Category Archives: Fundraising Fundamentals

Skip Wealth Screening For Planned Giving

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photo credit: quinn.anya via photopin cc

I consistently preach this to clients and audiences: small-and mid-size nonprofits need not spend money on wealth screening to find potential Planned Giving donors. You have all the data you need in your fundraising or CRM database.

Query your data for age and giving consistency and you’ll find your best Planned Giving prospects.

If you don’t have age info, consistency alone will work if you’ve been around for many years. Lots of my clients go back many decades, sometimes into the late 1800’s. But 20th century roots will be fine for you to rely on giving consistency as a proxy for age.

If a donor has been giving for 30 years, for instance, they’re probably in the age range you’re after.

If you don’t have giving data going back far enough to extrapolate age, then before you pay for an age overlay from a screening service consider this. Can you survey your donors with a reply card in your next mailing? If you don’t want to ask for date of birth, ask for age. It’s worth considering before you make the plunge into age screening.

An important word about giving consistency. Ignore gift size.

I literally mean if a donor has given you just $5 a year, and they’ve done it for 18 years out of the past 20, or 25 years out of the past 30, then they are an outstanding prospect for a charitable bequest, which is a gift to you in their will. (I said a lot about starting your PG program with bequests in this series for GuideStar.)

The students at Fairleigh Dickinson University’s Center for Excellence heard me say this just last week.

Age and giving consistency. That’s all you need to get started in Planned Giving.

Large shops will want to move beyond bequests, so they may wisely invest in wealth screening further down the road. But it’s not needed at the outset.

Small- and mid-size nonprofits can have very respectable PG programs that start and stop with gifts by will.

To launch any program–big or small–you can skip wealth screening.

Nonprofit Radio for March 14, 2014: Successful Software Selection Strategy & Storify and Quora

Big Nonprofit Ideas for the Other 95%

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My Guests:

Don Fornes: Successful Software Selection Strategy

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Don Fornes

Don Fornes, CEO of Software Advice, leads us through the software selection process for nonprofits. 

 

 

 

 

Amy Sample Ward: Storify and Quora

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Amy Sample Ward

Our social media contributor, Amy Sample Ward, is CEO of Nonprofit Technology Network (NTEN). We’ll talk about the value of Storify and Quora, two lesser-known social networks, for your nonprofit. 

This is an archive show from June 14, 2013, while I’m at the Nonprofit Technology Conference (NTC) getting great interviews.

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Hello and welcome to tony martignetti non-profit radio. Big non-profit ideas for the other ninety five percent. I am not your aptly named host. I’m sam liebowitz, the show’s producer. Tony is at the non-profit technology conference in washington, d c interviewing lots of smart, amazing guests. This week show is from the non-profit radio archive. It originally aired on june fourteenth of twenty thirteen old music, but terrific guests, and here you go. Hello and welcome to tony martignetti non-profit radio big non-profit ideas for the other ninety five percent. I’m your aptly named host. Oh, i hope you were with me last week. I’d stuff. I’d suffer stick a myth eah, if i heard that you had missed maria’s faa cues maria simple, the prospect finder and our monthly prospect research contributor there’s a lot of speaking and training, we talked about what she’s frequently asked, and artists sally west and keith, right? We’re with me from australia tell us about the love is campaign this week successful software selection strategy don fornes, ceo of software advice, leads us through the software selection process for non-profits how do you know when yours isn’t working quite right? Also, storify and cora, our social media contributor amy sample ward i got a promotion at the non-profit technology network and ten after that, we’ll talk about the value of storify and cora to lesser known social networks for your non-profit between the guests on tony’s take to my block this week is a charity did what charities do? Beth israel medical centers fund-raising became public in the new york times. Is there anything they should? Be ashamed of my great pleasure now to welcome don forged to the show, he started software advice in two thousand five. After ten year career in the software industry, he held positions at an investment firm and as a corporate development executive at a pioneering c r m software company. He likes to observe the evolution of software markets, including the impact of innovation. Don fornes, pleasure to welcome you to the show. Thanks, tony, glad to be here. Thank you, don. What are some symptoms that, eh, small and midsize non-profits current system, whether it’s software based or however it’s based aren’t, isn’t working very well. And a lot of the non profit organizations that we speak to our on the smaller end of the scale, and they’re managing things through excel spreadsheets, maybe they have ah, ah website that was coded by, you know, employer volunteers with few they’re using microsoft outlook and trying to find emails and information in there. There isn’t a professional infrastructure for managing their operations, and that can lead to what errors in in data, what other kinds of problems certainly errors on data but difficulty finding the information that they need inability to could manage an effective workflow and no what’s going on and making sure things are getting done, having insight into you know who are their, what, not just who is donating, but what what segment of constituent is donating and being able to discover things about their their organization if you’re using excel spreadsheets than there might be different versions of that floating around your office? Yeah, that’s, that’s one of the big issues with spreadsheets now excel is an outstanding tool and that’s why so many organizations use it but you do have that version control issue, and you have just a lot of opportunity. For errors in your formulas and things like that. So you get to a certain scale when spreadsheets won’t cut it anymore. Also in pulling out like donorsearch formacion you alluded to this, you know, you want to be ableto to segment, right? So that you can target people with a specific a specific approach. Sure, you’ve got you’ve got constituents who are big donors, small donors, everything in between, you’ve got constituents or e-giving for different reasons. So you really do it want to develop a marketing strategy that that identifies your various segments, and and you want to work with them in a each each segment in a unique way that appeals to you to their motivations and just expect forces, right? Thank you, and just extracting data. I mean, you should be ableto query your your database system in lots of different with lots of different variables. Yeah, there’s so many exciting things going on in terms of analytics these days that the ability to not just automate the transactions, that is, you know, that the donations or tracking contact information or interactions, but then to be able to go back and do discovery on that information. Or quickly generated report. Um, that type of analysis is so valuable and it’s getting easier. But it’s. Not as easy if you don’t have a good infrastructure in place, capturing that data in the first place. Yeah, you can’t really be. You can’t be very sophisticated. What is the different types of software that might be out there that we’re gonna be talking about helping people select? Well, you know what? The court, the nonprofit organization needs to account financially differently than a for-profit organization. So now there is funding counting, which is a critical infrastructure, but then in terms of really growing out business, getting beyond the administration, too, more strategic, how you’re going to raise money and activate your constituents, you’ve got a range of different applications, and so you’ve got donorsearch which will help you track who are your best donors or who could be your best donorsearch or maybe a more high volume campaign of how do you get a lot of small donations from a very broad set of targets? And then if it’s a membership based organization, you’ve got member management? I’m not saying that you’re providing some kind of value to that membership, trying to track who they are and who’s paid their dues and what you can do for them and what their interests are. You have case management where you have tell your client based organization where you have clients, that you’re taking care of her, helping, um, you’ve got volunteermatch management where you’re you’ve got a large force of volunteers and you want to keep them organized. Get the most out of that enthusiasm. Um, those are those are four examples of very pacific applications. And of course, the structure of the nonprofit organization will determine what they need. In that case, there are larger, broader, more sophisticated systems that integrate these capabilities. But whether or not you go to that level of technology investment, that’s, that’s a really important question an organization needs to ask itself. What about event planning? Sure, event planning is another application i didn’t name, but if you do a lot of events, you need to track registration, you need to track payments for those events and and all the tasks that come along with putting on a great event. So that’s another application that could be part of ah abroad integrated sweet or could be purchased on a standalone basis on dh. Then, of course, for non-profits that get a lot of their revenue, or even maybe just some of their revenue from from grants. There’s always grant administration and management too. There is on both sides of that relationship for the foundation organization that might be giving that grant as well as the non-profit that’s receiving that grant. So there’s there’s software to automate that as well. I think it’s, you know, moving to another topic, which is, you know what you actually need. Three organization needs, too, sit down and think about what are our real pain points, why’re, we where are we falling short, so not just not just thinking in terms of, gee, that technology is very shiny and cool, i’d love to use that, but where are we experiencing the most pain right now? Is keeping track of who are donors are who might be a donor? Or is it really organizing our volunteers to get the most out of them? Napor, you know, is that we have a difficult time organizing and managing the current process. If you have an outstanding grantwriting er, and you’re only applying for a few grantspace year, maybe you don’t need to automate that. And as we’re on we, i know you have five different tips that we’re going to talk through. But and your got into one of them. Thank you. As you’re identifying what your real problem is, is it? Is it possible to? I think it is, but i want to make sure to get a software solution that’s going to solve that problem, but then also have add on sort of modules that would do other things as the organization’s needs change. Sure, so there’s, there are a range of solutions, starting from what we referred to his best of breed. So let’s, say, an application that just does donorsearch. Monisha and they do that very well, and they have a lot of features for doner management. They go deep into that functionality, and then they’re on the other end of the scale are integrated systems that do donorsearch management, member management, case, management, event management, the whole range of applications. We call that an integrated suite, and, you know, in theory, maybe there are broader than they are deep, although in some cases they’re both broad and deep. So you you have to figure out where you want to fall on that scale. Obviously, the the best of breed solution can target a specific pain point you’re having it can typically be implemented mohr quickly you have fewer people using it, fewer people involved in the implementation and you just go in, you tackle that problem with that specific, best to breed solution. When you’re talking about integrated system, you’re getting the whole organization mobilized. Teo moved to this new system you’re thinking about how do your various departments work together? The folks that are working with donors, the folks that are working the volunteers, folks, they’re working with clients and they’re all moving to this new system. It can be somewhat of a big bang approach and requires a lot more change management, and there may be benefits down the road to have him everyone working off one seamless infrastructure sharing data and processes. But getting there is a big investment and the big challenge for the organization. We have to take a break for a couple minutes done, and when we come back, we’ll keep talking a little about the what we’re on now, there’s different. The implementation and also your tips for identifying what the what the right solution should be. So i hope everybody stays with us. They didn’t think dick tooting getting dink, dink, dink, dink. You’re listening to the talking, alternate network waiting to get in. Nothing. Cubine do you need a business plan that can guide your company’s growth seven and seven will help bring the changes you need. Wear small business consultants and we pay attention to the details. You may miss our culture and consultant services a guaranteed to lead toe, right groat for your business, call us at nine one seven eight three three four eight six zero foreign, no obligation free consultation. Check out our website of ww dot covenant seven dot com. 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 countries. People be better business people. Dahna you’re listening to the talking alternative network. Welcome back to big non-profit ideas for the other ninety five percent talking to don fornes he’s, ceo of software advice, which you’ll find at software advice. Dot com done so i’m talking about this implementation. It is possible than tio by these things in modules. Just just what you need immediately. And then there are systems where you can add additional modules. Is that true? I would say that that can’t be true. The modularity of a system really depends on how it was architected buy the software company. So there are some companies that do a very good job of designing their software into modules that can be turned on or off. So that you could say, deploy four of ten modules and then turn more on as ugo. But you can’t take for granted that every system is going to be architected in such a way that makes that easy. Some learn some art and that’s something really begin to is you evaluate the software. Okay. All right. So let’s, let’s, get into your five tips. You you really started with one. You introduced one the type of problem that you’re trying to solve. And your advice. There really sounds like is to start with the problem, not the cool technology. Yeah, i like to say, don’t be romanced by the technology, especially now that we’re into this cloud era and there’s a lot of advances being made and user interface, and than how it looks and feels. This software is just really attractive and great stuff. But make sure you’ve got a need for it. Don’t just go buying technology because it looks full, or because one one person in the organization, maybe tech savvy. There may be an early adopter, but then the rest of the team are, you know, luddite, and we’ll find in the same way that person did. You can. You can get yourself in some trouble where you’ve invested in great technology, but you’re not using it. And i think related to that is that you want to get what’s practical for your office. Sure. So there are there are systems that are fairly lightweight and do just the basics. And sometimes that’s all you need sometimes you don’t need toe over altum e and other times you have a larger, more sophisticated organization. Or one particular department is fairly sophisticated. And you really want some advanced technologies. He’s got to think about what is what is right for your organization and your your department. How do you avoid being romanced? Are seduced by the bells and whistles. That really cool? Um oh, this one. You know, this one does that to we could we could use that to and o it has this other thing. We could use that also. How do you keep your feet on the ground? I think it starts with staying. Ok. We’re talking about a technology purchase here, but let’s, put technology aside for a while. Let’s. Sit down and say, what are our biggest challenges? Where are we? Least efficient. Where do we spend the most amount of time creating the least amount of value? Is it that we have? Everyone has their own set of contacts, you know, maybe each pitch person who’s working with donors. Has their own list of of contacts it’s not shared. And someone leaves in those contacts. Go with, um for example. Okay, now you want to look for some kind of a donor management system that will unify all those contacts to be shared, even if they are assigned to different individuals. So you you want to think about where your biggest pain points are and prioritize what problems you want to solve in what order i like to say start small, think big, grow quickly. So, you know, start small, okay, what? What problems are we going to try himself keeping it in the context of thinking big? Eventually we want to solve almost all of these problems and then moved from there you have success. So i think, really just having a business discussion about the processes and workflows and what’s working and what’s not, and then once you say, ok, this is what we’re going to stall them. This is how we’re going to solve it. Then you go out and you start evaluating the technology and you stay in control of that sales process rather than letting a sales person from the software company show off. The bells and whistles that make them most attractive, you know, you say that’s, great that’s, interesting will take that into consideration, but you always come backto. What are the core problems you’re trying to solve? And how does that technology solve those problems? You talked about funda counting software earlier. What air cem? Some basics around around fundacao n’t ing. And what sort of problems might an organization have if if they’re not doing their accounting efficiently? Sure, i think with with the counting it’s it’s important to get the right infrastructure and processes and controls in place, i said, you need to be automating a process that is it’s. That accounting process is mission critical and has to have very strict controls. You don’t want to ever get into a situation where funds are being misappropriated are or you’re not sure how much cash flow you have going through the organization, so that is an area where you’ve got to get the right system in place. And yet, at the same time, it can be very constraining, because in the counting system has to be rigid and enforce controls. You need to make sure that this software that you’re buying handles the process is the way you want to handle them, or that you are willing to adapt to how that software handles those processes. S so we may have to adapt to what the software requires us to do. Yeah, so some software is more flexible than others in accounting, often it’s a little more rigid compared to, say, a constituent relationship management system. Because, you know, we do have, you know, accounting principles that are standardized that we have two follow-up so you may have to you have to do things the way that software is built to do it. I see in ah, a lot of small shops, it seems like very routine things, like maybe checks being received or accounts payable, being being received, or, ah, you’re sorry, a paid, um, always seem to seem, even though their routine, they seem like each time it’s the first time it’s ever been done. I hope that’s, not the case, for, for all organised games, i think some are more efficient than others. I think it comes down to you know, what is the attitude around payables receivables? And how quickly are you going to do it and who’s doing it? So i think that getting the right software in places key there, there are so many great technologies right now, such as a ch pain with subaru ing of payables receivables in our own organization, we’re doing more and more a ch, which is essentially a wire transfer, but no more scent paper checks, but actually sending the money elektronik, lee and the more modern systems are built to be able to do those kind of transactions. And i’m glad of that. I’m glad you explained what a ch is. Because on this show, i have jargon jail. But you kept yourself out. You kept yourself out of george in jail by quickly saying, basically a ch iso wire transfer. I think it stands for automated clearing house. Do you know? Is that right? That sounds good. Okay, so we’ll take that. Okay? Yeah. Yeah. And i just meant that, uh, all right. Guess i was going back to symptomology a little bit. You know, when i said routine things seemed to get treated as if there is the first time every time, even though it’s it’s done, you know, it doesn’t times a month or something, it always seems. To be a difficult task. So andi. Sorry, go ahead, you’ve got organizations for maybe you have a volunteer bookkeeper, who’s coming in once a week or twice a month or something, and maybe they’re using an application that isn’t designed for fund accounting on dh. Maybe that ridiculous person is, ah fine bookkeeper, but not very tech savvy and so that’s, where you can get into those situations where things were just very slow moving and and no one can really tell whether the check has been cut or not, or received or not. And i think that is symptomatic of the level of sophistication of the organization or they thought, function in the organization. Let’s, go back to your to your tips for, for finding navigating your way through the right software. What, what what’s next on that you recommend. Well, we’ve talked about not being romanced by the technology we’ve talked about some of the different applications, and identifying the problem first and then matching the technology is the solution. I think another interesting thing is its funding technology it’s an interesting area, because there are plenty of people out there who who love technology, who loved sponsoring technology but who love rolling up their sleeves. Of course, there are plenty who don’t, but organizations can identify those constituents who can be very useful as a technology resource. So in technology, there are plenty of people who been very successful financially, so you may find donors who have a background in technology who get excited about funding some kind of technology, purchase and implementation, and at the same time, they can roll up their sleeves and help with advising on selecting that technology, implementing that technology. Then there are folks who fit that description that maybe don’t have the financial resources to contribute, but could contribute their time and skills. So technology is is an area where well, let’s, let’s, go back to that bookkeeper, you know there may be bookkeepers who could volunteer toa do your accounting, but that probably isn’t the same level of passion relative to technology, where the people that are very passionate about what technology can accomplish and would really be motivated to come in and help you, either financially or by rolling up their sleeves. So i think you can be really creative as you think about technology. Maybe not. Just another thing that comes out of the operating budget. But could you do a special campaign around raising money to fund a technology project or forgetting time donated by folks that are tech savvy? Okay, excellent. Yeah. And and as you touch on this, another, another issue and that’s important. And a tip that you have is around the implementation and the training. Sure, so this is along the same theme i’ve been hitting on throughout this conversation, which is they’re really needs to be a process behind the technology, whether that process is something, you see the automaton with the technology or process you switch to because that’s the process that technology automates by default, and so the people that are gonna adopt this technology and use it, you are really critical to its success and can also lead to its failure. So if you by technology and you don’t use it, we refer to that in the industry as shelf where go that as we do surveys of technology users and buyers almost every time what floats to the top is one of the biggest challenges is adoption. How do you get everyone to start using it? If you have, um, your development folks using a donor management system, but they don’t like filling out all the field, you know, maybe they need the email on the phone number, but just don’t want to take the time to put in that physical address. Ah, that may serve their needs, fine, but it’s not going to help the marketing group when they want to do that next direct mail campaign, right? Right. You can get a lot of dirty data and there you need to get those folks bought in early to get the right data and the system and clean data in the system. If they’ve always been more of a relationship person, they don’t want to use technology, maybe they do their work over in lunches or an event you can have this whole system you’ve invested in, people are using it. So i’m i make a suggestion that may seem counterintuitive, which is get those people involved in leading the technology selection and implementation effort. Maybe they’re not the lead on the project, but they’re involved from the start so that they have a sense of ownership and buy-in and really get exposure to what the technology can do from the start. Well, they were probably gonna put one of your more tech savvy people in charge of the project. But you need to get those. Those late adopters are nanites into the process early so that they really you have an epiphany then come to believe in technology. We also need the leadership. It’s it’s gotta be it’s. Gotta be used properly at the senior levels. And it’s got to be encouraged and sort of enforced from the senior levels. Yes, and that would be a challenge if you’re senior management are the late adopters. Yeah, okay, not needed a champion at the most senior levels of the organization. You can say, hey, this is something we’re going to do. The time has come and everybody’s going to get on board, and we’re going to get the right amount of funding. We’re not goingto, you know, we’re not going to be too cheap about this. We’re going to get the right stuff in place, and we’re going to make the changes in how we do things around here, so that we’re really using this software and and automating are our process is the right way. Don’t we have just about a minute left, or so i want to ask you, what is it that you love about the work that you’re doing? You know, i it’s, uh, a little bit nerdy, but i love efficiency. I love getting doing things better and faster and in my own organization, it’s reflected by developing our own technology way rarely even by third party technology. We have a team of developers who build everything from scratch to do exactly what we wanted. It’s led to great efficiency and i think, whether your advanced enough to build your own or whether you’re buying software off the shelf there’s a great sense of momentum and pride that comes from getting better at what you do in getting more efficient and that’s what i love. Don fornes, ceo of software advice. You’ll find them at software advice. Dot com don thank you so much for sharing your expertise. Thanks for having me telling you it’s been my pleasure right now. We go away for a couple of minutes when we returned tony’s take two and then amy sample ward is with me talking about storify and cora. Stay with us talking alternative radio twenty four hours a day. Hi, i’m ostomel role, and i’m sloan wainwright, where the host of the new thursday morning show the music power hour. Eleven a m we’re gonna have fun. Shine the light on all aspects of music and its limitless healing possibilities. We’re gonna invite artists to share their songs and play live will be listening and talking about great music from yesterday to today, so you’re invited to share in our musical cumber er station. Your ears will be delighted with the sound of music and our voices. Join austin and sloan live thursdays at eleven a. M on talking alternative dot com. I’m the aptly named host of tony martignetti non-profit radio. Big non-profit ideas for the other ninety five percent fund-raising board relations, social media, my guests and i cover everything that small and midsize shops struggle with. If you have big dreams and a small budget, you have a home at tony martignetti non-profit radio friday’s wanto to eastern talking alternative dot com. Do you need a business plan that can guide your company’s growth seven and seven will help bring the changes you need. Wear small business consultants, and we pay attention to the details. You may miss. Our coaching and consultant services are guaranteed to lead toe right groat. For your business, call us at nine one seven eight three, three, four, eight six. Zero foreign, no obligation. Free consultation. Check out our website of ww dot covenant seven dot com. 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. I’m chuck longfield of blackbaud, and you’re listening to tony martignetti non-profit radio big non-profit ideas for the other ninety five percent. Durney that was chuck longfield, chief researcher research scientist, actually at blackbaud from last year’s bb con conference and i will be there this year in october. Also, thes blackbaud people are very modest, it’s hard to get them to say their titles. Janna eggers, senior vice president i think of marketing in products just, said jenna eggers from blackbaud i have to get them to be a little more ah more forward about their titles and we have something to say about titles, titles that have changed very shortly. But first i can’t send live listener love this week. I’m sorry i’m not live where pre recorded this week, however konnichi wa ni hao, anya haserot you know i send live listener love also, california always checks in texas, north carolina, oregon from time to time north i said oregon, not oregon there’s no e at the end of that, i learned that, um who else checks in new york? New york has been lately so live. Listen love to all of you and everybody else. Who’s listening live. I will be back in the studio next friday. Tony, stick to my block. This week is a charity. Did what? Charities do the fund-raising at beth israel medical center here in new york city became public because of a will contest, and it’s fund-raising methods were the subject of a new york times story, which is probably something that we would all rather avoid, and i don’t think anybody wants their internal office processes splashed internationally on the new york times, but i saw very little that beth israel should be embarrassed about. I think they’re fundraisers, including their ceo, who, of course, we know should be a fundraiser. I did what they were supposed to be doing did what charities do they is the story of a woman who was living in the hospital, literally living in the hospital for twenty years. She was a resident of the hospital for twenty years, and the question is, were there was the hospital’s fund-raising tactics inappropriate? And i don’t think they were. I think they had a great prospect living among them, and they would have been, i think, careless if they hadn’t cultivated and solicited this woman for charitable gift. There were some emails and some notes to the between members are between employees that i think we’re a little carelessly unprofessionally worded, but there’s nothing unethical, certainly nothing illegal, nothing fraudulent. So i don’t really think beth israel had that much to worry about when they’re fund-raising became public in the new york times, and i say more about that on my block, the post is a charity did what charities do on my block? Is that tony martignetti dot com that is tony’s take two for friday fourteenth of june twenty fourth of the year. Oh, i’m very glad that amy sample ward is with me now. She got a promotion at the non-profit technology network and ten and her most recent co authored book is social change, anytime everywhere about online multi-channel engagement, her blog’s, amy, sample, ward, dot or ge, and on twitter she’s at amy r s ward, i guess i don’t know, i guess i’ll say it because it’s it’s easier for me to say then for amy to say congratulations on being promoted to ceo of inten. Thank you. When was your promotion? Effective? Ah, effective june first. So we are in day eleven. All right? Yes. Today’s tuesday the eleventh. Um how’s it going, it’s going really well? I mean, you know there’s there’s not a lot of time spent trying to figure out who are these people that i work with because i already got to work with them for the last over two years, so it feels like, you know, you could just jump in and we can start moving forward on all kinds of projects are already deep in the weeds of the next ntcdinosaur will be in march in d c so lots of lots of action, lots of good stuff happening and t c, of course, is the non-profit technology conference? Yep, right, followers of intend may not know that. So what, you’re jargon jail. All right? No, no mass resignations since your appointment as ceo. Uh, well, not yet. Knock on wood. I i don’t think that that’s the case. I think we’re all really excited to dive into work together. I think you know, any organization that’s gone through a transition, you you kind of let yourself feel like, well, maybe, you know, maybe we’ll go in a new direction. Maybe we won’t what’s goingto happen. And so once everything’s kind of decided, well, now we can just move forward on all those great ideas. That we’ve been having and conversations that staff have together it’s, like one day. Maybe we’ll do this. So now we can really start putting some of that into motion on. You were supposed to be in the studio with me today, but you had to be by phone because you have something going on in your apartment, right? Yes. Since we since i’m now the ceo and ten, we will be relocating back to portland, where the antenna main office is. And as such as manhattan real estate, as soon as our landlord know that we were moving out well, he wanted to start fixing it up for the new people. So some repairman is coming. Tio tio, work on the bathroom. Okay, lets you get a swelled head. As ceo. You still have to be still to be in your apartment to let the let the contractors in. Exactly all right. And do you know when you’ll be moving? Sorry. Very sorry to see you going. You won’t be live in the studio with me anymore. Or maybe you will one more time when you mean portlanders again in july. July. Okay, we’ll see whether we get you. In the studio, one more time or or not, i guess depending on when your move is in july, but very happy for your congratulations on your appointment. Listen you i appreciate it. This seems like a good time to let listeners know. Remind listeners what what? And ten is about what? What what kind of help can small and midsize non-profits get from non-profit technology network? Sure so and ten is a non-profit ourselves. So we definitely understand what everyone else is going through. And where? The membership organization for anyone looking to use technology to meet your mission. So there’s no organizational size requirement there’s no budget requirement. There’s no mission specific or caused specific focus that we have it’s really, truly for everyone that’s trying to use technology to be a little bit more effective and more efficient and meeting your mission. So we have the ntc like we mentioned before the non-profit technology conference, which is our annual conference in this coming year in d c we’re expecting over two thousand non-profit staffers, so it’ll be a big, really great conference. But then, outside of that conference, we have about a hundred webinars a year that air on all different topics tailored to all different kinds of staff in an organization because, you know, for example, if you’re thinking about online fund-raising well, there’s some pieces of that that your staff are interested in, you know what air the pieces we need to have in place? And then there are pieces of online fund-raising thatyou’re development team want to know, like, how do we make the ask successfully online? So we try and make sure that there’s something for all those different sides of everyone in organization, and we have depending on the year between five to eight research report on those air, free to download for and ten members, and then, you know, outside of all of that, really a community so there’s over eleven thousand and ten members sixty thousand, largely in the community that aren’t necessarily paid level but attend webinars or have come to the conference. So there’s the probability of sets that there’s no way that there’s someone who hasn’t gone through what you’re going through at your organization and it’s a great place to come find those piers assam questions, see how they’ve navigated that website redesign or that our processor, whatever it may be and you make the point very well that this is not on ly for technologists who understand technology, but it’s for everybody in the organization. Exactly. I mean, it’s twenty thirteen, right? We’re all using technology. It doesn’t mean that we’re all directors, but we all need to use these tools to do our job. And so it’s a place where you can go regardless of what area in the organization you work in to find resource is that help you with your job, whether you’re in communications or you’re on the program team what whatever it may be, you’ll find antenna and t e e n dot org’s cool. Thank you very much, amy. Think well, hopefully we’ll get you some new members on dh attendees at ntc and viewers of your webinars and readers of your research reports. Because i think it’s very valuable what in ten does? And it is a it’s, a it’s, a morass in a black box for a lot of people and that it need not be right. Let’s, talk about storify and cora let’s. Do it. Okay. Storify, um, what’s. Ah, i see it described as content. Curation. What is this? Yeah, but kind. I mean, if you’re going to jargon jail me for ntc jargon jail you for content curation, because that sounds wonky. Well, i asked you to. I asked you to explain it e would know that wouldn’t be the way i actually think storify is really cool tool really cool platform because it is so directly the definition of social media it’s multidirectional, its share a ball, it’s public all of those pieces that we associate with, you know what these social tools online are that is storify. So essentially you could go to storify you say i wantto i want to create a story, and i want it to be about, uh, non-profit radio looks put in the hash tag non-profit radio that’s. But you wanted to do your store storify about today after you listen to the podcast and it will pull in all the media that it finds it’ll pull in the tweets if there are photos of tony’s taking photos in the studio and posting them. If there are videos posted, whatever kind of video that it confined with that hash tag non-profit radio and what’s great is that? It doesn’t just pull it in and say, here you go, it shows you these air, all the available pieces of content, you know we found and you get to very simply you don’t need to be a technologist to do this, but you can just drag and drop them into your post. You can add your own tax, so you could say here’s a great quote from one of our live listeners and then pull that tweet over. Oh, are you know whatever those kind of like annotations would be, and then when you are finished compiling it, you can either embed the whole thing in your website or in your blog’s, or you can just share it out on twitter or facebook wherever you want to share it and have it stay on the storify website. You know where however you want to move it around and it’s? Great, because then people can go back and kind of see that recap of the conversation i think it’s used really well. Bye. Uh, newspapers new york times used storify all the time. Tio pull in. You know what they’ve seen on a breaking news story, kind of in real time things like that i see. And on all those examples that you gave by the way of non-profit radio, which is an outstanding example to use. Thank you. They all do exist way have just a minute before a break. Do you have to start your storify with a hashtag or could you just use the phrase? I guess in quotes tony martignetti non-profit radio can you start that way? Yeah, you could try it that way. It’s it’s easier with hashtags only because you know that it’s a dedicated tag that people have been using. Whereas if you were trying to just search for you know any instance that someone saying non-profit technology, for example, there was it would just be too big and nebulous. Tohave a clean, you know, conversation captured. Okay. Non-profit radio is what you meant. Yep. Non-profit technology i understand. Just flows out. No, no, no. I meant non-profit technology. If you did that generally as a phrase versus for example, the hashtag and p tech. I see. Ok, ok. But you can edit out things that are extremely us, right? Yes, for sure. Okay. All right, let’s, take a break and amy will. Return. And we’ll keep talking about storify. And also quorra. Stay with us. You’re listening to the talking alternative network. Yeah. Have you ever considered consulting a road map when you feel you need help getting to your destination when the normal path seems blocked? A little help can come in handy when choosing an alternate route. Your natal chart is a map of your potentials. It addresses relationships, finance, business, health and, above all, creativity. Current planetary cycles can either support or challenge your objectives. I’m montgomery taylor. If you would like to explore the help of a private astrological reading, please contact me at monte at monty taylor dot. Com let’s monte m o nt y at monty taylor dot com. 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. Talking alternative radio twenty four hours a day. Hi there and welcome back, amy, this sounds like something that could be good for non-profit don’t have a social media team or director at all because you’re pulling in content that’s you’ve already created or that others have already created. Yeah, especially if you’re on organization where you’re having, um, on event or you’re having, you know, you put out new report or you launched a new program or, you know, you’ve done something that’s gotten your community talking online about what you’re doing so so it’s about something specific, it doesn’t just generally, you know, i like and ten well, that’s terrific, and i would love tweets that say i like and ten, you know, it’s, not necessarily something to capture a story, so any time you’re doing something that is a little bit more time bounder or topic lee specific it’s it’s really easy because you now you have all this content and so you, khun, just like you said, even if you don’t have a social media are big communications department, you could just go pull it all together fairly quickly, but be it also means that now all those community members that got highlighted in your store, if i get to feel like, oh my gosh, you know my my tweet about the event or the a photo that i took of, you know, the ballroom at the event got to be featured in the organization’s recap and that’s really cool for them as a member of the community who maybe hadn’t ever really felt highlighted or, you know, called out by the organization before and now they’re kind of, you know, they get to shine as part of the recap, and that makes it more likely that they will share it with their communities. Exactly. Now, storify, when you said that it gives you the chance to either in bed or share, i guess or both the people that including the people that it shares with include the people who contributed to everything that got drawn in, right? Yes, exactly. It has a lot of built and sharing features on dh you can you can tell it not to do those things, but it try it wants to encourage you to send out a tweet for example, tow any, uh, any tweet that you included in your storify to send a reply to those people saying, hey, i highlighted you in my store if i and give them a link and then they, you know, it links back to the store if i so you can have, you know, when you have your storify account in your building, these specific stories they’ll stay on the story by account, you have a you know, profile there people can just follow your storify account if they want teo, but you could also embedded on your blogged on your website, maybe you maybe you created a storify for a specific offline event that you held and, you know, lots of people tweeted and shared photos and you create a storify well, that’s really great to go back to the event page and added there so now it’s like an archive you know, event captured page and not just an old registration page, you can keep all that content there, so you’re extending the life of your content. Exactly. I get a tweet like that whenever i participate in a in a twitter chat called fundchat hashtag fundchat and at the end of the chat, i got a tweet that says you’re included in my storify for the fir fundchat today here. I think it’s a really great tool for twitter, chat because it’s, when you are participating in the chat, i think it’s fairly easy to follow along, but if you aren’t participating in that moment in the chat and you want to go back and look at the hashtag later, it just doesn’t make any sense. You know, you need that storify where the organizer can move people’s replies to fit underneath the question, you know, instead of kind of the ad hoc free flow that they may have actually come in that move them out of the time stamped order of when they were sent. But which question is this person answering and that kind of thing, right? Put them into a logical order. Yeah, yeah. Interesting, though, that they do come with the time stamp too. I like that pulls in all the all the original features of the of the piece of content. Okay, let’s, let’s. Give some time to quarrel. Qu qu o r a i won’t try to describe it since i got admonished with the store. If i so, how would you, amy sample ward if i describe quarrel for listeners? Sure. So, cora. Is essentially a q and a site, so you or others could submit a question, and then you or others could submit an answer and unlike certain other question and answer websites that you may have seen or if you have ever, like, done an internet search just for a question, and then you see all of these, like different kinds of forums and q and i websites come up where someone else’s asked that question, cora tries to keep it really limited so that there’s there’s not just like a forever stream of answers, but that there are really, you know, prominent answers to that question on which is, you know, something that kind of plays up a positive feature. So you’re not sifting through and wondering which of these answers is the real answer and it’s a place where bulls organizations and, you know, individuals of all different backgrounds have have really established some of their energy online as a thought leader, a resource to whatever kind of niche field there in so it’s not just about technology about everything under the sun and people are there, you know, some people ask a question and then answer at themselves because they want teo share information about that topic, but others see questions that others have posted and go in and provide an answer. I’ve answered a question on what’s the best way to get a taxi cab in new york city? No, so i don’t know that an expert, but i had a couple of suggestions. I see too many people standing on the curb. You’re gonna be out there, you could be in the middle district practically. We’ve gotta want that you got at least twenty five percent of the way into the street. If you’re not. If you’re not in danger of getting run over, then you’re not going. You’re not an effective cab campaign. That’s how you’re stopping the taxi is by preventing them from driving further down. All right, so we just have a minute or so left. How could non-profits use quorra? Sounds like credibility is very good. How else? What? Why else? Well, i think there are lots of ways whether you want to talk about your you know, the field in which your organization works and provide answers. Say you work in public education and you want to go, you know. Maybe someone has posted a question that says, what does a charter school mean you if you work in public education, you probably know, and you want to provide a on answer, um, i think the thing to keep in mind is that it is a very individual driven platform, and so if you have, you know, your executive director, maybe of a policy director you have, you know, whoever it may be in your organization think about having more than one person with an account and providing those answers as that credible individual that represents the organization, so that you created a little bit of space between that answer and your organization and have also said, well, of course our policy director is answering this question because it’s about public policy and we have an expert on this, you know, and that’s why we’re such a credible organization q u o r a dot com. Maybe we have to leave it there. Amy sample ward, ceo of non-profit technology network. Congratulations on that again. Thank you. She will remain our monthly social media contributor. You’ll find her at amy, sample ward, dot or ge. Always a pleasure. Safe move. I hope i get to see you before you go. Yes, thank you, bye. Amy buy-in, our creative producer, was claire meyerhoff. Janice taylor is usually the assistant producer, but she’s, not here today. Sam liebowitz is line producer. Our show’s social media is by regina walton, of organic social media and the remote producer of tony martignetti non-profit radio is john federico of the new rules. Oh, i hope you’ll be with me next week, talking alternative broadcasting at talking alternative dot com. Co-branding thing to being a good ending, you’re listening to the talking alternate network, waiting to get you thinking. Nothing. Cubine 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 huntress people be better business people. Dahna hi, i’m ostomel role, and i’m sloan. Wainwright were the hosts of the new thursday morning show, the music power hour, eleven a m we’re gonna have fun shine the light on all aspects of music and its limitless healing possibilities. We’re going invite artists to share their songs and play live will be listening and talking about great music from yesterday to today, so you’re invited to share in our musical conversation. Your ears will be delighted with the sound of music and our voices. Join austin and sloan live thursdays at eleven a. M on talking alternative dot com, you’re listening to talking alt-right network at www dot talking alternative dot com, now broadcasting twenty four hours a day. Have you ever considered consulting a road map when you feel you need help getting to your destination when the normal path seems blocked? A little help can come in handy when choosing an alternate route. Your natal chart is a map of your potentials. It addresses relationships, finance, business, health and, above all, creativity. Current planetary cycles can either support or challenge your objectives. I’m montgomery taylor. If you would like to explore the help of a private astrological reading, please contact me at monte at monty taylor dot. Com let’s monte m o nt y at monty taylor dot com. 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. Talking. Come on.

Nonprofit Radio At 14NTC

2014 Nonprofit Technology ConferenceNonprofit Radio will be at the Nonprofit Technology Conference this week, hosted by Nonprofit Technology Network (NTEN). I’ll be on the stage in the Science Fair interviewing lots of NTC’s smart speakers all day on Thursday and Friday.

I’m giving away an hour of free consulting! Drop your card to get weekly show alert emails and you’ll be entered to win a free hour of Planned Giving or Charity Registration consulting.

Not going to NTC? Enter on Twitter! All this week, tweet “#NonprofitRadio is at #14NTC!” I’ll pick a separate online winner!

Here’s a mere sample of interviews I’ve got lined up. I’ll play them on Nonprofit Radio in the coming weeks:

  • Facebook strategies
  • Career strategies for women in tech
  • Choosing the right CRM
  • Bridging the gap between social & CRM
  • Intro to Creative Commons
  • Your board & IT
  • Marriage counseling for IT & communications

There’s more! Along with NTEN CEO Amy Sample Ward, I’ll introduce conference sponsors who will be on stage showing their wares and services during lunch hours.

If you’re at NTC, come by the stage, chat me up and enter to win an hour of free consulting!

Nonprofit Radio for March 7, 2014: Society-Level Giving & Fraud!

Big Nonprofit Ideas for the Other 95%

I Love Our Sponsors!

Sponsored by RallyBound peer-to-peer fundraising for runs, walks and rides. Also sponsored by TBRC Cost Recovery, saving you money on credit card processing fees.

Listen live or archive:

My Guests:

Page Bullington & George Durney: Society-Level Giving

Page Bullington and George Durney
Page Bullington, Tony Martignetti and George Durney

Page Bullington and George Durney, both with Blackbaud, reveal tactics for setting donors’ sights to your society giving level, whether that’s $250 or $2500. (Recorded at bbcon 2013)

 

 

 

 

 

Gene Takagi: Fraud!

Gene Takagi
Gene Takagi

“Diversion of charitable assets” can hurt you badly and embarrass you terribly. Where are the vulnerabilities and how do you protect your nonprofit? I’ll walk through it with Gene Takagi, our legal contributor and principal of the Nonprofit & Exempt Organizations law group (NEO).

 

 

 


Top Trends. Sound Advice. Lively Conversation.

You’re on the air and on target as I delve into the big issues facing your nonprofit—and your career.

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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Hello and welcome to tony martignetti non-profit radio big non-profit ideas for the other ninety five percent. I’m your aptly named host. Oh, i’m very glad you’re with me. I’d be thrown into endo cardio fibroblast doses if it came to my attention that you missed today’s show society level giving paige bullington and george durney both with blackbaud revealed tactics for setting donorsearch ites to your society e-giving level, whether that’s two hundred fifty dollars or twenty five hundred dollars and that was recorded at bebe con the blackbaud conference last year and fraud diversion of charitable assets can hurt you badly and embarrass you terribly. Where are the vulnerabilities and how do you protect your non-profit i’ll walk through with jean takagi are legal contributor and principal of the non-profit and exempt organizations law group neo on tony’s take two i’ve got a speaking gig coming up. We’re sponsored by rally bound peer-to-peer fund-raising and by t b r c saving you money on credit card processing fees and now i introduce the interview from bb con on society level, giving welcome to tony martignetti non-profit radio coverage of bb khan, twenty thirteen were at the gaylord conference. Center outside washington d c in national harbor, maryland. My guests are george durney and page bullington. Their subject for their seminar was earning that society level gift. George durney is director of sales target analytics. Paige bullington is also a target analytics as director of professional services george page welcome thank you. Glad to be here. Yes, tony, thank wasn’t have you? George has revealed that he hopes to start up have a washington morning joe he’s actually sitting here practicing, saying good morning, washington so i don’t know how much longer he will be at blackbaud talking aboutthe time this show airs, you may be hearing him on w a m u welcome again, let’s see, we want to get that society level gift page. What’s what’s the first bit of advice or what? We’re let’s define what we’re talking about that it’s everybody underst starts at the same place. Typically when we’re talking about a society level gift we’re looking at individuals that are giving between a thousand dollars up to just under ten thousand kind of a very specific range, um and it can swing a little bit lower a little bit hyre for organizations, but that’s usually the rains that we’re looking at, ok, and we’re finding non-profits having trouble getting to that level? Yeah, it can be a challenge. They look different than other types of donors, so sometimes kind of finding them identifying them. Keeping retaining these types of donors can be a struggle, but there’s a huge payoff when you can choir and get to know donors at that level because they often are the most supportive and engaged of your organization. Ok, morning talk show host yes. What what would you like to add to the introduction? Well, and i think obviously page hit it perfectly, but one of the key things that thousand dollars donors also considered by some a mid level donor for gotten segment of their portfolio there, big on direct mail, low end donors, annual gifts they focus on major e-giving but sometimes there is a lack of strategy and focus on that thousand dollars donor-centric breaking that barrier and we did a lot analytics for today’s session breaking that barrier is critical in terms of retention in lifetime are long term value, so just a knowledge of understanding that and then having a focus on it. Is a big win, okay, so we’re not trying to get this donorsearch for one year, but there’s long term payoff teo breaking that this thing, this glass ceiling of of a thousand dollars that’s exactly right? We’ve seen hyre retention schnoll rate and hyre gains in terms of the year over year giving so it’s it’s a critical step on the path and it’s not a path where some are going to become. We’ll call it major donors and let’s to find a major donor, and everybody does it different totally tony, but let’s define it is like about ten thousand dollars there’s, some that that’s a step in the journey and others that it’s quite honestly, where they’re going to settle on and be comfortable in that level for years and can be extremely profitable in good for organizations. Tohave that group of donors okay, let’s, let’s, start with the advice, george with you. What? What’s what’s. The first advice to getting there. What? Well, actually, i’m sorry right now. You i withdrew the question sort of do we need to know where we’re starting? How do we figure out what we’re starting with? Absolutely that’s the first thing, probably the most important thing any non-profit could do, especially the smaller non-profits is have a value assigned to each donor-centric elif, you will on typically organizations do it on an annual basis, so being able to understand the potential and then what they get today out of that donor differential should help them allocate resources. So knowing that is the first step in the journey of being effective and efficient, moving donors up to that thousand dollar level and obviously retaining him and moving beyond. Okay, okay, paige, but way have this baseline, we’ve assigned values current and potential. Where do we go from there? I think the first step is to start to treat these individuals differently. We know from our research that they have different asset profiles, different demographics, and so the message you’re going to put out there, whether it’s via direct mail face-to-face cultivation or over the phone needs to look different than how you might cultivate a twenty five dollars, donor. Okay, well, let’s talk about some of the differences. What should they be? I think quite often, and this is a personal to some of the areas that i’ve worked in you have to understand and have a different type of connection with them, so understand they want to engage powerthru mission, they’re going to see themselves as an investor with your organization and making them feel that there have more of a steak, and what you’re doing is really important if you’re going to get people at that one thousand dollar level. It’s crucial. Okay, well, how do we do this? What kind of words do we use? What kind of channels do we communicate through? George is raising his hand, you know, somebody was actually walking by saying, sorry, tony george, actually, popular guy georges actually not engaged in the conversation. He’s looking at people walking past. I’m engaged in the conversation, so i will ignore george and we’ll stay with you. So what? How do we do this? Specifically? Specific communications channels what we’re gonna do, george, you’re out nastad i would say direct mail is still a great way to engage these donors. It’s probably going to be with more of a high end package and what i would call some insider information. A good example. I worked with healthcare foundation that started a fellows program and through that program, they engaged these one thousand dollars donors and prospects with insider information on where the health care system was going so that’s kind of one example a lot of organizations will do face to face but do larger scale event so it’s not that one on one that you may use with a major gift prospect, but maybe you’ve got a one too many where you have ten to twelve people in a small cultivation event again, you’re cultivating the moor is an insider, and you’re really giving them access to your leadership quite often, because again they feel different. They feel more like an investor so it’s important that you specialize and capitalize on that feeling, is there ah, size george paige mentioned one to twelve roughly over which you shouldn’t go where you start to lose that connection that yeah, there’s, no doubt about it. I don’t think there’s a magic number in terms of drawing the line on the page, has some great experience because she was doing this on a regular basis before she joined target, but one of the things we talk about is everybody has a clear definition of that major gift. Prospect, and they say one hundred fifty prospects or donors are assigned to an individual. This kind of cultivation lends itself. Paige was saying tomb or direct mail support and more over the phone, really a less of an investment initially in these donors, but an effective way to do it, and you could manage a broader portfolio. And i think this speaks to almost in a murder, and we’re seeing with some of the non-profits kind of an emerging new job title, if you will, that mid level gift officer, which isn’t that senior gift officer it’s, a little bit of a junior person, and the majority of their efforts are done over the phone or email, but yet they’re establishing personal contact, right? Those personalization. And they should be able to handle north of a thousand prospects on something like this because of the level of connectivity and cultivation. This isn’t somebody you need to go visit and spend the weekend. Okay, but let’s, let’s stick with the different channels. As you were waving to your fans in the audience a multi task paige and i were talking about channels. Yes, you mentioned you mentioned the phone. What would how would we start to engage someone there? Let’s say they’re giving it the i don’t know two hundred dollars on we want to we want to get that thousand dollars ceiling how do we start to engage them by phone? So? So the first thing is, we’ve got to identify the right person because not every is we mentioned before, not every two, fifty donors, the right one to cultivate, so once we’ve identified the right one, thank you, cultivate right then the question is its multi-channel and i and i think his page, you’re saying it’s, not just the phone, right? It’s all the channels we want to hit him with it continue to hit him with direct mail. Even online efforts create custom portals for these folks to come in, you’re really trying to connect and engage, and the phone conversation is going to be about discovery, right? Understanding who they are and why they give you right, because each donor, especially at that level, has different motivations. And you need to be able to differentiate, and we talked about it today, and we got a lot of questions from the audience that we have donors who come to events and give because thie event sponsor or their lead on the event a friend of theirs, they’re not engaged in your mission, but they gave just for that person almost attribute gift that’s probably not the person that we’re goingto invest in cultivation because they don’t have a connection game because of their personal relationship to the friend, right? And you’re not going to get that on an ongoing basis. That wouldn’t be that i won’t say we’ll get any dollars, but it’s probably not the best use of your time and not the best owner to target on and that’s where understanding and the phone becomes a great vehicle because in a direct mail conversation or it isn’t a conversation right? It’s a one way communication. I can’t assess that, but if i’m talking with somebody and i understand their priorities, i can quickly assess is this person on the path, if you will, to want to be maur engaged and committed to our organization, right? You can probably qualify the person in just a few minutes based on how well they received the call and and how engaged they are pages talking about engagement in this process, you could probably qualify them. Not that you’re gonna brush them off, you know, in a couple minutes, but within certainly within a fifteen minute phone call. If you’re able to get them that long, the un engaged person may disconnect with you before them that’s, right? If you’re able to get on the phone, stay on the phone with someone that long you can, you can tell exactly. You can weigh always say every donor is valuable, but not every donor is of equal value and it’s important to understand that value. And then there is, paige said, the engagement level and there’s ways to look at engagement in addition to just a conversation that requires some individual to sort it out. It’s attending events is a good indication the mohr events they attend, the more times a volunteer, these air, all good metrics of engagement that in and of themselves, they’re not necessary significant, but when you combine that with other information on that particular donor is paige talked about before assets age, other philanthropic giving activity while the sun you’re starting to paint pretty cystic picture of the person you want to invest cnn right, and make them really engaged. They didn’t think that shooting the good ending. 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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. You’re listening to the talking alternative network. Paige, we’re talking about the whole breath of the relationship, right? As as we’re figuring out who the people are that we should invest the time exactly a lot of it starts when they’re a direct male donor away up to some of these individuals becoming major gift owner. So you really have to take a holistic look at that lifetime value of the donor, and that helps inform who you’re going to pull out for this more intimate and sort of engaged level of cultivation. So clearly your record keeping is gonna be important no it’s not going to help tohave a spreadsheet from the two thousand events well, and then one from the two thousand three events and right, and and then trying to coordinate that with a with a fund-raising spreadsheet and maybe a volunteer list. That’s that’s not goingto work well, right? You know, you hit on a key part on, unfortunately, many smaller organizations because they don’t always have the resource is needed that’s just where all that information resides on disparage spreadsheets all over the building with different people and not saving that information. More people know about their shirt size and who attended. All the events, right and event attendance and any other engagement volunteering, i’m on the board of meals on wheels. If i show somebody who comes to our events who volunteers on a regular basis and there’s assets, they’re the probability for a more significant connection and gift goes up exponentially. Do we? Paige, do we bring volunteers in to help with this process? Or is this more? Because it’s ah, a donor that in the big scheme is mid level, as george was saying, is this more suitable for staff? I think i can see both sides of that. So is george said, you know, for some individuals, the volunteer, maybe the initial no connection that’s really important to bring them in to get that first gift. Having said that, you probably need a very focused effort from staff to continue to manage a population of maybe a thousand plus donors and prospects. It’s unlikely that volunteers are going to be able to do that quite as in sort of a discipline. Fashion is your staff might be able to do okay. So maybe then bring volunteers in at the stewardship. Thank you. Point. I think that would be a great point, and then certainly, if you’re doing events, say you’re hosting a cocktail hour to get to know these individuals, the volunteers may come into play as hostess again is people that open initial doors, but for that structured prospect management, my thought is that you’re gonna lean pretty heavily on your staff to ensure that that happens. Okay? Wei have plenty of time together, let’s, let’s diving deeper into some more, some more ideas around around breaking that thousand dollars stealing. Go ahead. No one thought that struck me as we were talking earlier is we’re talking about the disparate spreadsheets and sort of where you keep your information is, i think, it’s really important for organizations to understand that you don’t know everyone don’t assume that off the top of your head, based on anecdotal information that you already know and understand who these people are. And it happens a lot when we consult with organizations will come in, we’ll do a screening and they’ll say it’s, fine that you know you’ve found cem cem, new lower level donors. We already knew all our major prospect, and nothing is more fun to me sometimes didn’t actually. Bring out a list of let’s, say, a hundred people, and have people sort of sit back in the room and dio i had no idea. Oh, i didn’t know they could given that level. So i think that’s a key point when you’re trying to develop this program that we really shouldn’t assume that you know your data as well as you think you do. You probably know it pretty well. You can always knew it better. Okay, george could be a little humbling that i have to admit that you don’t know your data and your prospects as well as you thought you did. Exactly. And i think paige is right on point what the organization needs, whether we support them or somebody else does it is they need a discipline process toe analyze that donor base and segment that don’t and without making it an infomercial, pages put together a service over the last year that we’ve had great receptivity on for smaller non-profits on a subscription basis that comes in and makes it as simple as possible puts an m on the record for a major donor and a for an annual donor and it’s at that thousand dollar level on asset size. So you have an idea of the capacity there and a recommended next ask amount or a dollar amount on that donor and something that’s simple used in the hand. You know, all of a sudden it becomes a brush in the hands of an artist if they know howto share the passion of that mission with those right people and the right channels in the right allocation, all the sun you see, huge performance improved. What kind of support? Jorge does the person who’s doing this outreach need from the organization? Maybe from leadership? Well, from leadership, they clearly need a good case for support. I think that’s it and an essential item, they need that case for support. And they also need to be able to show accountability as to what the organization is going to do with those dollars. And i think that’s fund-raising one on one. Tell me why i’m in again and then tell me exactly what you’re gonna do with that. And and, you know, most organizations have embraced that, and i think now more than ever, non-profits or more transparent than ever. And the donor’s let’s. Face it expect that because they’re getting that level of transparency on page brought it up in our session. People aren’t giving donations anymore. They’re investing right? Sure, paige, do you have? Ah, sense of how we would hold the person accountable. Who’s doing this outreach? I mean, i beyond just who goes to valladolid level within x number of months and who doesn’t? How can we assess their their effectiveness? I think you hit on one of the first points number one it’s the conversion of people from lower level giving up to this thousand dollars society level gift that would be, i would say, one of the most important primary. Second dearly of that, i would say acquisitions i mean, i think it’s reasonable too, to expect that you’re also going to bring in some new donors at this level. So it’s not just going to be sort of a conversion path, you’re also sort of out there prospecting on dh then thirdly, had states retention it’s great to get them there also want to make sure that we’re keeping them there were keeping these folks engaged, so i think you know, under those three things you form. A baseline for some really solid metrics let’s spend a little time talking about that retention because now we’ve spent time getting getting them to that level. What what’s your beginning opening advice on keeping them at that level? Well, the first thing i would say is there some great bassline knowledge that suggests that these donors wants an individual gives the thousand dollars or more? They retain it a higher percentage relative to people giving it a lower amount, so i’d first of all, just saying put it out there that you can expect ah, hyre level of retention beyond that, you’ve got a steward, these folks and i go back to earlier comments about keeping them engaged on dh that’s going to be a key, you know, we know that that once you sort of open your wallet and get engaged, it’s an organization at that level, you’ve got a higher level of inclination, but it’s not going to be automatic, that you’re going to stay there. I mean, i use myself as an example. I gave a thousand dollars to an organization for a year, they were doing a very special campaign, i felt super engaged cause i was really passionate about what they were doing after that campaign. I kind of fell off, you know why? Because of their shortcomings in keeping you engaged or for your own interests change? Yeah, to a certain degree, it was sort of, you know, we kind of finished the campaign, they shifted focus, and i didn’t really hear a whole lot about, you know, kind of the new mission and how it translated to my interest areas, and they’re great organization. It’s it’s not, you know, sharp criticism, but that’s just an example of how, you know, for me to continue giving it that level, i really needed to feel more engaged because that’s not an insignificant amount of money and my attention sort of shifted elsewhere. I think this is critical, george, especially as a campaign wraps up it’s structured around the campaign, whether the campaign is, you know, something online and quick, maybe latto great sixty day campaign. Or maybe it’s a more traditional four five year campaign. When that campaign wraps up, how do we keep? How do we keep people engaged? What were we talking about now? Yeah. There’s. No doubt there needs to be. Some transition in some constant connection and, you know it is page pointed out, it’s interesting we saw in the study that we did eighty percent of the donors, eighty two percent once they hit a thousand dollar level, eighty two percent of them retain, and about seventy percent of those actually gave mohr now that’s what’s the corresponding statistic for those under a thousand under a thousand it was about sixty five percent, and when you got lower in the pyramid or on the food chain for gifts he got in the thirties. But i think another metric is paige talked about the ability while averages is, you know, a very deceiving right, because there’s all wireframe clolery all the outlier, all the outlines on this, and we’ve seen organizations even a five thousand dollar gift level that only retain twenty or thirty percent of their donors. Even at that level, they’re retaining a relatively small percentage. A lot of times, those air event driven donors is a good example, right? They do a lot of events, they do the big galas and they’ll only retain a small percentage, and yet others air retaining north of eighty and their entire portfolio right through the organization’s pretending lo don’t lose your point, but no, they’re constantly having to acquire eggs and spend so much more money acquiring new donors to replace right, the master says, and you know, a cz you said the mathos where it’s the leaky bucket, you know, it’s leaking, leaking and i’m constantly filling, filling, filling i’m chasing and it’s hard to string together, you’re over year solid, sustainable growth without having a solid retention left. And while this thousand dollars threshold is appears to be important, it’s not magical unless you put in the discipline processes around retaining and engaging and connecting and stewarding those relationships and as page mention and you hit on it, it has to evolve right? Because i’ll get a multi year commitment because of a capital campaign. But now what’s the incentive, i’m not building a building anymore. I’m not expanding a soup kitchen. Why do you need the money? And why must i continue to give it this level and that’s sometimes that’s amore, difficult conversation and a real challenge than it is to say they were building this building because we need it and therefore you need to give to keep us sustainable. Yeah, yeah, the case for the campaign is usually hopefully pretty straight forward, right? There has to be a plan, right page for transition after that campaign. Absolutely. And i was just thinking one of the things we haven’t touched on too much in regards to steward shevawn retention is the involvement in the visibility of leadership with these donors. So george talked about you. You do have to hold them accountable. You’ve gotta have a strategic vision. But one of the things that we know from past studies and sort of deep breathing with clients after campaigns is how important it is for these individuals to see and feel that the leadership of the organization is out there sort of building the case of in the community, coming back and talking to them and engaging them with that vision if leaderships not connecting with them. It’s very likely you’re going to lose them. Okay. Well, there’s ah, there’s an answer to something i asked earlier was, you know what kind of support to the the people with the gift officers or the officer at this level need they need leadership is george said they need the vision you need concise mission so that they can convey it and well beyond the campaign. Right? Unlike a major gift, they don’t need the leadership to make the ask right. They should be responsible for that relationship. They should be able to store it, but they certainly as you pointed out, they need the tool kit and they need the commitment. Okay, we have we have a few minutes left. Either one of you. What more would you like to say about breaking this thousand dollars ceiling? Go ahead. I was just going to add it’s just important. I mean, i you know, when we were thrown out a couple of statistics and we’ve talked about how you do it, i would underscore for organizations that getting to this level securing them retaining these individuals can really help underwear under gird your mission in your vision and really provide a firm base of financial support where sometimes annual getting and even major giving to a certain degree can be a little more volatile. And this really can become sort of a study platform and a foundation that i think the importance is sort of underemphasized right now. And i’m just a big believer that it can provide a nice pool of support steady, solid donors that really could be crucial to your organization’s success. George, would you like to leave us with you know, the question we get asked all the time is how do you find these? How will i find that thousand dollars donor zoho lled income the size of the assets, the real estate that they have one other giving that they do and the more and more data you look at, the more more you realizes there is no one silver bullet there’s no one thing that you could look at and say that person has a lot of assets because he’s been study after study, people of great affluence are not necessarily all very philanthropic they give, but that doesn’t mean they’re going to give it a certain level. So there has to be a combination of the ability to give and the willingness to give and that’s where requires some level of analysis and segmentation to really get to that point as opposed to tell me somebody who’s rich, give me the next millionaire and then that’s how i have a strategy? What do you love about this work? Analytical work that you’re doing, george, you know, there’s it we can help people immediately. I feel like every time we work with a client, we’re going to make them better. There is no doubt that if they follow in using information, it’s going to make a more efficient, more effective. We had one client who was here before standing in front of you that we help. And we identified on ly about three hundred prospects. But they raised twenty one million dollars in eighteen months from those prospect that were not on anybody’s agenda. Tony, they had not. You know, they were there. Some of those folks had given five hundred thousand dollars a year forever that’s such a grand slam, you. Twenty one million dollars. Every hundred unidentified prospect, obviously on unknown process unknown prospects down right down under the view, our line of sight from there in their folks. Page, what is it you love about this work? I would ask you really the same sentiments, but i’ll put a slightly different spent on it. I my background is in fund-raising for a number of years and i did. Not have analytics. When i did it, i would have given my right arm to have had it, because i know what it does. It allows our clients to spend their time on their mission and doing what they wanted. You and we really it is what george said. We really help them. And how can you not feel good about that? I mean, i feel great every day about what i get to do. So it’s it’s a privilege to work with the team i work with, as well as the clients we work with. Paige bullington is director of professional services at target analytics. George durney, formerly director of sales at target analytics. Now host of george durney show five a m two a m on w a m u r. We’ll put you on tv and he was like, yeah, that would be prefer tv. I want to say good morning, washington good morning, washington. Thank you very much. Both of thank you notes from you. You were very good. Your audition is you now have your addition. Real way. We have it. Tony martignetti non-profit radio coverage of bb khan twenty thirteen. Thanks so much for listening. I love going to these conferences, and next one will be next week at non-profit technology conference live listener, love, let’s, start abroad this week, korea. Lots of people in korea, multiple in soul, thank you. Also, young, jean and sanju. I hope i’m pronouncing those right on io haserot live listener to love to the korean peninsula in japan. Fukuoka you’re pretty. You’re you’re very consistent listener, if it’s the same person and also takashima konichiwa here in the u. S new york, new york. Cambridge, massachusetts. Atlanta, georgia, irvine, california. Beverly, mass, jackson heights, new york. They’re out of the woodwork live listener love to each of those like these great, all these states checking in love it and, of course, those of you listening on the time shift podcast pleasantries to you love our podcast listeners as well. You know that there are two companies that helped me bring non-profit radio to you, and one of those is rally bound. They support the show and they make simple, reliable peer-to-peer fund-raising campaigns friends asking friends to give to your cause. You know, you can claim a discount as a non-profit radio listener. People have here’s an example of one of the rally bound campaigns friends circle they raised more than half a million dollars in their annual five k walk. Now rally bound is not necessarily for events like runs and walks and rides. Ah, could just be a campaign that’s, not event driven, but this one was for friends circle. And they did very well pick up the phone that i mean, you could go to their website, but i like talking. Pick up the phone, talk to joe mcgee. You’re not going to get somebody to talk to at kickstarter or indeed go go. But you will it rally bound triple eight, seven, six, seven, nine o seven. Six my friend joe mcgee. Or of course, rally bound dot com if you prefer that way. Also tea, brc cost recovery. Supporting the show. Do you accept? Credit card gift if you do, then you should talk to them because they save money on those pesky credit card fees. Trc talks to your existing credit card processor, then you don’t need to be switching, talk to your existing processor and get them to lower the fee that you’re paying on each transaction. If you, uh, if you look at your statements, you’ll see that those, uh, those pesky little fees add up. If they don’t lower your rate, then you don’t pay them there. You would talk to yourself, rabinowitz, and when you talk to him thank you for sponsoring non-profit radio trc dot com or again, i like to talk method two, one two, six double four, nine, triple xero i’m delivering a workshop on charity registration at the foundation center in new york city, the’s charity registration laws are these things that require you to register with state authorities in each state where you solicit donations. So if you have a donate now button, for instance, on your site than you’re soliciting in about half the states in the us, if you’re sending email or u s mail those air solicitations also in the states. Where those messages land, the workshop is on tuesday, march eleventh at ten o’clock in the morning and it’s free and there’s info on my block at tony martignetti dot com. And that is tony’s take two for friday, seventh of march tenth show of this year. Jean takagi is with me you know him he’s, the managing attorney of neo, the non-profit and exempt organizations law group in san francisco, he edits the popular non-profit law blawg dot com and on twitter he is at gi tak gt a k jean takagi welcome back. Thank you so much, tony, how are you? I’m doing terrific, lee, how are you doing out there in san francisco? I’m doing, actually, and i’m actually in newport beach today. Oh, newport beach is that, well, is beach. So is it south of san francisco? It’s just the valet. Okay, way south. Okay, cool. Um, we’re talking about fraud. This with this, uh, this month, the fraud, fraud losses. These things can be considerable. Yeah, absolutely. That side interrupted. You’re not interrupting at all. Go ahead, it’s. Your turn. What? You know, i was looking at the chronicle of philanthropy this morning on their online website, and one of the top stories is oxfam’s extra cheese, please. Guilty to defrauding charity and that’s about one hundred eight thousand dollars, which probably small for oxfam. But, you know, always an alarming thing for the public to see. And incredibly embarrassing for oxfam. Absolutely. There’s more than just the money here, there’s the reputation and oftentimes that’s that’s the biggest loss of all the loss of the public trust in the organization. Okay, um, well, we you know, you and i have talked about audits before isn’t an audit, it actually turns out is not going to catch a lot of fraud. Or is that right? Yeah, i think so. What some people are saying is that not its only catch about three to four percent of the frauds that that are eventually figured out by the charities. So that’s a very, very small proportion, although there’s still very good. And what an audit might do is tio provide tips on getting internal controls in place. To prevent fraud from happening. I don’t want to downplay the importance of a financial audit, but it definitely doesn’t result in the capture of a lot of the fraud that goes on. I saw something that said that a lot of fraud is found by by tips like whistleblowers. Yeah, absolutely. There. There having a good whistle blower policy is a great tip for preventing fraud and really establishing what what we like to call from, you know, from a lawyer’s perspective, the tone at the top in terms of making sure that the board has said the prevention of fraud and the integrity of the organization keeping the integrity the organization is a paramount priority is really important, and having things like a whistle for policy that strongly protective of employees that might blow the whistle on somebody commiting or defrauding the organization is really important and sometimes tip lines that air man by third party providers can also can also be helpful in allowing employees to feel that they can remain anonymous during during those tips. Oh, that’s! Interesting that’s like the makes me think of those signs on the backs of trucks. How are my driving? The exact one, eight hundred number say this guy just swerved right in front of me. The same. Okay. Okay. I didn’t know that the only seek. I guess you can outsource that. Obviously through a provider. Okay. That’s. Interesting. Um, all right. So as not surprising, your pointed leadership is key in terms of policy setting and andrea lee. Not just policies, but but the tone, right? I mean, you want you need to be perceived as unethical moral leader of this organization. Yeah, absolutely. And that should sort of be embedded in everything that an organization does. Its values should come out in all of its policies and its practices. And i think maybe the second part is really important because we could all have. I’m like the seinfeld at the sub with the rental cars. Anybody can take a reservation. But it’s, whether you can keep the reservation that’s important than here, it’s the same thing. It’s, uh, you know anybody, khun develop or, you know, download some policies and say that there the policies of our organization. But if the board takes the tone at the top and really enforces it and you know, just by even giving a presentation in front of your employees and volunteers and anybody else to say without accusing them, but say, you know, integrity is, you know, our life, blood and here the things that we want to do to preserve our integrity on dh, you know, having anti broad policies and whistle blower policies and strong internal control that’s all part of it and displaying it out in front of the staff and employees, i think that’s that’s just very important preventive measure that i think is very, very effective as well. But you also have mentioned the other part of this which is enforcement, if a nem ploy e steps over the line and transgresses somewhere, do we covered up on dh and try to rationalize on their behalf? Well, you know, we don’t pay them enough for are they having family problems, you know, or do we deal with this the way the policies call for and and you know and in a strong way hyre waiting as a lawyer, i liketo after one way and that’s like let’s comply with law let’s, make sure we report it, get our money back way. Have to take reasonable steps to do that. But when i reversed the question to you, tony tone, if you were serving on the board of an organisation and you found out that your executive director has gone through some incredibly hard times and suddenly had the opportunity and under such pressure that, you know, she decided to borrow ten thousand dollars with the intent to pay it back by the end of the month. But she didn’t, and she got caught doing that. Now, is that something you want to report to the police and, you know, have it all come out in the newspapers or do you want to do something else? First of all, i want to go on record saying, i hate when you turn these questions back on me. I want that to be said explicitly, i don’t like it one bit. No, i would i would be pretty stern. Yeah, well, do i want the publicity’s you mentioned, you know, reporting it to authorities? She certainly if this is a fireable offense, whether she paid it back or not, you can’t borrow money from the organization unless the board approves some kind of alone. And then there have to be arm’s length arm’s length terms to it, a market rate of interest returned so oh are paid back, so you can’t just borrow privately and then whether you pay back or not with interest or not it’s not right if it’s not approved by the board. So to me, this is a fireable offense. Now, would i go to law enforcement? I i probably would, but i would want to know whether this needs to be something that’s going to be made public. And if they can’t a sure something private oh oh then then i wouldn’t want to pursue it with them. I would i would talk to law enforcement, but i would i would want some kind of i don’t know if you could get a guarantee maybe maybe this is maybe it’s naive to look for, but that’s what i would want because i would not want i wouldn’t want this to be public. Yeah, and that’s the tricky part, isn’t it? Because non-profits are supposed to be very transparent with what’s going on? And they in fact have to report to the irs and the form nine ninety whenever there is a significant diversion. Of charitable assets, whether recovered or not. So wait have to report they might not report the name or the position of the person that diverted the assets in the form nine, ninety that might be a bad idea, and if they don’t have absolutely, you know, substantial evidence that that this person actually committed it and just had strong suspicions about it, then they have to be careful of defamation. So, you know, you want to approach this very carefully, but way sort of concoct also the facts and circumstances of when it would be appropriate to go to the police when it might be, you know, appropriate not to when it’s right toe hyre person and i agree in most cases, i think, you know, and an executive would have lost trust here sheer he had done that, and, you know, it would definitely be interminable effects come, but you know, if it’s going to go out to the press, that could ultimately damage our mission and our ability to, you know, conduct our charitable programs and benefit are beneficiaries and do i want that to happen, you know, depending upon the offense, maybe it’s mia kulpa, i’ll you know, fall on my sword and they will do a better job next time, but maybe it’s not covering up. Maybe i just don’t want to make a big deal out of something that i think may have been small and may have been preventable, and then something that we could easily fix so tough questions, but okay, i mean, i would agree that it should be disclosed disclosed the way it’s supposed to be, and you’re saying there’s a requirement toe reporter on the nine, ninety then i would i would do so what i meant by being circumspect about talking to law enforcement, although i said i would, but, you know, doing it cautiously was i’m trying to avoid the press, but now if somebody later on reads it on our in our nine, ninety, which is a public document, then then i would say, you know, yeah, way we dealt with it, we fired the person, and we disclose that the way we’re supposed to because you just get you discovered the disclosure you read our nine, ninety, we just chose not to go to the press, but that’s, you know, a way we don’t have. An obligation to do that isn’t isn’t that sufficient transparency? I’m turning back. Yeah, i’m asking you. I think so. You know, a cz longest year transparent where you have to be. So the nine, ninety is where you’re required to go, whether you’re required to go to the police and report a crime committed against the organization that you know, that that’s actually amore involved issue. And you may not always have to go to the police, you know, especially under the circumstances that gave me that may not be something that you go to the police for, especially if you get the money back. But it may absolutely be interminable offense that you want to terminate your executive and feel like you’ve lost all trust of that person. Oh, yeah, but anything that goes to the police has the potential for going out to the press and it’s, not the organization. That would probably bring it out to the press. But somebody else that gets wind of that story in the public record. That might be part of the police from your okay. Okay, i understand that you have some ideas about some some red flags that would suggest that there’s a hyre potential for fraud in an organization let’s talk about some of those. What were some of those? Well, i guess the three what what are identified? The three conditions that exists for when fraud takes place and charitable assets are lost is when somebody has the opportunity to divert those assets, somebody may be experiencing some outside pressures from economic situation. In our example, and somebody khun rationalize it, for example, maybe they sabelo i’ve been underpaid for five years of working here on whether it’s, you know it’s justifiable is not is not the matter, but they’re sort of self rationalized it in their own heads and windows. Things exist that’s when fraud occurs and the red flags air, having things like very poor internal controls, an environment where everybody is so trusting of one another that there are no double checks. You know, andi, um, there’s excessive control by an executive director who has the right to make dispersement without anybody looking over, you know, for his shoulder when you do have underpaid staff. If if your staff has been underpaid for a number of years and you’ve got disgruntled staff members that might be a bad sign if there’s a lack of attention paid by the board and the lack of financial management experience. Buy-in leadership. Maybe. Program directors have always been sort of raised up to lead the organization’s, because they have the highest profile and the most respect. So the programmatically. But maybe they’re not the best financial managers, and they don’t know how to spot thes problem areas, or developed the right procedures and policies to protect the organization. That’s where things go wrong, okay, we’re going, tow. We’re gonna go out for a break for a couple minutes, and when we come back, jean and i are going to keep talking about fraud and some ways you can prevent it. Aside from policies like training, for instance, so stay with us. You’re listening to the talking alternative network. What? Have you ever considered consulting a road map when you feel you need help getting to your destination when the normal path seems blocked? A little help can come in handy when choosing an alternate route. Your natal chart is a map of your potentials. It addresses relationships, finance, business, health and, above all, creativity. Current planetary cycles can either support or challenge your objectives. Time. Montgomery taylor. If you would like to explore the help of a private astrological reading, please contact me at monte at monty taylor dot. Com let’s monte m o nt y at monty taylor dot com. 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. Talking alternative radio twenty four hours a day. Lively conversation. Top trends and sound advice. That’s. Tony martignetti non-profit radio. And i’m lawrence paige, no knee author off the non-profit fund-raising solution. Welcome back to big non-profit ideas for the other ninety five percent to get some more live listener love huntington station, new york joined us welcome and pompel oak in the philippines. Welcome, philippines. If you’re going to, you’re going to listen regularly put, let me know howto say hello to you in your native language. I like to do that. So if you’re going to come back, which i hope you will put on the facebook page or or twitter, let me know how to say hello to you. Okay, jean, let us continue with our ah what do we what’s? The euphemism for this diversion of charitable assets? Discussion? Yeah, um some training. How about you mentioned it casually? Let’s, let’s spend a little time on some prevention through training. Terrific. Well, i think again, just identifying the problems for employees is a big part of this. The solutions that you can have towards fraud prevention, letting them know that you know that there are risks of fraud and that you’re taking steps to to address him is a good thing. So just having the training in and of itself is great, but what you should do in the training is another kind of area where you could really help yourself if you’re an organization and i think part of it is tio have the staff included in identifying what the potential risks are to the organization, on the ground on the ground. They may be the ones who best know the areas where the problems are or where possible. Fraud can take place where employees or an executive khun misuse the organization’s assets, not just their funds, but perhaps there taking equipment or inventory home on dh things of that nature, training them on internal controls, the implement policies. We talked about enforcing policies but training the fact how tio implement the policies is also just critically important. So and doing that in the training as well and doing it at all levels trained the board, train the staff and make sure your executive particularly is trained on how to spot brought on how to try to prevent it. Let’s talk about something that’s very common, like it’s. Kenny petty cash metoo reimbursements. Where do you think the you know the balance is between burdening somebody with substantiation versus trying. Teo, make make sure we have the right, internal control around our our cash is i don’t know it is one hundred fifty dollars, beyond that is it has to be done by check or something. I mean, you know, give me help me out with the petty cash reimbursement problem. I think the big problem with petty cash is allowing petty cash to go out without getting receipts coming back in, and then we’re talking about a five dollars, starbucks copies and, you know, we’re not so worried about if it’s a one time deal. But if people are starting to take from petty cash to buy office equipment like a printer, the fax machine broke down. We have three hundred bucks for a fax machine, and you’ve got that petty cash lying around and proper receipts are not brought back in. Um, that’s that’s a big problem in a very, very easy way to commit fraud. Another easy way to commit fraud is to make up expenses so somebody could say our fax machine broke down in tears. You know, jnj repair services, here’s the receipt for, you know, one hundred twenty bucks, and you just keep seeing that same vendor come up over and over again. The fax machine seems to break down. Yeah, right. Yeah. Or now. J and j does plumbing now all of a sudden, because the because the urinal, the urinal, the middle urinal is not working in jay and jay. They fixed it for us. Make sure that works. Well, they’re very talented. Well, i’m not saying that you well, you still have one on either side. I said was the middle one. So you still have the one left on the right. But jay and jay is, you know, a multi disciplinary. Ah, provider. Yeah. And actually, acronyms are very, very easy way for organizations to commit, or people to commit fraud within organizations. And, for example, if the organisation’s name has an acronym, that anybody could make up a side business or company and use the same acronym, the donors that are donating checks, teo jnj charity may suddenly find their checks being diverted and, you know, put into j and plumbing account. Have you would not know any different. Have you seen this with with clients? Have you had to deal with fraud and any of your client organizations? Yeah, usually after the fact tony’s after the frog has taken place, and the organization’s air tryingto get back to speed and know what to do next. That’s, that’s, often times where we will come in. So are you called that the crisis stage, like where it’s just been discovered, usually right after that. So there may. There may be somebody else who deals with the first level crisis, and then we’re come. We come in after, okay, any any story you can share anonymously. I always get feedback from listeners that they love stories. Any anything you khun say, that they’re being there, be a lesson learned. Um, good question, you know, there there are times when we come in after an embezzlement ah heard and and, you know, the board may have not always been paying the most attention, teo what’s been happening, so i think that learning lesson in all of this, andre, actually, from you’re learning lessons that may come up with that the board that was asleep at the time on allowed their organizations to be victimized by by fraud have got to really stand up and do something to fix that and that’s just to show to the public that they are, you know, an organization that is trying to put the best use of their their money, and they don’t let these things just look away very easily. So putting in the right system’s putting in the right people very, very important, and we’ve written some opinion pieces for the chronicle of philanthropy on the i don’t know if you remember the three cups of tea case tony yeah, vaguely. Yeah, we just have about two minutes left, jean, but yeah, go ahead, summarize it. So so basically thie executive and the founder of an organization had been using organizational assets. To promote his own book and book tour, getting very, very substantial monies for that an organizational assets were used for those purposes. Eventually he came into some sort of settlement with the attorney general of the state to rectify it. But the board it ended up looking very poorly on and had to go through a bunch of steps to re mediate that they had let it gone too far and for boards to say, hey, let’s, now talk about these things. They’re all sorts of articles, the press loves to jump on them and fraud, and, you know, if we look at fried and overall businesses, we’re talking about average organizations losing five to six percent of their total revenues to fraud, and if we took that and looked at total non-profit revenues and said the same ratio applies, we’re talking over ninety billion dollars a year, so fraud is a big deal. I don’t want to overstate the case, but fraud prevention is a big part of the board’s responsibility we talked about tone, the tone of top and just making sure that they’re exercising their fiduciary duties right at the start. It is really important, we have to leave it there. That’s a perfect place to leave it. Thank you very much. Jean takagi. He is managing editor of neo non-profit and exempt organizations law group in san francisco. You’ll find his popular blogger at non-profit law block dot com and on twitter he’s gi tak gene, thank you very, very much. Thanks. Have a great day. Thanks. You too. Next week on archive show because i’ll be at end now. Ntcdinosaur the non-profit technology conference getting amazing interviews with lots of smart people just like we did it become at and t cme already fully booked with conversations about data, the cloud your boards like c r m i don’t like econ isms. Yeah, i don’t like akron isms first because they don’t exist. They also don’t like acronyms. So of course we’re talking about constituent relationship management on social media to, of course, that at ntc, i’m gonna leave that conference with, like, twenty interviews to play very soon. And that is next week. Wednesday get there. And then thursday and friday doing the interviews rally bound and t brc keep them in your thoughts and prayers. They support non-profit radio. Please thank them. And check them out. Rally bound, dot com or triple eight seven six seven nine o seven. Six t brc dot com, or to one two, six double four, nine. Triple xero. Our creative producer is clear meyerhoff sam labor, which is our line producer. The show’s social media, is by julia campbell of jaycee social marketing and the remote producer of tony martignetti non-profit radio is john federico of the new rules. Our music is by scott stein. A special shout out to julia campbell of jaycee social marketing. Welcome, first week produced promoting the show. Glad to be working with you. Be with me next week for non-profit radio. Big non-profit ideas for the other ninety five percent. Go out and be great. You don’t think shooting. Good ending. You’re listening to the talking alternative network, itching to get anything. Cubine 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. Hi, i’m lost in a role, and i’m sloan wainwright, where the host of the new thursday morning show the music power hour. Eleven a m. We’re gonna have fun. Shine the light on all aspects of music and its limitless healing possibilities. We’re gonna invite artists to share their songs and play live will be listening and talking about great music from yesterday to today, so you’re invited to share in our musical conversation. Your ears will be delighted with the sound of music and our voices. Join austin and sloan live thursdays at eleven a. M on talking alternative dot com. You’re listening to talking alternative network at www dot talking alternative dot com, now broadcasting twenty four hours a day. Have you ever considered consulting a road map when you feel you need help getting to your destination when the normal path seems blocked? A little help can come in handy when choosing an alternate route. Your natal chart is a map of your potentials. It addresses relationships, finance, business, health and, above all, creativity. Current planetary cycles can either support or challenge your objectives. I’m montgomery taylor. If you would like to explore the help of a private astrological reading, please contact me at monte at monty taylor dot. Com let’s monte m o nt y at monty taylor dot com. 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. Talking. Hyre

“Demystifying Charity Registration” at The Foundation Center

 

Foundation_Center

On Tuesday, March 11, I’ll deliver Demystifying State Charity Registration Laws at The Foundation Center in New York City. We’ll go from 10am to noon.

Here’s registration info. It’s free!

These are the requirements in 49 states and DC, that you be registered with state authorities in each state where you solicit donations.

If you have a “Donate Now” button on your site you’re soliciting in at least half the states. Likewise, if you send email or US Mail solicitations or host events where someone asks for money, you’re soliciting in the states where your messages land and the events take place.

Here’s what you’ll walk away knowing:

  • how to protect your officers and board by getting into compliance
  • what these registration laws are
  • why compliance is more important now than it has been in the past
  • how to know where you need to register
  • how exemptions work
  • specifics of New York state registration
  • a plan to prioritize and get started

Along with a colleague, I delivered this a few weeks ago at The Support Center. An attendee wrote:

“Well done, useful & timely workshop. This issue is lurking below the surface and should be made better known.”

I agree. I’m working on it. 

Someone else believed the program, “Might help our clients evaluate where to focus their registrations.” Cool. I always have consultants in the audience.

I promise you’ll walk out knowing a hell of a lot more than you know now. I hope you can be with me!

Here’s registration info. It’s free for Pete’s sake. 

My slides are below.