year. And i would think that that’s going to cover most of the people listening, okay, organization and how do you come up with that number? What is that? But under the substantial part test that emily was talking about again, if you don’t do anything, and that’s how the irs is going to look at your lobbying and they look at everything assembly was talking about and the general rule of thumb that people use that professionals use and trying to give guidance. Tio non-profits is saying that well, there is an old court case that five percent of your organizations, time and effort spent on lobbying. That’s not substantial. So it’s okay to do up to that amount, but anything over them that we’re not really sure of. So if we took a look at five percent that’s that’s going to be not a lot of money for a small charity for, you know, a million dollar charity we’re talking about a cz little as a five thousand dollars when we go into the expenditure test, their specific limits that we know we would need teo comply with in order to stay under that threshold, and the limits are pretty generous. Tony twenty percent of your first five hundred thousand dollars in expenditures in furtherance of your mission would be insubstantial. So that’s one hundred thousand of your first five hundred thousand dollars that you spend would be insubstantial fifteen percent of the next five hundred thousand ten percent of the next five percent of the next. It ends up being tapped at one million dollars. So when we look at that one million dollar mark, and then we go back to the substantial part, tess, we know that at about seventeen million dollars that’s when the substantial part tests and expenditure test looks to be fairly, even if we’re just looking at that five percent mark as the rule of fun rule of thumb with substantial part test okay, biggest benefit of the bible in h expenditure tests for most smaller non-profits tony is that all volunteer time spent on lobbying doesn’t count of lobbying? Volunteer time doesn’t spend doesn’t count, so so you can have lots of volunteers going out and knocking on lots of doors or leafleting and doing things, and none of that time counts. None of the expense of that time counts toward the calculation. Well, none of the volunteers time town on that calculations are only expenditures. That you might have in that equation would be factoring what staff time that you might be paying for to organize the volunteers and maybe some printing materials. But for low cost or no cost lobbying measures, the five of one age expenditure test is of great benefit. Okay, we’re going to take a break, and my voice just cracked like i’m fourteen years old, and when we return, we’re going continue learning, lobbying limitations. This is excellent detail to stay with us. Talking alternative radio, twenty four hours a day. Are you stuck in your business or career trying to take your business to the next level, and it keeps hitting a wall? This is sam lebowitz, the conscious consultant. I will help you get to the root cause of your abundance issues and help move you forward in your life. Call me now and let’s. Create the future you dream of. Two, one, two, seven, two, one, eight, one, eight, three, that’s to one to seven to one, eight one eight three. The conscious consultant helping hunters. People be better business people. Dahna this is tony martignetti aptly named host of tony martignetti non-profit radio big non-profit ideas for the other ninety five percent technology fund-raising compliance, social media, small and medium non-profits have needs in all these areas. My guests are expert in all these areas and mohr. Tony martignetti non-profit radio fridays, one to two eastern on talking alternative broadcasting do you want to enhance your company’s web presence with an eye catching and unique website design? Would you like to incorporate professional video marketing mobile marketing into your organization’s marketing campaign? Mission one on one media offers a unique marketing experience that will set you apart from your competitors, magnify your brand exposure and enhance your current marketing effort. Their services include video production and editing, web design, graphic design photography, social media management and now introducing mobile marketing. Their motto is. We do whatever it takes to make our clients happy. Contact them today. Admission one one media dot com talking. Lively conversation. Top trends. Sound advice, that’s, tony martignetti non-profit radio. And i’m ken berger from charity navigator. Welcome back to the show i’m with our regular legal contributors, jean takagi and emily chan. We’re talking about lobbying limitations. Gene, you mentioned that where this five percent is based on an old case. So how come it’s ok to rely on this old case? Because we don’t have anything else, tony so we don’t really have anything else to rely on. There may be some private letter rulings, but theres so specifics with facts and circumstance is that they don’t really touch on an overall level anymore. So all we have is that old court case that’s at five percent of time and resource is that that was insubstantial and okay, okay, and you invoked a lot of mathematics. You know, i went to law school because i’m poor at math, so but i was able to follow your explanation, but that’s about as far as i can go, so don’t bring in any algebra or anything. Just keep it tio addition and subtraction. Andi, i’ll be okay. So and what is the form that non-profit uses to elect the the more advantageous one that’s for small non-profits the five oh one h test it’s form fifty seven. Sixty eight and has emily mentioned one page form super easy to fill out one of the easiest forms that the irs has? Okay, fifty seven, sixty eight there’s no t on the end of that it’s not fifty seven. Sixty eighty no tony from from the earned income was that elearning yeah, i like the tee form. See if you can find some more of those that have a tv in them. Okay? And then let’s just based our conversations on those. So so we have to do research. Well, you do find all the forms and have teas, and then we’ll talk about that that’ll be the subject for future future shows that you’re on so let’s see, emily, how do we oh, so let’s, talk a little about social media now, okay, so now we know the two different tests. So emily suppose somebody posts puts a block post aren’t just comments on a block and a non-profit advocating, you know, opposition to the charitable deduction limitation that you were that you mentioned earlier. Does that fall under lobbying? Tony it’s really going to depend it’s going to depend on the facts and circumstances around that situation? Social media is certainly a place where the risk is there, um, and it really is going to fall on how the organisation is monitoring its own social media. So, for example, what kind of user agreements it has if it has a moderation policy, the dance that an organization takes on the way that they control their own platform is going to possibly affect whether the irs decides to say that that’s lobbying and challenge them and as well how courts are going to interpret the factions. There’s actually a really good resource that recently came out from alliance for justice called influencing public policy in the digital age. And it’s, a resource precisely on social media and a lobbying an election related activities. Ok, is that alliance for justice dot org’s? Do you know it isn’t free and it came out okay. Okay. It’s. Always troubling when you know when you when you guys say and i think this related to earned income also it depends on the facts and circumstances. That’s, it’s, it’s. So nebulous though, hyre. And you also said emily it it depends on the way the non-profit is monitoring their blawg. What do you mean there and could you could talk a little bit louder for us, too. There are different schools of thought as teo, how organizations should approach monitoring their own platform. So on one hand, organizations can decide to have moderating policies where they say they will take down information, not violate their community by lines of their terms. And if something were to happen, such as lobbying by a user who came on, you know, they may be able to show good faith, but at the same time they take on that responsability and apparently the administrative burden of monitoring that forum. On the other hand, there are organizations that choose not to moderate the forms, and they just put out a disclaimer that they don’t moderate it. They don’t stand behind necessarily what’s being put on there and it’s not a reflection of the organization. While that does take away some of that burden, then of going through in filtering the comments, it may be more difficult than to show that they are taking the responsibility to ensure that they’re not engaging in substantial amounts of lobbying lobbying, and it also creates a bigger risk that then, you know the free for all on their forum for whoever comes across it and whatever they want right there, you can’t just say we don’t monitor it and it’s not the opinion of of our non-profit that’s not going to be good enough? You can say that, but there is a question as to what position that puts you in certainly the law and the irs. They’re trying to catch up with these new avenues of social media and how to apply these very traditional rules to these new forms of media that, you know, create opportunities that weren’t previously available. Yeah, the laws are not keeping up with the changing digital landscape, certainly let’s. See so jean, did you find any there’s tea forms? Gene on the break, by the way, looking way had a two minute break it and i thought you come up with half a dozen by them. So there must be a reporting mechanism. If we’re concerned about the substantiality of lobbying activity, there must be some way that non-profit have to report backto irs. Absolutely so the form nine ninety is their annual information returns and whether you form filed the form nine, ninety or the nine ninety easy version you have to file a schedule c, which reports all of your lobbying activity and there’s two ways to report it. So if you are under that substantial part test, you didn’t do that that five o n h election and you fall into the substantial part test. You have to last her a lot of questions about whether used volunteers and what other resource is air being used for lobbying? But if you file that five o one h election, as i recommended for most organizations, especially smaller organizations, then you just record your expenditures and on the social media issue that really works out to your benefit as well, tony, because how much money did it cost to lobby when he just got a comment back from somebody that put in a lobbying position? It might have cost you almost nothing, right? So then you don’t worry about it so much if you paid that election and we’re talking here about the tax implications. But there is another federal requirement around lobbying activities to reaching that’s, right? So if you’re gonna be live ing on federal issues, you may also have to look at the registration and reporting requirements in the lobbying disclosure act, and those can be fairly complicated, but those air outside of sort of the tax requirements of around lobbying and you’ve got to talk with attorneys who understand the lobbying disclosure act on the federal level and possibly if you’re looking at state level issues or local level issues, you’ve got additional registration reporting with state and local authorities as well. Okay, so, uh, substantial, and what about the let’s? Say the pastor? This comes up in new york, a lot of pastor on a pulpit around election time on dh he or she is advocating for either one of the one of the ballot initiatives for against or for or against a candidate. Jean how does that fall into what we’re talking about? Well, when they’re talking about a ballot initiative, then we’re talking about a form of lobbying. So in the case of a pastor preaching to his congregation or even to the broader community we’re talking about typically grassroots flopping, which is lobbying where you’re going out to the people and telling them how to vote or tell their legislatures on how to vote sametz i’m going to actually back-up one step, however, if the people on a ballot initiative, if it the people themselves of the lawmakers and not the legislators, legislative bodies, then that would be called direct lobbying because you’re going directly to the people who make the law the people themselves. Well, but if you’re on the if you’re on the pulpit, you’re talking teo anaugh audience of congregants, and they’re all voters. What is that then? It’s still lobbying? So if you’re if you’re got a position on the law and telling them how to vote on the law, it would be lobbying the one thing that you mentioned that might be a segway for another show tony is, is when pastor on the pulpit start telling you who to elect for public office. Okay, now we’re talking about candidates, not issues, right? Okay? And in that case now we’ve got an election hearing activity and five a onesie three organizations, including churches, are prohibited from engaging in that type of political activity where they’re endorsing a candidate. Okay, that does sound very good. Why don’t we talk about that next month? Because there’s an election in november so we can talk about election earing and the limitations around that in october has that sound sounds perfect and, well, look way need that. Yeah, yeah. The subject is off the table if there’s no tea forme because tony form. So forget about it. You know we’ll do election next time. That’s. Emily chan and jean takagi emily gene, thank you very much. My pleasure, gene is principal of neo, the non-profit exempt organizations law group in san francisco. And emily chan is an attorney at neo. I want to thank both of them and also my first guest, samantha cohen from the american civil liberties union and all the very thoughtful people at fund-raising day who enabled us to have that booth on the exhibit floor to do the interview with samantha and and a bunch of others. Those interviews have been playing for the past couple months next week. It’s employee engagement deshele dorsey from changing our world is with me to talk about how your non-profit khun gained from company programs in giving, volunteering, mentoring and even loaning executives and also our regular prospect, researcher contributor maria simple, the prospect finder will be with me as well next week. You can keep up with what’s coming up! Sign up for our insider email alerts on the facebook page, facebook, dot com and then the name of this show and if you like the show, please click that like button and become a fan. You can always listen live or archive you’ve been live archive you will find us on itunes. You can subscribe there listen any time on the device of your choice at non-profit radio dot net on twitter you can follow me are hashtag is non-profit radio so follow me at anytime and during the show. That’s the hashtag to use use it wisely and use it indiscriminately, too. Our creative producer is tony martignetti of tony martignetti non-profit radio is claire meyerhoff. Our line producer is sam liebowitz and he’s, also the owner of talking alternative broadcasting. Our social media is done by regina walton of organic social media. I hope you will be with me next friday one to two p m eastern here at talking alternative broadcasting, which is always at talking alternative dot com. Dahna i didn’t think that shooting. Good ending. You’re listening to the talking alternate network. E-giving duitz looking to meet mr or mrs right, but still haven’t found the one. Want to make your current relationship as filling as possible? Then please tune in on mondays at ten am for love in the morning with marnie allison as a professional matchmaker, i’ve seen it all. Tune in as we discuss dating, relationships and more. Start your week off, right with love in the morning with marnie gal ilsen on talking alternative dot com hey! Are you suffering from aches and pains? Has traditional medicine let you down? Are you tired of taking toxic medications, then come to the double diamond wellness center and learn how our natural methods can help you to hell? Call us now at to one to seven to one eight, one eight three that’s to one to seven to one eight one eight three or find us on the web at www dot double diamond wellness dot com way. Look forward to serving you. Are you fed up with talking points, rhetoric everywhere you turn left or right? Spin ideology no reality, in fact, its ideology over in tow. No more it’s time. Join me, larry. Shock a neo-sage tuesday nights nine to eleven easter for the ivory tower radio in the ivory tower will discuss what’s important to you society, politics, business and family. It’s provocative talk for the realist and the skeptic who want to know what’s. Really going on? What does it mean? What can be done about it? So gain special access to the ivory tower. Listen to me, larry sharp, your neo-sage tuesday nights nine to eleven new york time go to ivory tower radio dot com for details. That’s ivory tower radio dot com every tower is a great place to visit for both entertainment and education. Listening tuesday nights nine to eleven it will make you smarter. Do you want to enhance your company’s web presence with an eye catching and unique website design? Would you like to incorporate professional video marketing mobile marketing into your organization’s marketing campaign? Mission one on one media offers a unique marketing experience that will set you apart from your competitors. Magnify your brand exposure and enhance your current marketing efforts. Their services include video production and editing, web design, graphic design photography, social media management and now introducing mobile marketing. Their motto is. We do whatever it takes to make our clients happy. Contact them today. Admission. Wanna one media dot com? Dahna

Thinking Is Underrated

Photo of The Thinker courtesy of marttj on Flickr.

Back in my dark days, when I practiced law and had to account for my time in 6-minute increments,* I regretted that there wasn’t a billing code for “thinking about your case.” To me, thinking was the most valuable contribution an attorney could make to a client’s case. There were billing codes aplenty for writing client correspondence; drafting motion to dismiss; making telephone calls; and appearing in court. The implication was that none of these required thought.

Since then, my days have been clearer and brighter, and I spend a lot of time thinking. I think a lot about relationships: with family and friends, clients, their prospects and donors, the dozen pros who help me do my varied work and the invigorating people I touch as I’m doing it. How to fortify ties. When to undo them. How to finesse a sticky situation. Who can help each other and should be introduced? Who might not work so well together and are better left at risk of meeting by chance?

I think about my time, my business, my stand-up comedy and my future. Much of my thinking time is over vacations and on the subway. Do you have a getaway place where you can devote time to thinking?

If you’re a fundraiser, you’ve got plenty of relationships to think about. You can think if you’re new to a job; lead others; have goals for your life and in your work; don’t have goals in your life and in your work; if you come from a family; if you believe in God; if you don’t; if you want to make the world a better place; if you have compassion; if you don’t. I urge you to devote time to thinking about what moves you.

I come across many bios that claim “passion” for something. I hope the people behind them are thinking strategically about how to turn their passion into fruitful action.

Think actively and consciously! My hope for you is that you’ll find it as wonderfully gratifying as I do.

* A maddening exercise that is detrimental to your health if undertaken for more than 18 minutes.

Nonprofit Radio for September 16, 2011: Learning Office Lease Lessons

Big Nonprofit Ideas for the Other 95%

You can subscribe on iTunes and listen anytime, anyplace on the device of your choice.

Tony’s Guests:

George Grace

George Grace: First, we talk through the walk through. How do you find the best space and use different spaces to strategically head into your lease negotiations? Our expert is George Grace, president of G.E. Grace & Company, who has done this work for dozens of nonprofits.

 

 

Robert Smith

Robert Smith & Kate Peila: Then, what lease terms do you need to be careful about and what are the negotiating points? Lease expert Robert J. Smith, Esq. and Kate Peila, executive director of Dance New Amsterdam, talk through DNA’s less-than-desirable lease to bring out lessons to help you get the best lease next time.

 

Here is a link to the podcast: 059: Learning Office Lease Lessons


Every Friday from 1 to 2pm ET.

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If you have big dreams but an average budget, tune in to Tony Martignetti Nonprofit Radio.

I interview the best in the business on every topic from board relations, fundraising, social media and compliance, to technology, accounting, volunteer management, finance, marketing and beyond. Always with you in mind.

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Welcome to tony martignetti non-profit radio, the aptly named host. We’re always talking here about big non-profit ideas for the other ninety five percent. I very much hope that you were with me last week when we had the nine eleven effect, christine cronin, president of and white charities dot or ge was with me to discuss the first online giving responses to the attacks and what’s changed as a result, and lessons learned from then also i had david campbell, professor of public administration of binghamton university. He also had firsthand experience on nine eleven from his work at community service society in new york city. We talked with david about his opinion piece in the chronicle of philanthropy. The lessons of nine eleven philanthropy a decade later this week, we’re learning office lease lessons first we’re going to walk through the no, i blew it first we’re going to talk through the walk through how do you find the best space and use different spaces to strategically head into your lease? Negotiations are expert is george grace, president of ghee grayson company, who has done exactly this type of work for dozens of non-profits then what least terms? Do you need to be careful about and what are the negotiating points? Attorney robert j smith and kate piela, executive director of dance new amsterdam, are going to talk through the dance companies less than desirable lease to bring out some lessons to help you get the best lease next time. In between those segments, it’ll be tony’s take two as always, at roughly thirty two minutes after the hour, a little talk about my stand up comedy, which is on my blogged and also the next-gen charity conference, where we’re going to be media partners. We’re live tweeting, today’s show. If you’re on twitter, use hashtag non-profit radio to join the conversation on twitter our producer sam will be monitoring that for us if you prefer the phone so nineteen ninety eight, but if you prefer the phone, we’re at eight seven seven for eight xero for one to zero. We take a break and then when we come back learning office lease essenes, i’ll be joined by george grace, so stay with me. You’re listening to the talking alternative network. Are you suffering from aches and pains? Has traditional medicine let you down? Are you tired of taking toxic medications, then come to the double diamond wellness center and learn how our natural methods can help you to hell? Call us now at to one to seven to one eight, one eight three that’s to one to seven to one eight one eight three or find us on the web at www dot double diamond wellness dot com. We look forward to serving you. Is your marriage in trouble? Are you considering divorce? Hello, i’m lawrence bloom, a family law attorney in new york and new jersey. No one is happier than the day their divorce is final. My firm can help you. We take the nasty out of the divorce process and make people happy. Police call a set to one, two, nine six four three five zero two for a free consultation. That’s lawrence h bloom two, one two, nine, six, four, three five zero two. We make people happy. Hey, are you crazy listeners looking to boost your business? Why not advertise on talking alternative with very reasonable rates? Interested simply email at info at talking alternative dot com. Welcome back to tony martignetti non-profit radio. I’m joined now by george grace esquire he founded g grayson company in nineteen ninety five. He has over twenty five years of experience in commercial real estate. He represents many non-profits and companies in their real estate transactions. Georges with mito help me with the first segment of learning office at least lessons. George grace, welcome to the show. Good morning. Good afternoon, tony. Pleasure to have you. It is afternoon. George has been drinking, but his seems cogent and i’m sure he’ll get through this segment just fine. Plus, we have a break in a few minutes. George. Why do non-profits usually need to examine a new space? What? What? What? What leads them, tio that several reasons first. Firstly, there you have a least that’s expiring, so that at least has to either be re negotiated or they have to move. Secondly, they’re growing rapidly and they need to get at the space. Doesn’t work for the moment anymore that it’s too small so they need more space. Or thirdly, they’re shrinking and this base is too big. And they’re paying a lot of money for space that they’re not. Using okay, those air, typical reasons, right? Hopefully not shrinking, but i imagine you’ve seen more of that now than you had say two years ago. Well, profits reducing, you know, it’s, i’ve seen a lot of a lot of the non-profits that i’ve worked with recently actually have expanded because there’s an opportunity in the marketplace because the rents have come way down so they see an opportunity to expand get a bigger front print. The tendency was non-profits as if we have the space, they’ll fill it with a use. Eso for a lot of the small, i would say the smarter non-profits are going out and trying to expand now, because now is the time to get cheap space. Okay. Oh, excellent. All right, now, your advice is that you you have to be willing to leave the space that urine so let’s, talk a little about your strategy. What? Why is that? Well, whether you’re going to renew the lease or your intention is to move from where you are, you have to go through the same process if you want to stay in the space. You you you were in and you want to re negotiate the least with the landlord. In order to best do that, you have to go out into the marketplace, find other alternatives that you’re willing to move. Teo, that is the key, and then use that as leverage against your present landlord and say to him, basically, if you don’t give me a great deal moving across the street because the landlord across the street is building’s half empty and is dying to have me and he’s doing all this, giving me all these concessions and benefits. So either you lower the rent or we’re moving. Okay, excellent. So definitely develop alternatives to where you are and then use those as leverage. Like you said. Now we have two attorneys on the show today, so i’m very conscious of jargon jail hold onto your wallet. Plus, we’ve locked up the valuables. Sam did that before you guys got here, so okay, a landlord now by landlord. You mean a building owner? Is that right? Correct. Okay. Let’s distinguish that from a non-profit that might be looking to rent from an existing tenant. That will make them a subtenant of sub lease. Okay, go ahead. Is the strategy while lester is the strategy different if you’re talking to a landlord, which is the owner versus talking to and negotiating with an existing tenant that you’re going to sub let from yes, ok as well, because there’s two things the tenant that sub leasing space has a different set of incentives than the owner does the owner is, has his incentives or her incentives is to make sure that their buildings full that they have that they have long term leases, preferably so they can re finance the property because one of the many owners and every owners have different incentives, but the mainstream usually wants to get their buildings full. They re finance the building and then take out money tax free. We’ll talk about that refinancing so in a few minutes as an incentive. But that’s the owner that’s the owner’s incentive, the tenant that subleasing has a lease which has a certain term certain number of years. It’s not forever, like the owner owns it forever. The tenant only owns it for two years or five years or ten years, so that he has a wasting asset. A longer term lease has more value for a tenant sub. Leasing it than a short term if you only have a year left on your lease who who wants to move in for just a year and then not know if beyond that year they can stay. So the value of that is diminished. That’s that what you mean by a wasting asset? Yes, the shorter the asset, the shorter of the length of the term, the less value that least has ok. So as as an organisation, or any as any tenants turned out to be an organization and any tenant as the least starts tio come toward its end, they get anxious about getting someone in there because they know that the shorter there time period that they have left, the less desirable that least becomes for other people to move in. Yes, and so they’re in a position to be much more flexible in terms of their rent. You know, the short of the least term is if they have ten if they’re subleasing for nine years, for example, than you know, that’s virtually like being a landlord. So there it’s, not as it’s still a fairly good asset, right? But one year well, and they’re not. Using this space well, well, sublease it for whatever we can get there, desperate to get seldman found money. This is the kind of detail we’re going to be talking about. We’re talking about learning office, least lessons with george grace of g grayson company. We take a break and stay with us. You didn’t think that shooting getting thinking, you’re listening to the talking alternate network. E-giving. Duitz good. Are you stuck in your business or career, trying to take your business to the next level, and it keeps hitting a wall? This is sam liebowitz, the conscious consultant. I will help you get to the root cause of your abundance issues and help move you forward in your life. Call me now and let’s. Create the future you dream of. Two, one, two, seven, two, one, eight, one, eight, three, that’s to one to seven to one, eight one eight three. The conscious consultant helping conscious people. Be better business people. Bonem hi, this is psychic medium. Betsy cohen, host of the show. The power of intuition. Join me at talking alternative dot com mondays at eleven a. M call in for a free psychic readings. Learn how to tune into your intuition, to feel better and to create your optimum life. I’m here to guide you and to assist you in creating life that you deserve. Listen every monday at eleven a, m on talking alternative dot com. Are you feeling overwhelmed in the current chaos of our changing times? A deeper understanding of authentic astrology can uncover solutions in every area of life. After all, metaphysics is just quantum physics, politically expressed, i and montgomery taylor and i offer lectures, seminars and private consultations. For more information, contact me at monte m o nt y at r l j media. Dot com talking alternative radio twenty four hours a day. Welcome back to the show. We’re talking about learning office, least lessons with george grace george before the before the break you were talking about having to be willing to leave, even if you really maybe don’t want to leave. So are we talking about bluffing? You’re the place where you currently are. Is that fair or no? You can consider it a bluff if your true intention is never to walk out the door but too, if you’re really wanna press the rents down, you have to be willing to walk the stronger you are in that position. If you really are willing it’s, very easy. If you’re bluffing. It’s there’s always a tension and you have to cause the landlord may say, you know what? Go, go they call your bluff. So so you you know that’s a gamble and you have to do it very strategically. I’ll give you one example. One time we were looking, the landlord had come in to visit to tenant and the tenant blurts algal, we want to stay. We have no intention of leaving that is giving your negotiating position away. Sort of revealed your cards. Yes, that cost him thousands. Of dollars. So so to generate these alternatives, you know, the first step, i guess, is to figure out what you need. Is that right? Yes. You know, let’s talk about that. How do you how do you figure that out? Well, there’s the number of there’s a variety of variables they have to look at the first one is how many square feet, too? You need that’s the first one that everybody looks at and everybody has sort of a, you know, a basic understanding of how many square feet they need or think they need, but that’s one variable of many. Okay, depending on what the uses of this straight office used. That’s. One thing, if you have specialized clients that come in that need, you know, certain access after hours, if you mean the handicap access handicap access. If you work twenty four seven, you want to be in a building that provides twenty four seven of air conditioning and access? If, ah so they’re abroad. If if you want, you may want a lot of security because you’re handling money. So you want to make sure the building is secure. There’s a lot of other aspects. In the operation of the building that will affect your organization. So you want to make sure that the building can accommodate what you’re doing, sort of the technical specifications of what you’re doing have to be met before you even look at the cost, because if you can’t operate in the building there’s no sense in making an offer, the price is irrelevant. You can’t operate, so the first thing you want to do is an organization is defined, what you need and what the critical elements of your space are that are absolutely necessary in order for you to operate. Then you go out into the marketplace and see what’s available that meet those criteria, okay, since the first thing that people think of and clearly not should not be the last thing, but since the first is the square footage, is there a way of determining how much square footage we need? Well, a good rule of thumb that that i use is usually around two hundred square feet per person. Now that rule of thumb is actually coming down a little bit because people are using space much more efficiently. You don’t see everybody getting officers. The cubicles, instead of being eight by six cubicles, are now five by six cubine cubicles so people and sometimes they go to desk space instead of actual cubicles, which makes it a four by four is space for person, so but as a general rule, you’re not going to be wrong. By using two hundred, you’ll have plenty of space now. You may whittle that down to one hundred fifty or hundred seventy five per person because you have to also take into account you have common areas, you have circulation space, you have bathrooms, you have conference rooms, kitchen’s oppcoll that adds into that number, and one of the things that you mentioned is the population that the non-profit might be serving, they may have special needs. They also might be a special population that a building might find that they don’t really want that population for whatever reason, coming through the building during regular hours, something like that of a great example of that. I represented a day school here in manhattan, and they have kids, kindergarten age kids and younger coming in in baby carriages. Most buildings are horrified when i told them they didn’t want that population in there at all, even though they’re not offensive in any way, rather cute at times, but we had to find a building that actually could accommodate them, and it was few and far between the other. They had also another requirement that they needed open space. Try getting open space in manhattan, but that’s a requirement of the law in new york state for a day school? Well, i found them a building with the roof three story building with a wide open roof that they converted into a school yard. So but that’s the type of thing where it was a needle in a haystack, how many buildings would they would allow that, you know, a hundred children into the building and have rooftop space for them? Very unusual, but those of the oppcoll requirements that they had to operate, and unless they had them, they couldn’t go into the building. Makes no sense, as you said, makes no sense to explore space that doesn’t meet your basic right basic needs. I think lawyers would be another undesirable population if you had a lot of lawyers on your staff that that could be good work against you as a potential tenants, you know, you can be helpful. Sometimes lawyers. Lawyers are always safe target. Especially when you’re arrested. You can almost never get in trouble making fun of lawyers i’ve learned onstage. Okay, so so now that you’ve got your you got your needs defined? Yes, but of course, lawyers could be enormously helpful. Like you and robert smith are today. Even defined your needs. Now you go out and look for it, right? Yes. Ok. How do you find the spaces? The spaces and the buildings that meet your needs? Well, what typically happens is if i mean an executive director of an organization, they’ll say, well, we need fifteen thousand square feet and i said, well, how do you know that? Well, i i know it’s. Fifteen thousand square feet. You know, let’s, go look at some spaces and that’s. The first reaction. They people want to get a visceral reaction. They want to see that you want to see and touch stuff. You know, before you start going into the numbers about do you really need that money? Square feet? And what is what kind of air conditioning are you looking for? How? You operating? No one’s interested in the details in the beginning, i want to get out. They wantto look, they want to walk around, they want to get out of the office. They want to see stuff and it actually serves a purpose even though it’s, in some sense, is a waste of time because they don’t know what they want, you know, you know, while you look at things, if you don’t know what you really want but it does serve a purpose in the sense that they get a sense of the type of space they like. They like loft space. They like normal office space with drop ceilings, you know, dark space, sometimes companies like dark space because they’re using computers all the time. I went into a space that these wonderful window line there, all the shades were drawn and why? Because they’re computer programmers, the light was anathema to him, so but people want to go see and they want to get a feel for the space. And once you go through that, you do learn a lot. You find out what they like, what they don’t like. What type of lobbies air good you. Know buy-in various factors that are they could not articulate that they are they they do articulate in their expression when they see something ok, and for me, that’s a hugely valuable amount of information that i get and then i go back and sit down with them and say, what do you really need? And then at that point, we can really refine our search. Now we have in a sense of the type of building they want, the amount of light they like neighborhood can also be important neighborhood, and that doesn’t only apply in new york, new york city, but what part of the city you want to be in could be very important where your employees coming from, where the people you’re serving, coming from right neighborhood yep, neighborhoods a big factor, and especially to when you’re negotiating rents because some neighborhoods and more expensive than others. So tenants well, you know, may want to stay in the area there in that they’ve been in and fifty years, but that area now is the most expensive area in the city, and they can’t afford to stay in that, so now they really are forced to look. At other areas, and it also helps in the negotiation. You want an alternative, you get noel turner that you’re willing to go to in a less expensive area. That’s big leverage to use against your current landlord. Okay, so how do we then get to the state where we start making offers so that we can get these bonified alternatives? Tio tio use in our negotiation with where we are? Well, so we’ve looked at a bunch of spaces. We make sure that they meet the technical requirements of the tenant of the organization latto we then look at the financial aspects of the of of each transaction because at the end of the day, it’s the money decision. That is the last decision that is made. So you have five or six spaces that work on a technical level. You you can either do one of two ways you can make offers to each landlord, including your own. Or you can ask for you, khun send each owner and or if pia request for proposal and have them making offer to you. Okay, that’s interesting, but that probably only applies to organizations that might be looking for a certain minimum spacer. If you’re just looking for a couple of thousand square feet, the odds of you successfully delivering a request for proposals to her landlord are pretty slim. Well, you could deliver them, but the odds of getting a response quite slim. There’s a couple of factors that go into that one is how much space if you’re taking two hundred thousand square feet perfectly every every landlord wants you, they’ll stand on their heads. The answer on our fifty okay in a soft market, you can also even if you’re a small, our tenant, you can also ask for nora pee in a tight market. Unlikely you have to make offers. You have to get the landlord’s attention when you say smaller let’s say smaller in what is a soft market in a lot of places now would that include, like, say, ten to fifteen thousand square? Yeah, i would say that’s anything under ten, you would probably make an offer, but ten and over you, khun certainly it’s not embarrassing. Tio have ah, haven’t landlord respond to a north pick and then so that our f p lays out what your requirements are and how the and then it’s, just the reverse of an offer to offer your putting it. I’ll pay you twenty dollars a square foot and rent in the r p you’re saying, what will the rent be for all of the things we’re requesting, you know, ten thousand square feet on the fourth floor, you know, in the southwest quadrant of the building, you specify exactly what you want and the landlord rules respond to that. Okay, so i think this is a good point, whether we’re whether we’re doing the r f p or whether we’re making an offer, talk about some of these other variables that you can you can work with besides trying to negotiate the rent falik build outs is one, but there are a lot of what we call in the profession concessions so one is the landlord will build the space or the land will give you fifty dollars a square foot for you to build a space. They’ll give you free rent free rent, not just two, build a space, but after the space is built and you’re in the space and that free rent offsets your your expense expenses for architects from moving things. Like that because you could negotiate the period of free rein. How many months that’s going to last? Okay, there’s. A myriad of clauses in annalise, which i’m sure you’ll get to later. But you know, the electric claws can be done in a variety of ways. There are escalations that could be they could be measured. Okay jargon jail what’s an escalation. The landlord in the least, always has some sort of escalation factor that corresponds to the cost of operating the building. So, as the building operating expenses go up over time, the increase is usually passed on to the tenants. Okay, but we can negotiate whether it is. And so now it’s, the measuring how it’s measured. So they’re actually formulas then is that right there? Numerous formulas. Ok, ok. What is the mother? Let’s? Not go into the formulas? That’s. Mathematics. What are some of the other variables that we can be negotiating around? This is interesting. Well, there’s, a lot of you know, the certainly the rent is the major one who has the major impact. But electric escalations t eyes. Which is the construction? How? The construction was a stand for lieutenant installation ten. Installation building how the space is delivered. Is it delivered raw? Is it delivered? Partially finished? Is it delivered with bathrooms with air conditioning? All those things have to be negotiated. Really? So? So space doesn’t automatically come with bathrooms and cerini not necessarily necessarily. Okay. Interesting. Okay. And then if you have specific requirements that need to be built in, you have a vault that you want because you are you’re a lad. And you want plumbing for your sinks that also can be negotiated into the into the rent if acquired. Okay, we have just a couple minutes left. Let’s. Talk about working with a broker, a real estate broker and creating incentives for that person to work for you. First of all, who does a broker work for the law is that whoever pays you is the principal. And whoever receives the peyton payment is the agent. So the broker gets paid by the landlord. Okay, traditional that maybe something that now is that only makes bro hold on sec. Look that guy’s taking over the show. Does that make a thie the so i think people are not familiar with that. So a broker, who’s who’s. Spending time with you looking at space, they’re actually getting paid by the landlord or the owner of the building it’s like you if you’re buying a house that’s the same thing nice lady shows you the house ingratiates herself with you and makes you know you’re her best friend now she’s representing the seller it’s the same with the broker unless you hyre that broker to be your agent. And if you hire the that broker, you have a piece of paper that says, george grace is my exclusive broker, he represents us his fiduciary responsibilities does to us even though he’s getting paid by a third party. The law is that if you have a written document, it negates that the common law of principle agency okay, based on so we’re no longer than looking at who pays the broker. We’ve been looking at that piece of paper exactly, okay? And is that something that that non-profits looking for space should have it’s interesting non-profits are the more progressive groups? They because they want they want clarity, they want transparency, and they want incentives aligned with theirs better than even for-profit they tend to want tohave these relationships. And want them in writing and want their understanding. So it’s, clear to the executive director, is clear to the board so that they are getting the best information for them, for them to make the best decision. Okay, so they’re getting good information, and they could make a decision, property rights, that’s, something that non-profits should should look for and to ok, we have to stop there. George graces principle of g grace and company founded in nineteen ninety eight, this is our first segment of learning office, least lessons. George pleasure to have you on the show, thank you very much. Thank you for inviting me my pleasure. Stay with us after the break, it’s, tony’s, take two, and then we’ll continue learning office lease lessons with robert j smith and kate piela. Stay with me. You’re listening to the talking alternative network. Are you feeling overwhelmed in the current chaos of our changing times? A deeper understanding of authentic astrology can uncover solutions in every area of life. After all, metaphysics is just quantum physics politically expressed. I am montgomery taylor, and i offer lectures, seminars and private consultations. For more information, contact me at monte m o nt y at r l j media. Dot com are you concerned about the future of your business for career? Would you like it all to just be better? Well, the way to do that is to better communication, and the best way to do that is training from the team at improving communications. This is larry sharp, host of the ivory tower radio program and director at improving communications. Does your office needs better leadership, customer service sales, or maybe better writing, are speaking skills. Could they be better at dealing with confrontation conflicts, touchy subjects all are covered here at improving communications. If you’re in the new york city area, stop by one of our public classes, or get your human resource is in touch with us. The website is improving communications, dot com, that’s, improving communications, dot com, improve your professional environment, be more effective, be happier, and make more money improving communications. That’s. The answer. Hey, all you crazy listeners looking to boost your business? Why not advertise on talking alternative with very reasonable rates? Interested simply email at info at talking alternative dot com welcome back time for tony’s, take two at roughly thirty two minutes after the hour little about my block this week. There’s a standup comedy video of mine from july i did a show at gotham comedy club on west twenty third street in manhattan in a couple months ago, and that video is on my block. E, m p g a d v dot com also want to remind you that we are media partners for the next-gen charity conference that’s on november seventeenth and eighteenth here in new york at the tribeca performing arts center. Some of the speakers are craig newmark, the founder of craigslist and craigconnects duitz and he’s been a guest on this show, rabbi shmuley boteach, america’s rabbi and also charles best, the leader of donors choose dot org’s that’s, just two of about fifteen or seventeen speakers that they have throughout the day on november seventeenth. And then there are other sessions on november eighteenth. I’ll be there interviewing speakers as they come off stage, and you’ll hear those interviews on the show afterwards. So the conferences november seventeenth and eighteenth. You can get information and get your tickets at next-gen charity dot. Com and that is tony’s take two for friday, september sixteenth. With me now is robert smith. Robert is a no attorney. Opened his law practice in nineteen ninety three. He has represented renters, buyers and sellers of commercial and residential properties. He’s, also an experienced real estate and commercial litigator with me, also is kate piela. Kate is executive director of dance new amsterdam, a contemporary dance organization in new york city. Kate robert welcome. Hi, tony. Welcome. Thank you. Thanks for having a pleasure to have you were continuing learning office. Least lessons. Now, robert has reviewed dancing or amsterdam’s. Lise and robert. There was something that you want to talk about in terms of when rent starts and we’re going to get to that shortly. Let’s. Just start a little bit with the least history. Maybe kate, if you wantto just a little bit about how this least came about. Well, initially dance new amsterdam was dance space center, and it was up uptown a little bit on broadway for fifty one broadway. And they needed a new lease because they’re at least was running out on the new place and they were invited down. Tto help! Participate in the revitalization of lower manhattan after nine eleven, and so that was the initial sort of of research that was going into this in the city was open to bringing non-profits and cultural organizations to help the revitalization and dna they they re branded, changed their name to dance new amsterdam for the air they were moving into. And we’re the first cultural organization to risk the move down into do you know, in the aftermath of what was going on down in lower manhattan? Okay, okay. And and they were moving into a public space? Yeah. Publicly owned building in that it is a city owned building it’s a sun building. And we’re going to talk a little about that because that has implications for for lease negotiations. So turning robert to you, one of the things you want to mention was in terms of when rent starts to be paid. What? What is what is the least say? And what can we learn from that? This goes actually duck tales with some of the things that george was talking about earlier when he mentioned that one of the things that can be discussed are either rent. Concessions or on allowance for a period of time that would permit the tenant too, do negotiations or renovations of the space. And while that was going on to have a forbearance of rancid, basically not be able to pay rent while that’s happening. So it’s essentially they take the space, they sign the lease. And then there was a period of free rent. And during that period of time, during that period of time, the tenant is doing the work too customised the space to build it out. And that is one of the things was happening here, the actually it seemed like and when i looked at the police and i know you mentioned this to you when you and i first discussed this, that it seems like a generous period of time that was given to dna for its buildout, they got sixteen months of free rent. Okay, that does sound like quite a long time. You’re in four months, right? Does butt thie issues that dna was facing at the beginning of its terms. I meant that as it turns out, it wasn’t long enough on. And i think that the importance one of the important lessons is to try to build in as much flexibility in terms of time to tie it in rather to an event to say ok, when we are done with our construction, part of which is coming from city funding. Okay. And here you have a city owned building also by that in rather than a specific period of time. So so you were in this public building. And this is where some of the implications of being in a publicly owned a city owned building are on dh. You had to get permits right on dh permission for the build outs. And that took a lot of time. Well, money renovate. Every organization has to get permits to build out. There was just some walls that we hit with the entrance because there’s so many students coming in the entrance to the building initially was a public public entrance to department of buildings on to eighty broadway. We ended up having to find another entrance in the building, which meant we had to expand theory, jinnah ll amount of space and redesign the the plan. Okay, so this all added to the time exactly and then getting new permits. Because you have to do it on the original design and then there i mean, there’s, yeah, there’s permitting, right and there’s always going to be something unanticipated in build outs and sounds like yours was extreme having to find a new entrance. And so robert that’s your point about trying not to negotiate a finite time? Because as it turns out, even sixteen months wasn’t enough time. It’s true. And i think that any time that you’re talking about build outs and as kate mentioned, when you have permits, anybody has to get permits when they’re making changes when they’re doing building the department of buildings is particularly overworked and overburdened, and they get tremendous number of requests and things that they have to look at. So, you know, you need to have an expediter you need to get things through it’s a time consuming process added to that is that for dna, their funding was also public funding. So i think any time that you have the city involved in multiple layers of a transaction, you have multiple opportunities for delay, even more than you would with other parties. What was that? What was the nature of that? Public funding city agency’s funding dancing came through numerous public and private, but we got it through the elected officials through h hud laura manhattan development corporation. So if you look at all these layers of public funding, there’s rules and regulations and reports that have to be followed procedures and reports filed and followed to get thes and this is adds to delay possibilities now, robert what’s the likelihood that, ah, landlord is going to agree to flexibility in terms of when the least payment start different circumstances will lead to different results in this particular instance. Great lawyer answer. Love that. No problem. We do what we can in in this particular instance, we had a situation where the space that dna was coming into had been vacant for many years. I think it was about ten years from what? What kate had mentioned. So you had a tenant coming in that had a better bargaining position than it might if it was coming into space that had been used for a period of time. Or if there was a lot of competition from other entities that were looking to move in here, dna is the only game. In town, they wanted to move into this space, the landlord in this case, the city or there was another entity that was in between the city and dna that was technically a tenant in subtenant situation, so dna had a lot of leverage, and i think given that it was in a better position to dictate some of the terms to the landlord, including the term about look, when we are going to start paying rent, when we’re going to be ready to start paying rent, if they didn’t have all of that advantage, i don’t think they would have been in as good a position and, you know, often that’s the case, and i think that’s again, going into some of things george was talking. There is the caveat to add to this whenever anybody gets public funding the use of that funds to rebuild or to renovate, or whatever you do with it is the life of the bond because you get bonds to get public funding, that government gets a bond to get the money, and they give it away to nonprofit organizations, and there was, and that agreement has between a b between the landlord. And the city, because it’s public funding in the agency that’s giving the funding. And so i think this points back to again public funding, publicly owned building and a commercial landlord in between, as with this whole process, so that complicated things, but it also makes it a little odd sometimes in trying to understand these covenants of what is the life of the bond and these sort of things, because things can be manipulated much easier within a system now, my correct you were you were going to be subletting this space. Is that right? Okay. And that robert, that has some implications, right? Because now we’re talking about we’re dealing with the tenant who has the lease, and not directly with the building owner that’s, true and again, that follows up on some of the things that george was talking about in terms of what the incentives are and what the considerations are it’s more of a concern, too, the overland lord, the owner of the building, and in this case that was the city of new york and ah so it’s more of a concern to that anthony than it is here to the the tenants so to speak, because this was a ten and subtenant situation. So they didn’t have the same direct level of incentive that the city did, but again, because the city owned the building. I think that was a consideration that had to be brought into play here. And i don’t really think it was as much as it might have at the time that the lease was initially discussed. Okay, we’re gonna take a break talking with kate piela and robert smith, continuing our discussion about learning ofthis least lessons to stay with us. Talking alternative radio twenty four hours a day. Are you stuck in your business or career trying to take your business to the next level, and it keeps hitting a wall? This is sam liebowitz, the conscious consultant. I will help you get to the root cause of your abundance issues and help move you forward in your life. Call me now and let’s. Create the future you dream of. Two, one, two, seven, two, one, eight, one, eight, three, that’s to one to seven to one, eight one eight three. The conscious consultant helping hunters. People be better business people. This is tony martignetti aptly named host of tony martignetti non-profit radio big non-profit ideas for the other ninety five percent technology fund-raising compliance, social media, small and medium non-profits have needs in all these areas. My guests are expert in all these areas and mohr. Tony martignetti non-profit radio friday’s one to two eastern on talking alternative broadcasting do you want to enhance your company’s web presence with an eye catching and unique website design? Would you like to incorporate professional video marketing a mobile marketing into your organization’s marketing campaign? Mission one on one media offers a unique marketing experience that will set you apart from your competitors, magnify your brand exposure and enhance your current marketing efforts. Their services include video production and editing, web design, graphic design photography, social media management and now introducing mobile marketing. Their motto is. We do whatever it takes to make our clients happy. Contact them today. Admission one one media dot com talking. Zoho welcome back to the show and your aptly named host, robert. We’re talking about some of the other variables that can be negotiated, whether by dancing the amsterdam or gender, generally besides just square footage and rent. What are some of the other variables that tenant khun b negotiating around? A lot of them revolve around liability issues? I think that in a number of instances, landlords will put provisions and leases that essentially try to passed through all liability to tenants. So as a for instance, always insisting the tenants have insurance and, you know, saying that if there is a requirement, for instance, and we discussed that if there are construction items that the landlord is required to undertake, either for reasons of statutory changes or insurance requirements, for instance, they have to put in sprinklers, they need compliance with the americans with disabilities act. There may be construction that goes with that, and the landlord is going to try to pass that through to the tenants to make the tenant liable to basically pay for the chillies. So so changes to the building structure can be passed through to the tenant. Even the tenants only will be there for five or ten years and but still, that could be a requirement in the least yes, and and i and i think that’s the kind of thing that again, at the beginning, you have to be able to step forward and say, no, this is something that you’re doing is a landlord and it’s for your benefit, and you’re required to do it. We don’t want to have to pay for that, okay, i see you nodding way actually act somewhat as a landlord of our own space. So if the h vac system breaks down that’s our responsibility to fix anything within our space, if something goes wrong, we have to manage it. The elevator is a different story, but that’s the one thing so he’s, right? You’re talking terms in your lease? Not not because you’re leasing, not because you’re subletting space to others, but within your linden our lease. You’re responsible for those things. Yeah. Okay. Now, robert what’s the likelihood that a that a building owner is goingto negotiate some of that away, you know, again, it goes back to the circumstances. And here, i think where you had a tenant with leverage coming. In you may again be in a better position at that point. The landlord is going to say, this is a benefit for everyone in the building. It’s not just, you know, for me as a landlord, yes, i’m being required to do it, but that means that your subject to that as well tenant and so i want you to take that on. So i think that’s a rough go in a lot of instances for attendant to be able to assert that. But i do think that it’s a point of negotiation and again depending upon the relative position of the parties is relative, you know, strength of their of their posture overall. That’s going to determine how likely a landlord is to give in on something like that, okay? And any one of these things that were talking about they all get put into the mix so that if you don’t don’t succeed in one variable, you might use that is okay. Well, if you’re not goingto relent on the past throughs of the required construction, then give us a break on this other thing, right? So what? What might be one of the other things sometimes. It’s insurance requirements insurance what’ll happen is that a landlord is gonna want tended to have ah, a certain amount of insurance to cover liability for property damage for personal injury damage. And it’s not always a reciprocal thing. And what i mean by that is that what happens if there’s damage in a space that’s caused by the landlords negligence with landlord is going to want to have the tenant essentially even take responsibility for that and try to absolve themselves of responsibility? Sometimes the landlord will say, any lie about any recovery that you can have can only be from us in our interest in this building. Normally a landlord’s interest in the building is going to be minimal. Okay? So now so they’re trying to limit their liability to their financial interests or their financial stake in the building. Well, correct, how does that? What does that mean? Well, what it means is that jargon, general jargon, prison state i don’t even know what that what were we talking about? You know, just you know, you’re not understanding tony that’s. Essentially what it means is that if if there is liability that could be assessed against the landlord and, you know, let’s say it’s a million dollars worth of liability, the landlord may only have a really ownership interest in the building that’s minimal because it has a mortgage, for instance, okay? And if it has a mortgage, then it doesn’t really have equity in the building, and it doesn’t have assets anywhere else. You as attendant want to be in a position to tell the landlord if something like that happens, we want to be insured as well. We want to be covered for a situation like that. We want you to have at least the same measure of insurance coverage that you’re insisting that we have on that space. Okay, so that’s, something that you can negotiate because otherwise and landlord, does something wrong? You go after the landlord? The landlord said, sorry, i don’t even have five cents to pay toward this. Good luck and, you know, you are essentially out of luck, and then you have to. Okay, did you have any insurance related issues around this lease? Well, it’s interesting because we’re in a building with multiple tenants and above us is the department of buildings and we just went through kind. Of a new issue of you’re laughing but it’s it’s fast, sadie it’s a laugh of pain. It is fifth floor had a leak in a pipe which came all the way down and pulled into our fourth floor. We’re on the second floor, so but it came all the way through the walls. We found the leak, but then it pulled at dna and then went down in dim o’dell’s. And then it started out that we were liable for that. But then when we did the research which we become responsible for its very interesting who’s responsible it’s like the last place that it came down it’s. Like what? We don’t care you it came from above. So then we have to do the research and go. But it came from you guys and they said, well, now you have to prove it it’s fascinating these how people passed things off and you have to be very careful and conscientious and it’s, time consuming and there’s damn dancing after them. Two vs models down below. Imagine they have quite a legal legal contingency contingent. They have a model lawyers. You have a mob of dancers and and young. People learning dance, and they’re not that dangerous. But the interesting thing, too, is that when you, when you see the leases that are produced, they’re probably going to be about seventy or seventy five pages long, there’s a lot that goes into them and there’s a lot that has to be reviewed and there’s a lot that can be missed and passed over. So it is imperative that from the first moment, when that least comes in, that every word in line is examined because every one of them could contain some type of klaus that’s going to imperil that tenant at some point in time, so it really requires diligence and vigilance to go through every every piece of it. Okay to that point, i think you really need to be intimately involved in a sense, with the process as the executive director and the board, because there are also paragraphs when i first because i didn’t sign this lease, i was i inherited all of this when i went through the least, i’ve found like paragraphs, which neutralised other paragraphs, which seemed to protect the organization, which i found really interesting dancing after them have ah, lise. Leasing specialist on attorney advising them, do you know i know you weren’t you weren’t running, we did and, you know, it’s a very complicated thing because we have thie over lise, and then the lease and deadlines to get the funding and deadlines to move into a new space and this whole really camaraderie about revitalisation of lower manhattan. So i think all of that sort of thing really like i can put the fear of god in a sense or the universe into some, you know, a group it’s like my head if we don’t do it right now and we don’t sign, we won’t get the money, and then we won’t have a life and, you know, it’s something that has to be taken very slowly and being very involved as an end, both lawyers have said, right and more rationally, maybe then some of the emotion that that could be could be swept up into it. Yeah, but yeah, exactly. But i think that this was a difficult time. It was very emotional for everyone. We have just about a minute left, robert there’s, something i want to talk about in terms of it. Not not. Not being even an obligation of an owner to provide water and electricity just in a minute left. Can you explain that and what we need to look out for? Well, sometimes there is, ah, clause that landlords will put in that says that they don’t even they’re not obligated to provide certain what you would consider to be basic services, and normally they do provide those services, but there may be times where, for some reason they’re interrupted and at that point, the landlord of saying, well, you know, sorry, we don’t have an obligation to provide it for you. And again, that’s one of those things where you say look, we can’t function if those things aren’t provided, your obligation is to provide certain basic services for us. You have to guarantee that you can’t tell us that you don’t have an obligation to do that. So that is something that has to be discussed right off the bat. It seems like it’s something that should be automatic. It’s not yeah, water, electricity, right lutely, we have to leave it there. Robert j smith opened his law practice in nineteen ninety three representing renters, buyers and sellers of commercial and residential properties. Robert, thank you very much for being on the show. Thanks for having me, tony appreciate pleasure. And kate piela is exactly the director of dance new amsterdam contemporary dance organization in new york city. Kate really? Thank you very much for sharing dnas sort of woeful story about about the least at least. Yeah, thank you very much. Well, thank you for having me. Pleasure. Thanks for sharing that story. And i want to thank your publicist, amber, for recommending the the idea of the show. This whole show was really pitch to me by ember, and i like the idea. I hope that you will be with me next week, when we will be talking about prospect research on women donors. The last of my interviews from fund-raising day two thousand eleven, samantha cohen, from the american civil liberties union will be with me to talk about finding information about women that is valuable but often hidden. And the second half of the show next week learning lobbying limits or legal contributors from san francisco, jean takagi and emily chan explain the limitations on lobbying for charities. We all know charities aren’t supposed to. Lobby. But what activities? Constant constitutent lobbying? Can you have a petition? Can you say things that events or in personal face to face meetings? What can’t you say they’ll break all these lobbying limitations down for us? You can keep up with what’s coming up on the show. Sign up for our email alerts on our facebook page, obviously, facebook dot com and then the name of this show did you like today’s show, please like us on the facebook page? You’ve been listening live, but you can also listen. Archive itunes you can subscribe listen on the device of your choice at any time, you’ll find us on itunes at non-profit radio dot net on twitter you can follow me i hope you were with us today. The hashtag is non-profit radio or you can follow me personally and i’m tweeting often about philanthropy and the show as well, and use that hashtag non-profit radio use it recklessly. The creative producer of tony martignetti non-profit radio is claire meyerhoff, our line producer and the owner of talking alternative broadcasting is sam liebowitz. Social media is by regina walton of organic social media. Regina has arrived back in the san francisco area. After driving cross country from new york, we miss you already, but fortunately, you’re going to stay with the show. This is tony martignetti, tony martignetti non-profit radio hope you’ll be with me next friday, one to two p m eastern on talking alternative broadcasting, always at talking alternative dot com. I think that’s a good ending. 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My Stand-Up Comedy, So Far

On July 20th I did a stand-up comedy set as part of a new talent show at Gotham Comedy Club in New York City. The video is below.

I’m already booked for two lunch keynotes with renowned acronym associations–ADO and PPGGNY–later this year, and in January. I’ll intermingle comedy and sound advice on relationship building for fundraising.

If you’re part of an organization or office that uses acronyms unashamedly and your audience would enjoy a funny and insightful keynote, let’s talk using words.