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Nonprofit Radio for February 3, 2025: Your Grantmaker Relationships

Shoshana Grossman-CristYour Grantmaker Relationships

 

Shoshana Grossman-Crist leads you through the pathway of relationships with institutional funders. She reveals her advice on how to build and maintain relationships before you apply for a grant; while your proposal is under review; after you’ve been funded; and, while you’re doing the work. Also, what if the foundation denies your proposal? Her company is Social Impact Compass.

 

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Welcome to Tony Martignetti Nonprofit Radio, big nonprofit ideas for the other 95%. I’m your aptly named host and the podfather of your favorite hebdominal podcast. And oh, I’m glad you’re with us. I’d be hit with gastroenteroptosis if you brought me down with the idea that you missed this week’s show. Here’s our associate producer Kate to tell us what’s up this week. Hey, Tony, this week it’s your grantmaker relationships. Shoshana Grossman-Christ leads you through the pathway of relationships with institutional funders. She reveals her advice on how to build and maintain relationships before you apply for a grant, while your proposal is under review, after you’ve been funded, and while you’re doing the work. Also, what if the foundation denies your proposal? Her company is Social Impact Compass. On Tony’s take 2. For our listeners whose funding was uncertain last week. We’re sponsored by DonorBox, outdated donation forms blocking your supporters’ generosity. Donor box, fast, flexible, and friendly fundraising forms for your nonprofit, DonorBox.org. Here is your grant maker relationships. It’s a pleasure to welcome Shoshana Grossman Crest through her company Social Impact Compass. She helps NGO grant teams exceed their annual fundraising goals. She leverages her extensive experience working on both sides of the funding process to yield client results that range from growing grant funding from $15,000 to $300,000 over two years. To 10Xing their donations from individuals. Shoshana is on LinkedIn and her practice is at socialimpact compass.com. Shoshanana Grossman Kris, welcome to nonprofit radio. Thank you so much, Tony. And welcome from Mexico City. Yes, it is great to be connecting with you from the other side of the border. You just moved there a couple of months ago. What, what is it that draws you to Mexico City from, uh, from Vermont? Great question. I fell in love with Latin America quite a few years ago actually I took a gap year before college and I realized that Latin America chills me out. I’m very type A and I’m a happier person when I’m living in Latin America and my career has always been focused on community development and nonprofits and NGOs and so this is where I started that path. Have you lived in other countries, Central, South America? I have, so, oh gosh, um, started out that gap year and half of it in Costa Rica and then Ecuador and then I spent some time in Argentina with an internship with the government ended up in Kenya, um, studying abroad and then I have lived in Mexico City on and off since 2007. There have been some other places sprinkled in there too. We lived in Guatemala 2 years ago, and I’ve also spent extensive time in India. I’m probably forgetting a place or two, but in a nutshell, that’s about it. That’s very impressive a global, a global, a global resident outstanding. What what is it about Latin America? So you’ve been to lots of places you’ve been to Africa as well as Asia. What is it that that makes you less type A? What is it about Latin America draws you in specifically? You know, I could never put my finger on it other than that people enjoy life and they work to live rather than living to work. And then a number of years ago I saw a graph that charts out GDP for countries and happiness. And basically more money correlates with more happiness until a certain point at which you’re pretty good on money and then it doesn’t really impact your happiness. Latin America is an outlier in that graph and so it’s significantly happier people are significantly happier than you would expect for the GDP. So maybe that shed some light on it too. It’s admirable, yeah. All right, very interesting. Thank you. All right. Well, congratulations on uh just having moved to Mexico City. You said, uh, you told me off mic, uh, 2 year lease, right? You’re there for 2 years? That is exactly right. Outstanding. And what time zone is Mexico City? So it depends what time of year it is because Mexico, uh, like much of the global South, does not go through daylight time. So right now we are 1 hour behind East Coast time, but sometimes we are 2 hours behind East Coast time. OK, so central or mountain or from North America, right, right, right. We’re talking about grant maker relationships. Uh, let’s, let’s just a threshold question, make sure that these are even, uh, I hope the answer is yes, otherwise it’s gonna be a very short, uh, short episode, like, like 5 minutes. Um, these are, these are possible. We don’t just, we don’t just apply. I mean, we can, we can actually get to know people behind the institutions. This is all feasible and doable. They are possible, not always, but often. And You don’t have to have a connection to be able to make a relationship. You don’t need someone to introduce you. There are other ways. OK, all right, we don’t need an insider. We don’t need a board member who, we don’t need to know a board member in the foundation, but, OK, we can come cold and try some, right, some, some folks are not gonna, some foundations, I guess, are not gonna respond or respond coldly, I suppose, but we can, we can make the effort, we can make the outreach. Uh, without knowing an insider, lots of people come to me and they say, hey, I’m looking for contacts. Can you, you know, introduce me to people? Can you introduce me to people and foundations? And I say there were 86,000 foundations in the US alone. There’s no way that I know someone at every foundation that’s gonna be right for you, or even at a handful of foundations that are gonna be right for your organization. And and we can get into that question later of of of right for your organization and where you should be trying to build relationships but at the end of the day that’s something I want people to walk away with is knowing that you can build that relationship you can open the door and create the relationship. It takes work, um. It takes finesse, but it’s definitely possible. All right, good. Then, then we can spend more than 5 minutes. That’s that’s good. I’m glad. So these are not essential though, right? If we’re, if we’re not able to build a relationship, we still can go ahead and uh make the application that we think we’re, we’re suited for the, the, the work of the foundation. In most cases you have to look at what the foundation is open to. So if it’s an open call for proposals, absolutely submit your proposal if you don’t have a relationship. If it’s a you submit a a general expression of interest on the form on the website, absolutely. It may even be an email that you can send along with a couple liner on the kinds of work you do and where you see alignment. Um, so most of the time you can still submit something. There are places that say no, and then we have to respect that. OK, I just don’t want folks to get discouraged in their relationship attempts. If, uh, if, if an organization isn’t forthcoming, there’s still a good likelihood that we can, we can proceed. Um. Absolutely. I usually tell organizations always try first to create a relationship, to build a relationship, and if that doesn’t work, then just send something along. OK. Yeah, very concise. Uh, you have some principles of building relationships. So what I guess let’s sort of take it chronologically. What, what is our first outreach look like? We, well, we’ve done our research, we, we’ve, we’ve identified that we believe our work aligns with the funding priorities of this hypothetical foundation, which, which should we make it a, should we make it a. A private uh uh private family foundation or should we make it a public foundation, which is right, that, that seems a little more intimidating too. I, I, I just, uh, to me it sounds like it would be harder to, uh, it sounds like a little more closed, uh, institution. Maybe, maybe I’m wrong, but all right, let’s, let’s go with it anyway. private, it’s a private, it’s a family foundation, um, midsize, you know, it’s not, uh, it’s not, it’s not enormous. Uh, multi-billion dollar endowment, but, uh, you know, they’ve got a couple $100 million endowment, something like that, maybe, uh, a couple $100 yeah, a couple $100 million dollar endowments. So, We’ve identified, we, we’ve done our research proper. Let’s just assume that that there is alignment in fact. I’m glad you’ve done your research because there are many, many outreaches that happen where people have not done their research. So let’s double click on that and say, right. Is that, but maybe we shouldn’t assume it. All right. You have to, you have to make sure that you’re aligned with the work of the foundation. You better you better you better flesh that out for us. Many foundations will share that they when they have open calls for proposals for example and so this is just the numbers we have to give us an illustrative example open call for proposals, maybe 25% of the proposals they receive do not meet the basic criteria. So then we can assume that that research is not always happening or that we’re not always sure what alignment means. And so, So that we have this piece under control before we move on, I’ll share a few things that we always need to double check. One, obviously thematic alignment, 2, obviously geographic alignment. Right, so are they working on the top, you know, do they fund the topic you work on? And do they fund in the area that you are working in? Also, are they funding where you are registered, so they might only fund organizations registered in your state or your country or not. But then also things like. Are they looking for something scalable, innovative? These are really loaded terms and You need to understand what they mean to that funder. To that funder scale might mean replicate in some additional counties in your state, or it might mean we want to reach 10 million people across the globe. They might use the same language to say we want something scalable and replicable, but you’re not actually gonna know what that actually means and if you align until you look at the kinds of things they’ve been funding until you look at their website or their 990, the 990 might be the easier place to look for a private family foundation, um. And you can see who they funded before and you can see if the kind of scale those organizations are are having reflects what you’re doing or what you’re looking for similar thing for innovation. So there’s, there’s the more concrete checklist you need to have, but there’s also that sixth sense. So that’s some initial guidance on making sure you’re right fit before you’re reaching out, otherwise you’re just gonna kill yourself reaching out to a million and 1 foundations that aren’t gonna be the right fit. Yeah, or, or even not a million and 1, but you’re, you’re squandering your time anyway. Right, all right. Uh, OK, thank you. We’ve done that. We’ve we’ve done it, uh, successfully appropriately. Uh, now what? I don’t know anybody. I’ve, I’ve given the list of board members of the foundation and employees of the foundation to my board and nobody knows anybody. What. What do we do? Well, the fact that you have a list is a great starting point because those people can be found in a couple of different ways. One is LinkedIn. They’re all individuals, probably a lot of them will be on LinkedIn, and you could send them a, a connection request always with a message, right? You get I think 200 characters on LinkedIn, uh, message requests, and you can send something like hi, uh. It is so and so from it’s Shoshana from Social Impact Compass. I’ve, I’m really inspired by the work of this foundation. I’m seeing some synergies and would love to connect, can write more once we’re connected on LinkedIn. So you indicate a little bit that you’re a real person, you’re writing to them very intentionally, you see some opportunities. And you were doing your homework and you’re willing to put in the legwork to share some more once they connect. It piques some curiosity too. It makes them more likely to to accept your invitation and then once you’re connected you can send them a follow up message or uh there are some great, um, before you, before you leave LinkedIn, I wanna say that uh. Before we started talking, I sent you a LinkedIn connection request without a note. I figured you would know who I am. So I, so I didn’t, I didn’t include a note. So I hope you’re not gonna turn me down because I didn’t include a note. I promise not to, Tony, but we’re existing. This is existing relationship, different situation. We, that’s true, but you still, I don’t, I don’t know how hard and fast you are about the, uh, sending a note. I think it’s a very good idea to send a note, but you know, I was, I was thinking about what we want to talk through and I thought, oh, we should connect, make sure we’re connected on LinkedIn because that’s our preferred social. So I just, I did it without a note. So don’t, don’t turn me down. I promise. OK, thank you. It’s time for a break. Imagine a fundraising partner that not only helps you raise more money, but also supports you in retaining your donors. A partner that helps you raise funds both online and on location so you can grow your impact faster. That’s Donor Box, a comprehensive suite of tools, services, and resources that gives fundraisers just like you a custom solution to tackle your unique challenges, helping you achieve the growth and sustainability your organization needs, helping you help others. Visit donorbox.org to learn more. Now back to your grant maker relationships. Beyond LinkedIn direct messages, where were you gonna go? Yeah, there are some great free services online that will let you look up people’s contact information. Um, Hunter AI, for example, is one of them, hunter.AI, I believe it is, um, there are a couple others. They give you maybe 25 free searches a month. Other than that, you can pay a subscription and you put in the information you have on that person and you can often get their email address, particularly if you know what uh foundation they work at or if uh you know what company they work at, and then you get their email address. And then you get to send a longer message than that 200 character LinkedIn uh outreach that some people may or may not see because some people have a LinkedIn account and they haven’t been on there in 2 years so uh we may need some alternate strategies and. That email Is going to want to do a few things. One, similarly, it’s gonna want to pique their interest. 2, it’s gonna want to show you’re a real person, and 3, it’s gonna want to um So you’ve done your homework, and 4th, a clear call to action or a request for a next step. Now, one of the things that’s really important in these outreach emails, it’s cold outreach email is To make it more about them than about you. Oftentimes in the nonprofit space, we are so in love with our work and we’re so passionate about the impact we’re having that we focus on Our organization and the amazing things we’re doing. Hopefully we’re also focusing on the need that we’re addressing the problem that we’re solving. Unfortunately, that’s not enough when we’re reaching out with a cold contact because we’re humans and all humans, it’s about me, me, me, me, me. And so that means that this email needs to talk more about them than it’s gonna talk about you. It’s gonna talk about what made you catch, what caught your eye about their work and their foundation. You’re gonna wanna talk about other work that you know that they fund that’s similar to the work that you’re doing. You might wanna talk about some commitment that they’ve made or a place where they spoke recently or something you saw the the family speak about in the case of a family foundation if maybe they gave a talk at a Rotary Club and you found the, the uh recording online. You want to show you’ve done your homework, you wanna show that there’s alignment, you wanna show that what you are doing. Offers the potential to get their mission further faster. Basically you’re positioning yourself as a great ally to them. Now, in the case of a family foundation, it might be a little more on the touchy-feely side than if you were talking about a Ford Foundation, a Kellogg Foundation, um. Where they have very clear theories of change and indicators are trying to meet and these sorts of things which you should talk to in that case. In the case of a family foundation, it might be a little more on the touchy feely side of things about the change you’re you’re making in the world and how you’re helping. So you also wanna talk to the try to speak the language of the person that you’re you’re writing to. So that email might sound something like. Hi George, hi Nancy. Um, I am Shoshana, the founder and CEO of Social Impact Compass, and I am reaching out because I was really inspired when I saw the, the change that you are driving on. Ending hunger in sub-Saharan Africa. I was particularly mot motivated by your. Collaboration with XNGO and the way you’re supporting innovation. In the region. Here at Social Impact Campus, we are also working on that issue. And doing it in a different way. The reason this, this is unique because of A. Or B and it’s. It’s This is going to be a game changer because. We think there’s a lot of potential for synergy or collaboration here. We would love to hop on a 30 minute call with you. And get to know each other a little bit more, and if it makes sense, explore what collaboration might look like. Do you have time for a 30 minute call in the next month? And then you might choose to sign off with, even if you don’t, do you mind just letting me know you got this email? That’ll really help me know if I need to follow up. Thanks so much, Shoshana. That’s great. You just think that’s outstanding. You just dictate. You put yourself on the spot. I, I would have felt bad if I had asked you, what should it say? But I didn’t. You, you, you put yourself on, you took it on, took the burden on yourself, and you dictated, uh, a template, uh, email. Outstanding. Thank you. Thank you. My pleasure on behalf of our listeners. Thank you very much for that. Um, and you included the call to action. OK, could we jump on a call? So this would apply whether it’s a staff person or even a, a board member of the foundation. How, how are we reaching out to staff and board or should we just restrict it to staff of the board? I’m sorry, staff of the of the foundation. I think staff is a great place to start because it’s their job to respond to you. It’s their job to be sourcing great projects. If you don’t get response from the staff, then I think the board is a great plan B. And when you reach out to the board, it’s probably gonna be a little less structured than what I just shared, a little less. Um Um, it’s gonna be a little more conceptual. I see some great alignment. I’d love to know about your engagement with the board, where you see the organization heading, some priorities, um, we think there might be a match, but before we engage directly with the organization, I would, I would love to hear, hear from you, hear about the perspective, um. Here what priorities you see the foundation focusing on and how you think we could potentially engage with the foundation. I love how you edit as you’re as you’re speaking. It’s you’re real, you’re like a real editor. Um, OK, and of course the board member might refer you to a staff person, but that’s fine, right? It’s a it’s. Absolutely. I talk to one of our officers. Perfect. And then that officer is probably going to pay attention to you because the board member told them to. Yeah, I was, I was referred to you by, uh, Shoshana Grossman Krist, uh, your esteemed board member who does real-time editing on podcasts, and she recommended that I speak to you. Yeah, yeah, so, yeah, drop a name, right? I mean, isn’t that the way to do it? Absolutely, absolutely. I think there are two things to do here. One is you want to come across authentically. And so this real-time editing made me think of that because I am not coming across as the perfect speaker who has, I didn’t come here with the template written. That I’m reading to you. I’m coming to you live. We are talking through a real scenario. I’m being a real human. It’s allowing you to see me as a real human. I’m not a bot. I’m not AI in this day and age, we don’t even know, um. And it allows you to feel that human connection and be more interested in responding. So, just as you see me editing in real time, feel free to be authentic and human. On your emails. In fact, I had a team member once a couple of years ago who was significantly younger and like just out of college, and she started her emails with high exclamation point to like cold outreach emails. And I was like, that feels very informal and really not that professional. Maybe you shouldn’t do that. But you know what? She got great responses. It was refreshing for people. And so feel free to let your personality shine through in that way. OK, instead of deer. Mr. Miss, miss, you know, something more formal. Hi, hey, like, uh, yeah, it’s like, uh, it’s like a friend. Hey, it’s a friend you see in the supermarket. Hey. Talk to them like the relationship you want to have with them. Yeah, absolutely. And then the other thing is follow up. And this is why I’ve started putting that final line around, if you don’t mind, just let me know that you’ve got this email, because oftentimes those emails do go to inboxes that no one is checking, particularly if you aren’t able to find the contact information of a specific person. So your plan C is just to write the generic contact info at or whatever that email address is, maybe it’s something you find on the 990. And I have found that they might, no one might be checking that inbox. In fact, there’s a case where we wrote to an email address. No response. We wrote to the contact us form on the website. No response. We followed up on both of those. No response. Like 6 months later we decide final final attempt we’re going to call them old school, pick up the phone turns out no one had been checking any of those inboxes. They said, we are so sorry. Thank you so much for letting us know. They ended up review requesting a proposal and approving it. So this kind of persistence and follow-up is critical. It’s the name of the game in fundraising and more so when it’s a cold outreach. All right. Um, Did we talk through your, your advice on uh on questions, getting to know you, get to know you questions? You, you, you alluded to a couple, like what do you, what do you see as the priorities, where is the foundation headed? Do you have some other advice around questions getting around for getting to know folks? Yeah, absolutely. I, once you’re on the call, I would absolutely start at a personal level. Some people won’t be open to this, and then you can read the room and move on. But this is now we’re at the next stage. We’re at the, we’re at the, we’re at the phone call now. Oh yes, yeah, I wouldn’t ask too many questions in the email. No, um, you know, let’s take a step back for one second and I’m gonna give one other tip for that follow-up email, which is You don’t get a response to the first one, very likely. To be honest, in some ways I screen my emails in similar ways. If I get a cold outreach from someone. And I’m not sure how I feel about it. I’m just gonna let it sit. If they follow up, I know that they’re serious, I know they’re professional, then I’ll respond. So that may be happening. So always have a system in place to make sure you’re following up on your emails if you don’t get a reply within maybe 2 weeks. That follow up email is great to make it a response over your initial email, and it might look like an RE and then they’ll think they’re already in conversation with you, so they’ll be more likely to open it. So now you’re forwarding your original email to them, your original email. Oh, respond over yours. All right, and then put their address. OK. Yeah, exactly, uh, no, cause you already sent it to them. So if you just click the response button, the reply button, it will just reply to them over your original email that you sent them. No, it’ll reply, it’ll reply to you because you wrote it. No, it won’t, it will reply to them. Oh, I always do that by forwarding the original email, and then that’s how I get the RE. Maybe we’re using differences. I don’t know. I, I use Apple Mail. Maybe you use Outlook. I use Google. Google. OK, OK. I think differently. OK, whatever you need, you want your original email in the in the in the body of yours, uh, of your follow-up and you want the little RE. Exactly. Exactly. And so then your follow up can be really brief, just two lines. Hey, following up on my email that I sent you a couple weeks ago, it’s below, would love to put 30 minutes on the calendar to chat. We just last week had hit a huge milestone with our program, share some update like that, mention what it is. Are you game for chatting? Here’s a link to schedule. Some people ask me, you know, isn’t that too forward? Isn’t that like inverting the power balance if I like share my calendar, my scheduling link? It’s like, no, screw the power balance, pardon my French. And uh, we’ve had much worse than that on nonprofit radio, don’t worry about that. And and reduce any friction. Give them an easy way to schedule a meeting with you. So that would be my recommendation. OK. And how many times would you follow up? You’re not getting responses. How many emails, how many, you send the original, how many follow-up emails would, would you, would you, do you recommend sending? You know, Tony, I have a feeling we might spend this whole podcast episode just on getting the meeting, and I’m not opposed to it. There’s just so much to unpack here. I love it. Um. I like detail, you know, I like action steps that people can take and talk through with their VP or take take if they have the authority themselves, move ahead. Yeah, I would like, I like details. Great. So there’s a term called professional persistence, which I love. Joanne Sonenshein um is the one who I heard that from, and The idea is follow-up works, follow up is important. Don’t feel bad following up if you do it in a professional way. Oftentimes when we send an email, we feel like. I made a personal connection to you. If I call a friend and the friend never calls me back after I left him a message, I might be insulted, especially if I follow up. So by the second time, I’m kind of feeling hurt and I’m not gonna follow up again. I’m taking it personally. That is not how we can think about cold outreach because these people don’t have a relationship with us. So what if we use a different framework and we think about the marketing rule that you need 7 touch points. Before a potential buyer buys. 7 touch points. So essentially, what if we think of buying as giving you a meeting? 30 minutes of their time is valuable. That is giving you, that is buying something. So, maybe you might need to do 5 follow-ups. Now, what that looks like is going to vary. So that might mean that by the 3rd 1, it’s not hey did you get my message, but it’s this article just came out about us, wanted to share. It might be, I know you work in this space. Here’s an innovation that has nothing to do with my work, but I saw it and I thought of you, let me share it. Then if they are not responding after all of that, I would send them a final message saying, Just wanted to see if you’re getting my emails, and B, if this is bugging you and I should just stop, but I would really love to hop on the phone. That’s what I would suggest. OK. And then you don’t move from email to a different channel, you just, you’re just taking that person off your, your contact list. Oh no, I’m using email in a very generic sense, contacting. So in the example before, definitely try to give them a call if you’re not getting a response to an email, you want to make sure your emails are going somewhere that someone’s reading. I think that um trying a phone call is great. I think trying to contact other people on LinkedIn is great. There’s also something to be said for you might not be the fit with that person, even if you’re the fit with that foundation and trying other people I absolutely think it’s a great idea too. OK, and are we doing these all concurrently? So are we reaching out to maybe 34 people at the same foundation? Around the same at the same time, we’re sending our initial LinkedIn DMs or emails concurrently. I don’t do that because it usually feels like some wasted effort. If multiple people respond to you, then I’m like, Oh sorry, I’m already talking to someone else in the foundation. I’ll loop back around if it makes sense to follow up with you or something like that is a way out of it. But I generally find it’s more work that’s not necessary all the time. So I would just do one at a time. OK, OK. Consecutive, not concurrent. All right, um, so let’s say we get the, we get something successful now. They’ve, they’ve, uh, jumped on our call to action. They, uh, they opened up for a 30 minute meeting on Zoom. Now you have some Advice around uh questions, you know, getting to uh opening questions, right? Yeah, absolutely. So just like in that email, you want it to be more about them than about you. In that first conversation, you want to Get to know each other, you want to understand what they’re looking for, what they’re struggling with in their portfolio of grantees right now, and the change they’re looking to see. The way you get there is through asking questions, and I recommend that you start with personal questions if you can. How did you get into this work? Allow there to be a personal connection that is built first. If they’re not open to that, OK, move on. But if they are open to that, it’s going to bear a lot of fruit later down the road. Most people like to talk about themselves. Exactly. Then once you’ve gotten through some general connection questions and oh you both discovered you lived in Kenya at the around the same time, once upon once upon a time or whatever, um you’re both motivated to do this work. From very, you know, for very personal reasons, whatever you’ve discovered, then you can start to talk about what is the organization, what is the foundation looking to do ideally before you start pitching your work, you’re gonna know what they’re looking to fund. And what kind of change they’re looking to achieve? And that way, when they ask you about your work, you can target what you’re sharing, you can tailor what you’re sharing so that it responds directly to what they’re looking for. That, that raises the question. We have to take a little step back. How do we prepare for this 30 minute Zoom meeting? First, read whatever you can read about them. So if they have a website, if they have an annual report, please read it. It’s gonna make you look good and it’s going to allow you to be much more focused in the call and actually get to a useful point by the end of the 30 minutes. Second of all. You want to have thought through based on what you’ve read about them, or learned about them through any other sources, maybe you know someone who knows someone who has an experience there, who’s been funded by them, whatever it is. Once you’ve done that, think about what do I want to share with them. What’s going to excite them, both about experiences, like success stories in the past, and about our vision for the future. Then, Say, all right, if they ask me for money, what is the number that I can share with them? It’s not I’m coming with a proposal, but generally I should be able to talk some numbers of we would love to scale to. One more state, or replicate in one more state, and this is what it would cost. And this is what it it would make possible for the community there. And then I also really recommend you come in with a plan B and maybe even a plan C. So you think that what they’re interested is in early childhood education, but maybe you on in the middle of the call you discover that they’re in the middle of a whole strategy revamp and they’re not gonna be working on early childhood education anymore and now they’re moving into higher ed or they’re moving into economic development. So, what are some other things that you could share if you are able to identify that that initial idea is not gonna be of interest to them? And then ideally, you might have a handful of slides with some visuals to complement this, that’s not necessary. But if you’re someone who um makes a good slide and, and feels comfortable presenting in that way, maybe you wanna have 5 slides that you pull up when they ask you about your work and you’re gonna take 5 to 10 minutes to share an initial introduction about your work and, and what some um what your upcoming programs are and maybe an impact story you might wanna have some visuals on slides that are just gonna make that really hit home and and be more powerful. It’s time for Tony’s steak too. Thank you, Kate. I was crushed last week. 00, we’re recording this on Wednesday, the week before the show gets out, and, uh, you know, so on, on last Tuesday, there was the freeze on federal grants and loans and then Today that they we’re recording. The freeze was rescinded, uh, you know, the, the ups and downs. Just I’m, I’m, I don’t know, I have your back. If this was affecting you. Um, I, I was thinking about you, our community was thinking about you. Um, and, and as of today, uh, I think the international grant making, uh, to organizations doing international work is what I mean like international relief and aid. I think that still seems uncertain. So, I, I don’t really have a solution, a strategy, well, I guess I have a strategy, we all need to stick together. We, you know, if this, if, if these freezes become routine or if they turn into cuts instead of just temporary freezes because this was supposedly a 90 day freeze, it lasted 24 hours thankfully. Then we all need to band together. But the community is stronger when it stays together, when we all advocate for each other or for a segment of our community. My heart is with you, if this affects you. Of course, for nonprofits that, you know, might be affected in other ways with the new administration. Seems like it’s been 6 months and it’s been 2 weeks. We’re here for you. The community is here for you. We got your back. We’ll do what we can for you. That is Tony’s take too. Kate. There’s a lot of ups and downs with change, and right now it’s, it’s only been 9 days and so much has been happening. We just have to have each other’s backs on times like this. That’s right, yeah, because it’s a, it’s a fire hose and uh. In a lot of ways, the fire hose is the is the purpose to just exhaust and distract. So, yes, we do have to have each other’s backs. Anyway, we’ve got Boou but loads more time. Here’s the rest of your grant maker relationships with Shoshana Grossman Krist. What, what, uh, what’s our goal for this meeting? What, what would we like to get out of this thirty-minute meeting? Great question. You want to get the next meeting. So ideally after that 30 minute meeting they would let you, you would have together honed in on there’s some alignment in terms of values, there’s some alignment in terms of what you’re looking to fund and what we’re we’re trying to get funded and you’ve gotten clear on which of the things you do would be of interest to them. Ideally you would have a follow on meeting to hammer out what a proposal whether a project fundable project with them would look like that may not be what they want that may not be their ideal next step and maybe then it’s an invitation to submit a letter of interest or proposal that’s also a totally fine end of meeting one. But the more information we can get before we spend the effort writing a proposal that’s gonna get a yay or a nay, the better. And again, if we haven’t reached this step with them. Still, with, with the assumption that our research is, is done accurately, uh, we, we should go ahead and submit. If we, if we haven’t gotten any response, I’m just reminding folks that you don’t have to be at this stage in order to submit the letter of inquiry or the or the proposal as long as you’re, as long as you’re complying with all their other rules about timing and length and everything like that, you don’t, this is not essential for uh for a funding request. 100%. OK, just reiterating what we said a half hour ago just in case. All right, um. Yeah, so suppose we uh. Well, where, where, where would you like to go? What’s the most challenging step? Uh, I don’t wanna make this an easy process. I want this to be a little, uh, maybe circumlocuitous a little bit. So we didn’t quite, they, they didn’t say submit a proposal or LOI. They said we need another meeting. Now, what’s the, what’s the how do we know what the purpose of the, the new meeting is? is it just to reiterate what we just did or what, suppose we need another meeting. Well, how do we know what to do in the next meeting? You should ask. OK. I think we’re very afraid of the nonprofit sector. We’re very afraid of who will I be talking to? What would we, what would interest her or him or them? Yeah, what would you like to get out of that next meeting for it to feel like it was fruitful? It’s perfect, yeah. Well we focus on you, uh, focus on them. What would you like, uh, what, what would you like to get out of the next meeting? Yeah, we feel like there’s this power imbalance and we’re not allowed to ask any questions. I’ve had organizations uh that I’ve, I’ve worked with say, oh, we had a funer come for a site visit and we never really understood why they came or what the purpose was and they left and we never heard from them again. And I think that was a great, that’s great they came for a site visit. I mean they spent time, they traveled, yeah, even if it was just across town, they traveled. They traveled and I said, well, did they ever share the objective? No. Did you ever ask? No. Ask if you need permission to ask, please ask and funders are listening to this funders, please be up front and please be clear. But if you’re a nonprofit and NGO. Please feel comfortable asking. You deserve to have this information. You deserve to have your time respected, and you deserve the clarity that you can move your mission forward as effectively as possible. So this is me giving you permission if you needed that. You have, uh, you have Shoshana’s uh blessing on your next step on, on being proactive. Um, OK, so then, let’s say it did go well after the 2nd meeting. They said submit a proposal. Uh, I don’t really want to talk about, we’ve had other folks not too long ago talk about the rules of, you know, make sure you use the right font size. They have a page limit, adhere to the page limit. Don’t think you’re special. They have time limits, adhere to the time limits. Try not to do it by midnight of the final day because your, your Wi Fi might go down or UPS might let you down or something, you know, they might have a snowstorm. And then you don’t get there on time and then you have to ask if you have an extra day because of the snow in Oklahoma. All right. Um, But I want to keep the relationship going. We want, uh, naturally, now we’re. We’ve, uh, let’s say, all right, so we’re under, we’re under consideration. We haven’t been funded yet. They have our proposal, we followed all the rules. What are we sharing that? Are we, are we stepping away? So that we don’t oversell and just let them do their due diligence or are we still keeping in touch or maybe somewhere in the middle? What what what what are we doing while during the three months that our proposal is under consideration? Great. So you just indicated some information that we always want to have, which is what does the process look like? We know in this case, 3 months. 3 months is the amount of time where you could let it sit and give them their space. Trust the process, trust the universe. But if something interesting comes up in those 3 months, if you have, um, again, you hit a big milestone or your annual report comes out, or you relaunch your website or Someone awesome said something great about you. There’s an amazing testimony that came through. Feel free to share that. Maybe one touch point with a wonderful update to keep them particularly excited, it’s not a bad idea. What if your CFO was indicted for criminal uh financial malfeasance of uh of the nonprofit’s assets? You want to play that? Why don’t you take us a little bit further along in this scenario, Tony? How would you start playing it out? Do we share that? Uh, well, I think it’s it, it definitely needs to be shared because it’s relevant, uh, it’s relevant to their decision. So even bad news. Yeah, you have to, you have an obligation to share that. Because if they go out, if they go ahead and fund you under, under a failure to failure to disclose something relevant like that, then I don’t know, you might be committing some kind of fraud yourself. Maybe it’s only civil fraud. I don’t know, but, uh, uh, yeah, you have to share bad information. So, I mean, you’re an upbeat person, uh, yeah, everything you said was positive from website to publicity, you know, whatever, but if it’s on the downside, uh, You gotta share that too. I think that that kind of direct and assertive communication is really important. We’re building a relationship and this relationship, even if you do get the money in the short term, it’s not gonna bode well for the long term. You’re gonna have a lot of repair to do. You’re gonna get through this. You’re gonna have a second, you’ll have a follow up CEO. You’ll have your blue ribbon committee that will do an outside investigation and ensure that this never happens again, as we always, you know, as we do. And then when you have your new CFO in place. Uh, you might want to very well come back to that, or that funder, and if you are Duplicitous in your first attempt. Uh, concealing bad information, then there’s no way they’re gonna consider you a second time. Absolutely. And so I think an outrage saying this happened, we wanted to let you know, here’s everything we’re doing to address it, and we would love to hop on a call with you to address any concerns you have. That’s one way to to go for it. You could also just read the room, and if you feel like this is not, this is not going to be successful, given the blow up that just happened, maybe you say, Our recommendation so that you have a chance to get to know us fully and this doesn’t become the deciding factor is we pause our application and we so that we have this year to continue to build this relationship with you and that you consider us again next year and then maybe you go back to your past funders and say here’s the crisis we’re in will you help us fill the gap this year so that we can move forward effectively. Outstanding. OK. All right. I hope folks realize I’m not a negative person. I, I don’t focus on the negative, but I just, it came to mind as you were positing all these wonderful, uh, wonderful news, newsworthy hooks that are, uh, you’d want to share. Uh, what if it’s, what if it’s not so, what if it’s not so positive, but it’s still newsworthy. OK. Um, all right, so. But we, you said we also be OK to just let the process lie, you know, if there isn’t something newsworthy that really merits their attention. It’s OK to let the let the 3 month process go. That’s OK too? Yeah, absolutely. And if it’s longer, if we’re talking like a 6 month process or a 9 month process, I do recommend being proactive about staying in touch, maybe um. Every 3 months you might, you know, maybe it’s just, it’s the new year, it’s the holidays you just send a happy holidays wishing you the best and make it a personal email or maybe it is something relevant to your organization and and your annual report or whatever it is, uh, the idea is not to overwhelm them but it’s to keep them excited and to show that you are professional and you are committed and you are passionate. All right. Uh, the stated time has elapsed. It’s now been 3 months or 6 months or 9 months. We didn’t hear back. Definitely follow up. What do we say? Uh, how long do we give them after this stated period? A couple weeks, couple weeks, 2 weeks, 10 days, 2 weeks. Yeah, sure. And what are we saying now? When did you check in? And you had shared that the uh there’d be a decision around X date. And we would love to know um if there’s anything else we can provide on our side if the decision hasn’t been made yet and there’s anything else we can provide on our side. Let us know. And That’s about it. OK, this, this particular moment is just about not being annoying and getting the information that you need. OK, OK. Could you go be a little more assertive and, you know, wondering about the status, you know, could you please Uh, please advise on, uh, you know, where our application stands, where our proposal stands. Yeah, you can be assertive. You just wanna be kind if they haven’t responded to you, uh, in time, it’s probably because they’re underwater. That’s usually the case. Everyone in the sector, both organizations, nonprofits, and funders tend to be overworked and so we can generally assume that they haven’t responded because they have a lot on their plate. And so we just wanna be that nice person who’s checking in, but we don’t wanna be like, hey, you said it was a state, we haven’t heard, please advise this is rude. Yeah, no, OK. OK, right, we’re polite, but we have, uh, as you’ve said in the different words a couple of times, you know, we have rights in this whole process. Yes, we’re, we’re stakeholders in this process. We have a, we do have a right to know, but you just don’t want to say it that way. All right, and in, in a slightly different scenario where This is a funder you do have a relationship with. Maybe this is even a follow on grant. If they haven’t responded by a date that might really be impacting you because you might be expecting this grant or you might have been, you know, have a team in place from the first year and maybe that money is ending soon and you’re not sure if you can renew their contracts or not. These kinds of things are also fine for you to share with the funder you do have an existing relationship with. You wanna share it in um. Um, in a, an assertive way, but also a respectful way, because they probably don’t have this on their radar. So if you can say, if you have any insight into the process because we will renew the, the, we will renew the contracts of the existing program staff if this is a yes. Or if there’s some significant changes to the decision making process or timeline that will impact decisions we make in the next 2 weeks if you could let us know within the next 2 weeks. That would be, that would be really helpful for us. That kind of thing is absolutely helpful and usually it’s a human on the other side. That person’s gonna respond. OK. Uh, we were successful. We got funded. Now what? Well, because we had the, we had the help of Social Impact Compass and uh Shoshana Grossman Krist advising us. So why wouldn’t we have been successful? What, uh, what now? Pick up the phone? Can you, can you, like, I do plan to giving fundraising. When someone tells us through a checking a reply card or I hear it secondhand from another, uh, from a staff member, uh, when I’m a consultant, my immediate reaction is to pick up the phone and express effusive thanks. Uh, is that, is that, is that not appropriate on the institutional funding side? It’s not quite the same, but it really depends on the relationship that you’ve built so far. So, if it’s someone who you really built a personal relationship with through this proposal process. And you have their phone number, which oftentimes we actually don’t even have each other’s phone numbers. Um, that might be something you do, but honestly, it’s probably gonna be a really excited, grateful email that you’re gonna send. OK, all right, so it depends on, yeah, it is. OK. Depends on the relationship though. All right. That’s why I do plan to giving and not uh foundation work. I’m, I’m, I’m much a, I’m a person to person, not a like institutional. All right. Uh, not, you’re not an institution, but you know, I like dealing with people, uh, people not representing, uh, institutions, people, people in their 70s, 80s, and 90s representing themselves and, you know, their husband, because a lot of the people I work with are women, so. Uh, OK. So right, really effusive email. Thank you so much. Look forward to working, of course. Uh, next steps, if they haven’t outlined anything in there, how do you usually get the acceptance? Is it, does it usually come in paper mail or is it email or it varies? Email. It’s usually an email? OK. Yeah, either email or a notification through the system, but usually it’s an email. OK. OK. All right. Um, we’re complying with everything they said to do to get the, get the funding flowing. All right? The, the payments are coming by ACH. Everything is smooth. What are we doing now? What’s our relationship look like now? That uh maybe a little different than than it was just a few months ago. This is when we sometimes get relaxed and we turn the relationship by we I mean the executive director or the development lead, whoever was managing the relationship before may turn the relationship over to the implementing team, the program’s team, say, OK, now we have a funded project and it’s being implemented by X team, they are responsible moving forward. Uh, that is a mistake, because of that team, their eyes on the prize of implementing their project well. Their eye is not on building a long-term relationship with this funder. That may also just not be their skill set. So as much as reporting and meetings and whatever are going to be through that project team, you wanna make sure that you have someone who’s tagged as responsible for this funder relationship over the long term. And so that might look like. In addition to the mandated reporting and meetings or site visits that this program project team is going to have with the funder, that relationship lead is going to make sure that if the funders open to it, they’ve been added to your mailing list so they’re generally aware of what’s happening in the organization. Be that when things that are particularly relevant for that funder. Come into the universe that they are shared with that funder even if it’s not specifically about that project, even if it’s not specifically even about your organization you’re maintaining that relationship. The other thing I always recommend is that once every 3 months that person who’s leading the relationship sits down and writes a 1 paragraph email to. Eat to the funder. That’s not a huge ask. I mean, how many grant funders are you gonna have in total in an organization? Max 25 in like a crazy making kind of world? Yeah, that’s huge. Yeah. That’s 25 paragraphs that you need to write once every 3 months. You can do that, right? That’s a very feasible thing to do. 25 1 paragraph emails that you need to write every 3 months. So you take one day a month and you do this. Max And that paragraph. Probably it’s going to look something like the following. Hey, how are you doing? How is the transition been going? I know that you guys changed your, you know, the president of the foundation last month. Just wanted to share a quick update about some really exciting things happening over here. First of all, we hit this milestone with our project, or we just heard, I just heard this testimony from a participant last week, or we just entered the field and I, you know, things are now in operation for this project. I wanted to attach a photo. The second thing you’re gonna say is, here’s what we’re looking forward to. Actually, no, take that back. Here’s my editing in real time. So first thing was excitement, something that’s happened. Second thing is, if you want to share about a challenge you’ve encountered in the project. Do that and share how you’ve overcome it or a challenge that organizations recently had and how you’ve overcome it. It makes you more real and it shares anything that needs to be shared but framed in a really positive way that you are resilient, that you are capable, that you are moving forward in this challenging world and then the third thing is something that’s coming up that’s really exciting in the organization or in the project. That’s one paragraph send something like that once every couple of months. If you have multiple foundations funding the same project, you can literally send the same email to each of them, but make it an individual email to each of them. And then you’re good to go. That’s the main thing to do. When should you hop on the on the phone? When should you meet in person? That’s all gonna vary based on the vet vibe you get from them. Ideally, you could have a once a year, you know, 30 minute virtual coffee just to connect. OK, OK, and of course if there are. Bigger challenges than you want to mention in your every 90 day email, right? You need to flag those. Here’s what we, what we intend to do to overcome. If you, if you want to discuss, you know, let’s jump on a, let’s jump on a meeting, right? Let’s have a call. OK, OK. They’re, they’re partners now in this work, so you need to treat them as partners. That’s exactly it. All right, all right. Uh, well, let’s take a step back. Well, even this happens, it’s so rare. Those who are working with Shoshana, but some people do get turned down. Some, some, some proposals don’t get funded. We didn’t get funded. What do we do? Walk away walk away tail between our legs never reach out to them again. No, I know that’s not right, but you flesh out what we should do. So first off, you want to acknowledge that they let you know a response. Some foundations just don’t respond and that’s your no and we wanna be grateful when someone does give us a response. So you’re gonna most likely hear about this through email, so you’re gonna send an email back. you would send it back to wherever you got the notification from. And copy in anyone else who has been part of this process, who you met with earlier on in any of these meetings or who you had been in email contact with um previously. And you’re gonna thank them for letting you know, and you’re gonna thank them for the incredible work that they’re doing, and you’re gonna express all of the good wishes that they, the projects that they did select are really impactful. And you’re going to ask for feedback. That’s the next thing you’re gonna do. If they haven’t explicitly said that they don’t give feedback, you’re going to ask them for feedback and you’re going to say, do you have 20 minutes to jump on a call and share feedback? So really help us know if we should apply to you. In the future, if it makes sense for us to apply to your foundation again in the future or and or to strengthen our proposals to other foundations in the future if you don’t have 20 minutes, do you mind just sending off a line or two with why we were not selected in any feedback you have? You’re giving the option. Mhm, or let’s just do it by email quicker. OK, OK. Um, and then from there, based on what you hear, if you don’t hear anything back, follow up. If you hear back, look, you were so unaligned, you did not do your research. Oh, that’s probably you should let that one go. If you heard, look, we loved your work. It was actually quite well received by our committee, but at the end of the day there were just too many proposals, and this didn’t make it to the very top of the list. There are other projects that offered more bang for the buck, that were, you know, seemed more innovative, bigger scale, whatever it is. And you say, then you respond and say thank you so much, this is really helpful, we’re gonna take it into account. And I would love to keep you up to date. You maybe share an email once every couple months. About what’s going on over here, so we, if in the future it makes sense to collaborate, if in the future we’re a better fit for funding, that that door is open, are you OK with that? So ideally we’re gonna ask for their permission to keep them up to date. And then, and my guess is this is the same in planned giving, right? You, there’s a lot of asking for permission. We need to, it’s a relationship. We can’t just be like bombarding someone who with unwanted things for too long. So, so we’re gonna ask for that permission and then we’re going to keep our word and so just like we hopefully follow we responded to their email within a few days and. Um, we thank them for their feedback within a few days. We’re going to do that follow up and we’re gonna make sure we have the systems in place and the people responsible internally to do that follow up. Maybe it’s something where you use Asana and you put a recurring task in your Asana or your Monday.com or whatever you use to to manage your tasks, um, and so every 3 months it pops up that you’re supposed to, you know, follow up this person. Maybe you put on your calendar that the first Monday of every month. This is what you do. You do follow ups to funders that haven’t responded or updates to funders who um you said you would, you know, keep apprised of what’s going on or your current funders. So there are, there are a couple different ways to do it, but um. But that’s gonna be really important to to continue to have that relationship if you think you can bump into them in person at a conference, for example, if you know that they’re gonna be at a conference that you’re gonna be at, uh, do make that effort before you go to a conference to look at the list of registrants, see who’s gonna be there, think about who you want to engage and and ideally send them in a message or an email beforehand and say, hey, just how you’re gonna be there. I will, I’m gonna make an effort to run into you, or say, hey, I see we’re both gonna be there. Do you want to find time during your coffee, you know, is there a day during a coffee break that you want to have coffee together? It’ll be great to actually meet in person. Conferences are great for building a personal relationship into an existing professional relationship. Excellent, excellent. All right. And uh, my final question. Talk about leaving ego. Uh, out of this, when, when we, when we didn’t get, didn’t get funded. Ego. Where to start? Think the ego can be about us as people, and it can be about our work. We can take it personally that our work wasn’t selected. And At the end of the day, that’s not gonna help anyone. Unfortunately, there is ego in this world, even when our goal is to make the world a better place, there is ego. So, we need to check that. And we need to come from our the place of being our most authentic selves because that’s what’s going to to engage more fully and so you could say in an email if you were rejected you could say thanks for letting me know we’re really bummed we were really excited about this program but I understand that the competition is fierce. And, and, and maybe that’s a way to be true to yourself and your feelings while you are being authentic and respectful and keeping the door open and and and strengthening the bridge, honestly, for the future. Do you have other thoughts on this? No, I don’t even have thoughts that deep. Mine, mine were basically just, you know, it’s not personal. Uh, it’s, it’s not even a professional. Reflection of the work you’re doing, the quality of the work, the, the value of the work, it’s just that you didn’t align with their, with their priorities. I mean they have priorities and you have work. The two didn’t, the two don’t work out. It’s like, you know, it’s like a, uh, I don’t know, you can analogize it to, uh, trying to buy a home, you know, you want a home, you meet a bunch of people trying to sell a home, you make an offer, sometimes they take your offer and sometimes they don’t. It just doesn’t work out. You, you have, you have similar interests. It’s just that this deal didn’t work out, and I’m not a, I’m not a transactional person, but, you know, it’s just some things work out and some don’t, and that. It’s not, it’s not a reflection on your, of your, the value of your work, or certainly of the value of you as a person. It’s just that The two are not aligned and maybe and this time, you know, it’s not even like a house because you get to come back a second time. If the feedback is that it was a very it was very close, but you know the way you phrased it, other, other projects were more compelling or more innovative or scaled faster, you know, you’re welcome to come back. You can’t, you can’t do that usually on a house sale. So I generally agree with you, but I would add a caveat, which is to say it might not be that you’re just not aligned. The fact that you didn’t rise to the very top might be that you still have some growing and learning to do in how you’re presenting your work and how you’re responding to the funder’s priorities. And so there you need to check your ego and say what can I learn from this? How can we improve in the future from this? There’s an organization that I worked with who who regularly for 6 months asked for feedback after every proposal, and they didn’t get feedback every time when they asked for it maybe only 1 out of every 4 requests, uh, turned into feedback, but those 1 out of every 4 requests over the period of 6 months turned into they heard the same feedback 3 times and that told them that this was an area they needed to strengthen. So, See what you can learn, see how you can grow. Don’t take it personally on an individual level or about your work. Understand that some of it is just part of the game and some of it is part of the growth. And see the growth opportunity. All right. So, so it’s not to end with, uh, you know, what to do when you don’t get funded. Leave us, uh, you’re suffering with a lackluster host, you know, the things, things are not organized, we’re over time, it’s a disaster. I’m surprised you’re still with me. Just overall, you know, leave us with some uh some institutional relationship. Uh, inspiration. Relationships with funders can evolve in ways we don’t expect when we build that foundation when we enable it to when we enable it to be a relationship and not a transactional experience they can then be excited and connect us with other funders they can then invite us and put us on a panel where we get. Visibility in front of other funders they can we can you know they can turn to us when they need guidance about a local situation or help mapping other potential grantees and we can play that role for them and in some ways return the support that they’ve provided to us so there’s a lot that is possible when you sit first in that human relationship. And when you treat it like a garden that you really do care for and tend to and water. And not like an human ATM machine or an institutional ATM machine. So there’s a lot of possibility here and it can feel really good. You can feel like it can feel like you’re running into a friend. It can feel like you have a partner. You can feel supported rather than feeling like you’re reporting to someone who’s judging you all the time. So there’s a potential to totally shift the way you’re engaging with the funder and how the relationship feels if you do it from this perspective. The garden is a wonderful metaphor. Thank you. Shoshanana Grossman Quist. You’ll find her on LinkedIn, uh, but if you want to connect, don’t make the mistake I made, you know, send a note. You’ll find her there and you’ll find her practice at socialimpact compass.com. Thank you very much, Shoshana. Thank you, Tony. This is so much fun. I really appreciate it. I’m glad, my pleasure. Next week Yeah, we’re working on it. If you missed any part of this week’s show, I beseech you. Find it at Tony Martignetti.com. We’re sponsored by DonorBox. Outdated donation forms blocking your supporters’ generosity. DonorBox, fast, flexible, and friendly fundraising forms for your nonprofit, DonorBox.org. Our creative producer is Claire Meyerhoff. I’m your associate producer Kate Martignetti. The show’s social media is by Susan Chavez. Mark Silverman is our web guy, and this music is by Scott Stein. Thank you for that affirmation, Scotty. Be with us next week for nonprofit Radio, big nonprofit ideas for the other 95%. Go out and be great.

Nonprofit Radio for April 3, 2020: Build Your Grantmaker Relationships

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My Guests:

Amy Berman, Caitlin Mitchell, Daniel Werner,  Anthony Sanchez & Christine Kang: Build Your Grantmaker Relationships
Our panel of grantmakers and a grantee reveal savvy strategies for building and maintaining relationships with your institutional funders. Foundations are made of people. How do you get close to them? This is a panel I moderated at The Foundation Center in New York City. Back when there was a The Foundation Center. It’s now Candid.org. (Originally aired February 16, 2018)

 

 

 

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[00:00:06.34] spk_0:
Okay.

[00:00:58.72] spk_1:
Hello and welcome to tony-martignetti non profit radio. Big non profit ideas for the other 95%. I’m your aptly named host. Oh, I’m glad you’re with me. I’d suffer the effects of follicular assis if you made me go lymph with the idea that you missed today’s show. Build your grantmaking relationships. Our panel of grantmakers and a grantee reveals strategies for building and maintaining relationships with your institutional funders. Foundations are made of people. How do you get close to them? This is a panel I moderated at the foundation center in New York City back when the foundation center existed. Uh, so, uh, going back couple of years? Um, that’s it. That’s all I got to say about that On Tony’s take to 20 ntc thank you’s were sponsored by wegner-C.P.As guiding you beyond the numbers wegner-C.P.As dot com by Cougar Mountain Software Denali Fund Is there complete accounting solution made for nonprofits tony-dot-M.A.-slash-Pursuant Mountain for a free 60 day trial and by turn, to communications, PR and content for nonprofits, your story is their mission. Turn hyphen to dot CEO. Here is the start of build your grantmakers relationships.

[00:05:40.86] spk_2:
We’re here to talk about collaboration and impact collaborate an impact. And our panel today is gonna focus in the collaboration. We’re gonna be talking about the relationship building of collaboration, that aspect of collaboration between non profits and the funders. All right, Most of you are in non profits potential grantees and most of our panel are the funders. So I have vidi admonished is too strong a word. But I have urged them to keep their advice, you know, relevant for potential grantees. How can each of you, in your non profits collaborate, build relationships with potential funders and even even when even when you get a no from a funder, what can you do after that? Our concern is that this is seen is proceeding to transactional. It shouldn’t be transactional. Your relationship with potential grant oars potential funders can be parallel to the work that you do in individual fundraising in each of your individual program. Because funders air made up institutions are made up of people and we know people fund what they believe in. So how can you build the relationship, keep the relationship strong even in the face of a rejection, and thereby collaborate with your potential funders which hopefully will become your funders. It’s my real pleasure to introduce our winning panel. Beginning with your on your left is Caitlin Mitchell. Caitlyn is a program and evaluation officer with Empower the Emerging Markets Foundation. Their work is around at risk youth in emerging markets in Colombia, Mexico and South Africa. Next, moving to your right. Dan Werner Dan is Social Justice program associate with the darkest foundation. Their priority is LGBT social justice, and we have Amy Berman. She’s senior program officer at the John John A Hartford Foundation, and their work is around improving, improving the health of older adults. Christine Kang, associate program manager at Project Sunshine. She is our sole Panelists who is among you apart part of the non profit 501 C three community, and their work at Project Sunshine is direct support to pediatric patients and their families. And Anthony Sanchez welcome. Anthony is corporate social responsibility manager at American Express. They’re three priorities around CSR or preserving historic places, developing new leaders and encouraging community service. Each of their fuller bios is outside. Please give a warm welcome Thio tunnel, please. Now, um important to know about about Christine and Anthony, they’re actually they could be holding hands. American Express that Americans press is funding project sunshine. So we brought we brought to the panel one team that is actively collaborating. All right, so keeping with you know what I I, uh I said is our purpose. Today, we’re gonna talk about relationship building, so I’m gonna I’m gonna start with The most basic basic question means we’ll start with Caitlin, creating strong relationships with funders again for our our audience of small and midsize non profits. How convey what’s one or two ideas that come to mind about creating that strong relationship at the outset at the beginning of a potential relationship?

[00:06:05.45] spk_3:
One unique thing about power is that we strive to and have the opportunity to fund an organization for up to 10 years. And I say that because when we enter a collaboration with new organization, there is not the idea that the organization is going to do everything perfectly, but there are a few characteristics that are really important to us. Um, the first I would say is just honest communication. I’ve had a number of grantees over. It’s inevitable that you will have adversity that something won’t go while ago won’t go as planned. And as a program officer in charge of managing our relationship, the most helpful thing to me in the kind of like star grantees versus ones that are a bit more difficult,

[00:06:33.49] spk_2:
we want to be star granted. Yes, we are just

[00:08:03.54] spk_3:
goes who communicate. Um, explain that. You know, there are delays in the project often most of the time for very legitimate reasons. And in addition to that, not only say, you know, unfortunately, Caitlyn, there’s been a delay or we weren’t able to do this activity but also have already problem solved around how to either overcome that challenge and or a different activity. So one grantee in Oaxaca, Mexico the end of their year long program, which was a leadership training for a group of 20 young people, was to take them to Mexico City. These are young people who had never really been out of the municipality in which they lived in right before. A few weeks before they were supposed to go to Mexico City, there was extreme violence in their community, and a lot of parents rescinded the permission for their young people or their their Children to go. So six of 18 that were planned to go were able to go to Mexico City. And that would be a big sort of like, uh, what’s going on. Um, but when they approached me, they said, Listen, only six of 18 could make it. We still went on the trip. They still did all the activities and we did a camping weekend closer to the community in which they live. They live where 16 of 18 were able to participate. We still went through the leadership training. We had hoped for the themes, the bonding that took place. Um, and they still had that sort of new and broadening horizons experience.

[00:08:25.48] spk_2:
And then we’re gonna have a chance to talk about some examples of impact. We’ll definitely get to that. So, yeah, basically, it sounds like you’re suggesting honesty. If there’s if there’s tribulations. If there’s trouble, let your funder. No. Yes, I have a non profit radio. I host this podcast. We gotta keep it to an hour. So we got a concise.

[00:08:56.14] spk_1:
It’s time for a break wegner-C.P.As so that your 9 90 gets filed on time so that your order is finished on time so that you get the advice of an experienced partner. Uhh doom and Affirm that has a nationwide non profit practice with thousands of non profit audits under its belt. Wegner-C.P.As dot com Now more of build your grantmakers relationships.

[00:09:03.21] spk_2:
Then what? Aside from being honest about potential problems, adversity, What else? Where else could we do again? Looking to try and look at the outset way? We don’t even have a relationship yet. It’s up to you. But early on, at least

[00:09:14.04] spk_4:
No, that’s great. And I wish echo

[00:10:58.04] spk_6:
exactly what was just said. I would also say, um, from the outset, you’re a new grand T and speaking from From Position the foundation, right work and some of the other foundations that we partner with speak raving. But a new grantee is ah is a new, amazing relationship that your program officers excited about and the foundation is excited about. Um, another dynamic within foundations is to not overbear helicopter in and try toe add too much burden onto the grantee because we know that your work is paramount and we don’t wanna sit there and constantly be asking you for updates, because we know that you’ll probably be sending that in a report. So I’d say Take the onus and agency, too. Um, reach out to us and share updates in the interim. We love when we get interim updates. If you’re, um and I’ll keep it quick with this story. We have a grand t out in the rural area of California, and the rural areas of California have more of, ah, um, kind of economic climate of the US South. It’s not all L a and, um, the Bay Area. We get updates about winds that they get at the local school board level and within the local court systems. And we love hearing those stories, and we share them throughout our foundation on and it goes all the way to the board level. So I would just say, Be open and honest with us and feel free to reach out. And don’t think there, that they’re the big foundation black box and we will send them a report later.

[00:11:36.38] spk_2:
Yeah, awesome. Open honesty and even reporting when it’s not required. Correct? Right. You’re welcome. You’re welcome. Those okay? By the way, let me also remind each of you if you don’t have the mike. You can still speak. You’ll be hurt by this. This fancy omni directional. So you’re welcome. You should have it yet. But if you If you make some quick or something, you’ll be hurt. Okay? So keep it clean. It’s gonna be it’s gonna be heard. It’s gonna be preserved. Please let me burn. What? Advice for the starting that relationship real strong.

[00:13:27.24] spk_7:
So I’m gonna go to before you’re even a grantee. Andi, I agree with everything that I’ve heard so far. But before you’re a grantee, this is your opportunity to really understand who it is you’re gonna be meeting with. And you should be meeting with the foundation that you want to get to know or go to an event where you know that they’re going to be. And you should know enough about number one, their mission, the kind of grants that they do. Because when you talk about the work that you want to dio, it has to fit within the strategy of that foundation. But I’ll tell you, even more than that, you need to look at the language on that website. So you know, you’ve heard some hints here you’ve heard you know, words like workforce or words like social justice. Use those words in describing what you do. If your work relates to that area, convey what you d’oh and what your interests are within that kind of language and context that will make it easier for you and the person that you’re meeting with sometimes for the first time, to see where the fit ISS. Now maybe the person is going to get where the fit is without you having done your homework. But it’s your job to really make that fit apparent. So doing your homework in advance is really helpful. And one thing that I would suggest the first time that you meet with the foundation don’t hitch an idea because that one idea may be the thing that is not within what they can. D’oh. Let them get to know you and the range of things that you d’oh that will be the best entry. And one of the biggest mistakes that people make is they come in with a very specific pitch and their other things that we then didn’t get to talk about. And that’s the thing that would have been the right fit.

[00:14:11.20] spk_2:
Are you starting to hear the parallel between your individual giving and your potential institutional funding? Who goes into a meeting first, meeting with a potential donor and solicit? It doesn’t happen. You get You have to get to know them. Amy’s Amy’s advising. Not only do your research, but very well your first meeting not be the pitch and again parallel with your similar to the work you’re doing in the individual fundraising. It’s

[00:14:11.68] spk_7:
kind of like asking

[00:14:12.62] spk_3:
something you’d marry you

[00:14:23.94] spk_2:
wear. That really is talking. That’s what I’m doing wrong. I realized 55 years to hear that. All right, Christine, please.

[00:15:49.84] spk_5:
So I’m for our relationship with American Express and then other relationships. What we’ve learned is to is, and I think why we’ve been so successful is that as a non profit we take, we tried really hard to understand the funder. So and previously I actually was at a foundation, so I kind of have both lenses too. But it’s so it’s exciting to have the two perspectives, but I think it’s sometimes he deceived. Think of funders that oh, they have all this money and power, So I’m just going to go in and they must be able to do X, y and Z. I think there’s a lot of assumptions and and expectations that come with that relationship. But to think about the relationship from the point of view of how can I be helpful? What is tthe e funder going through? How can I How can we make their lives easier while also maximizing our impact? So it’s not just about I need this from younger. I want to get X. I get why. But okay. What? How can we create a conversation around? So for us at Project Sunshine, we focus on pediatric health care. So we always start with the child in mind. But we can’t do the work we’re doing without are amazing partners, our funders, our corporate partners. And so, while making sure that they understand our mission and the work we’re doing to ask them, okay, So that how can we make your life easier? So I think starting from that.

[00:16:34.20] spk_2:
And doesn’t that sound like something you would ask? Maybe not in those exact words, but parallel again in your individual fundraising. What is it about your work? What is it? I’m sorry What is it about our work that interest you that motivates you? That moves you? Um, and what’s in terms of suggestion? How can we make your life easier? Are there different methods of giving that we could talk about? Maybe a plan to give to makes more sense for you. Maybe it’s structured over a period of years. Maybe it’s a one time outright gift. Maybe it’s a gift of something other than cash gift in kind someone some other kind of asset. So you know, again the suggestion. How could we make your life easier? You’re always thinking about how you can help your donors to make gifts to, you know, see these parallels Anthony, please.

[00:17:35.63] spk_4:
So just to add what toe What Christine said, I think it’s important to set expectations, right? So on the corporate side, I mean most CSR teams in a corporation, it’s probably a group of 6 to 8 people at American Express. It’s a it’s a team of 10 and we’re basically responsible for engaging over 50,000 employees. So it’s hard to do that right. So we look for partners who can help us. We can help them with their objectives and to, you know, help with their mission. But on the other hand, we also expect them to engage our volunteers, right. So setting that expectation is important because it’s a win win situation. So we’re helping the non profit achieve their goals. But we’re also engaging our volunteers. So I think setting an expectation upfront, it’s super helpful,

[00:17:47.98] spk_2:
and your collaboration involves a lot of volunteer work, a lot of service work by American Express employees. We’re gonna get to that that grants aren’t only in the form of money by any means. Let’s open it up now we’re gonna come back, come to questions periodically through time together. How about questions on this initial round of

[00:18:10.23] spk_3:
Hi, Um, I was wondering how open funders are, too, like meeting new people like cold calls, your email or phone call like how approachable would you say you

[00:18:10.85] spk_2:
are? How open to new relationships. This is perfect. It’s exactly We’re talking about what you know, with the beginning phases of the relationship, how open are you to increase? Sounds like everybody has something. Say, uh, Amy, Good Michael. So pick them. I can’t.

[00:19:03.12] spk_7:
It’s it’s really important. That’s a big part of my job. Yeah, I’m constantly meeting people, you know, My area is around aging. It’s around care of older adults. So I am on the road as a national thunder. I’m on the road, probably almost every week. I am going and meeting with people. They have very easy access to May. If people are committing their life toward doing this work, I’m committing my life toward them because my foundation’s mission is to do this as well. So I’m completely accessible.

[00:20:26.94] spk_6:
Damn. Um, yeah, I would I would say that in our experience, we are one of the largest LGBT funders. So we get a lot of requests from us based for global Funders Well, from US based organizations and we Similarly, when we have a team of of six or so so we just don’t have the band with. And one of the one of the things I hate about my job is knowing that me and my team really don’t have the bandwidth, even though our way have open on initial funding concept submission so anyone can send them in. We all do look at them, but we don’t have the bandwidth to have that special touch and tell people. Oh, but this local foundation in Seattle area is doing X y Z, so I would say, Just keep at people. Find out where those funders in those spaces go. When we attend conferences and other things, you catch people in a different mindset. They’re not running the meetings. They’re not doing their grant right up. So I would say catching people in different spaces, as opposed to the cold call is one avenue you could you could employ. Okay?

[00:20:59.46] spk_3:
And I would just say as a both of do in a don’t is because in power, we are open to hearing from from perspective organizations. But do your homework ahead of time and make sure so empower supports work in 15 emerging market countries. We say that on our website, we list the country’s make sure it’s a country that you work in is one that we support. We support work with at risk youth ages 10 to 24. If you’re working with the elderly or with Children, we’re not the right organization. So in general, Aziz was saying, we tried to respect our grantees time, and hopefully the idea would be that then sitting organizations or are granted partners will also do their part, too. Respect our time

[00:21:20.74] spk_2:
if I tell you that initial

[00:21:52.69] spk_4:
really agree with that? Obviously, like I mentioned before, it’s very hard to, you know, answer every email, answer every inquiry. So doing research. I think our website is really good at providing. As tony mentioned, we support three different pillars, but it it’s a good place to start because it provides a list off sample projects that we’ve supported. There’s also an eligibility quiz. So going back to what hates that, um, it helps you figure out whether it would be a good match or not, because through that eligibility quiz, you know, if you were to select, you know you’re in a place like Arkansas where we don’t have a large employer employee base. That probably wouldn’t be a match because we like to support organizations and specific regions, especially, you know, where we have a large employees head cow and and, you know, our biggest market. So doing research is it’s super important.

[00:23:26.56] spk_2:
Yeah, So you’ve heard this a couple of times now. So what do we do on the individual side called prospect Research? You got to do it on the institutional side to you don’t want to embarrass yourself by, uh, it’s a failing to send a letter of inquiry. If that’s part of the That’s the first step that a funder once so don’t miss step by not doing your research. Let’s move the relationship on a little bit now. We’re not We’re not at the inquiry stage. We’re not at the opening stage now. We’re funding your, uh you’ve selected grantee. How can we keep the relationship strong now? We already heard Report when it’s not necessary to keep us involved. Some steel. You can’t repeat your idea. You gotta come with multiple ideas. That’s why you’re here. Way also hurt. Share adversity, tribulations, difficulties along the way. What other advice? Again? Keeping the relationship strong. Now that we are funded, who wants toe? Anybody could start. Okay,

[00:24:25.24] spk_3:
11 thing that could be a challenge. But I think is also easy to find. A potential volunteer for that really makes a difference. For us is around honestly high quality pictures of the work that you’re doing if you have a really active social media page and the reason is that we are not in and down foundation. So we report our donors about the work that we’re supporting, and it’s really helpful. And unfortunately, some of the grand teeth like it featured the most are those that have really great documentation of their own work. So not every organization can hire it’s owned photographer, that’s for sure, but I think that’s a good news. That may be a volunteer who wants to come learn more about your program. If they have, you know, photography skills could be a really great way. Just just yeah, raise awareness about the work that you’re doing. And, yeah,

[00:25:14.34] spk_2:
can I suggest that maybe it doesn’t always. It doesn’t have to be high production value to be moving and show impact. I’ve seen cases where, uh, people who are benefiting from the organization’s work do you sell do selfie videos and, you know, with some really simple editing tools that could be really compelling so they might go on for 12 minutes or so. That’s too long, but I guess the point is it doesn’t have to be high production value necessarily to convey impact, use your social media. Obviously, we all know how important video is how compelling that could be. Storytelling through pictures as well. Uh, you know, let them let them know what the work is that they’re paying for. Please, Dad.

[00:25:50.29] spk_6:
No, no, Andi, keep it quick. Might sound very simple, but I know when I was in very early in my career non profit that didn’t have much of a development office capacity. But now I know being on the other end how important. Make sure your funders are on your email list. So when you send out everything about programmatic aspects or big announcements that, you know, all of your funders are getting those updates. That way you could focus on your work. And that way, funders are also updated.

[00:26:21.95] spk_2:
Follow them on Twitter. Follow your funders on Twitter. I mean, it sounds basic, but it might get overlooked. Facebook, you know, fan their facebook page, etcetera, etcetera connect in ways other than what? Uh, what? They’re what they’re requirements are for, you know, quarterly or semi annual reporting or something, you know, connect beyond that again. Relationship building. Right. You’re doing it on the individual side. Do it on the institutional side as well. You got something in my wife’s name is Amy. So you suffer. I don’t feel like I’m sorry. I

[00:27:09.51] spk_7:
Okay, so the other thing is about your expectation for us. And you know, it’s important that you have an expectation for us. There are people. There are foundations that, you know, everything kind of goes into a black box. When, when I’m developing a proposal, I actually work with the grantee on the development of that proposal. So I’ll edit it. It’s not a black box, it’s an intentional act. So once we’ve decided we’re going forward, it is a very intentional act. But once you have the grant, the other thing is to consider me as a part of the team. So include us in convening Sze, invite us. We may or may not be able to go, but we also have the ability to write and speak. I’ve given congressional testimony on behalf of grantees. You know, we are We can provide you with more than just grants support. We can actually provide you with elbow grease. We can be helpful to you. We can even bring other funders to the table. So the more you engage with us as a grantee, the more helpful I can be for you.

[00:27:37.28] spk_2:
Excellent examples. Excellent. Thank you, kid. You wanna you wanna add?

[00:28:10.43] spk_5:
So I know we’ve been talking about social media and videos and high tech stuff. So what I think, though, that that’s very helpful, I think. And I don’t know, old fashioned is just a meet in person. So for Anthony and I had breakfast today before we came here and we try to make it a point to remember that for organizations, companies that there’s a person there that you’re talking thio cool. Maybe just got married or so to to also build a relationship around the person, not just the institution. It’s a thing.

[00:28:46.14] spk_2:
Yeah, said earlier. Institutions are made up of people. I mean, how how plainer can we make the comparisons t your individual fundraising program? It’s the same. It’s the same strategy keeping, keeping, informed, inviting. You invite your major donors to things invite your institutional. Your funders, like Annie said they may or may not come, but the invitations should always be out there. They should be getting all your press. All your tweets, et cetera. You know I can’t drive home way

[00:30:43.69] spk_1:
need to take a break. Cougar Mountain software. Their accounting product Denali, is built for non profits from the ground up so that you get an application that supports the way you work that has the features you need and the exemplary support that understands you. They have a free 60 day trial. It’s on the listener landing page at now. Time for tony Steak, too. The 20 NTC. The non profit technology conference was terrific. I hope I’m pre recording this a month before NTC. Thanks so much to Cougar Mountain for sponsoring non profit radio at the conference. I do hope that the booth we shared did not get torn down because you forgot to pay the bill. I doubt that that happened. Um, I’m sure I reminded you that the payment was due, and I’m sure you hadn’t paid it. At least I hope, Assuming that you did, I I do. Thank you so much. So let’s assume that you did so thank you to Cougar Mountain and the guests, all the many guests that I will have captured, uh, last year it was 70 knows more than seventies like 80 85 in 36 different panels or something so comparable numbers. Thank you. Thank you to the guests who took time at 20 ntc to come by and be interviewed for non profit radio. And of course, you listening. We’ll get the benefit of that for months to come. I’m gonna have 20 NTC panels. Thio play. Thanks so much to the intense staff. They’re always accommodating. And this year, I’m sure well, have been It was that the police Kwame Perfecto will of a future perfect will have been perfect. We’ll have been very, very accommodating as they always are. So thank you to any sample, Ward CEO and all the staff at n 10 that is. Tony. Take ju. Now let’s go back to build your grantmakers relationships.

[00:31:46.89] spk_4:
So on the corporate side, it’s about being, you know, you guys being flexible, right? Because, yeah, I can support you through grantmaking and providing volunteers. But there’s also other opportunities, so I always make it. Um, I always make the effort of engaging non profits where our affinity groups at American Express, because that if your woman empowerment organization, um, there’s always a way to connect with employees and other ways, right? So will offer volunteers, but We can also bring awareness to our employees. And they could make individual donations through our employees giving campaign or through our dollars for doors program. Or maybe it’s an opportunity for you to come in and speak to a group of women and just bring more awareness. So the relationship doesn’t just have toe. And at grantmaking were always big, expanding that relationship and helping you as much as we can.

[00:32:11.25] spk_2:
All right, this is a time we’re gonna turn thio storytelling I want I want to turn to some examples of how these strong relationships have impacted work on the ground. You used any example? You like one of your one of your grand T organizations? Let’s start with Anthony and Project Sunshine and And why don’t you talk about the work that goes beyond as you were just saying, Perfect intro Don’t be on money.

[00:34:07.81] spk_4:
So, um, we started our partnership with projects ensuring back in 2010 and our biggest challenge at that moment was engaging those. I mean, we’re American Express. We have several call centers throughout the U. S. And it’s harder to engage those employees who are, you know, their job is basically being on the phone, being in a call center. So we were looking for ways to engage these volunteers because, let’s be honest. Most employees want to go out and volunteer, but the challenge is finding the time, right. So not every employee has the luxury of going on park and planting a tree for four or five hours. So we thought, Why not start this partnership with ah, Project Sunshine? Who? Christine can talk more about what they dio create these care kids that are prepared in house. Esso employees don’t necessarily have to leave the office to volunteer. Um, it only takes one hour. We started our partnership back in 2010. Immediately. We got a huge response because again people felt like they were able to give back without having to invest so much time. Um, fast forward. I think two or three years later, the success of the program helped us build a case to go back to our leaders and say, Hey, this is a great partnership. Were engaging more volunteers. We expanded then to other locations. Um, and we’ve been partners now for seven years, and we’ve engaged over 7000 employees in the last couple of years, and we’re now internationally. Last year we started a partnership with Project Sunshine. So it’s finding ways of thinking of all your employees population, right? So those who don’t have the flexibility and I think that’s what works well that projects on China heard the challenge that we were having. And they did a great job at finding a solution for us,

[00:35:04.40] spk_2:
especially if you’re talking to corporations. Think broadly again, of course, because we said your first meeting is not gonna be the solicitation. You’re gonna make some enquiries. So after you’ve done your research on the Web site, maybe talk to some other organizations that you know they’re funding. However, however you go about your research, especially talking to corporations, you want to think about volunteerism because Anthony’s point is, and please do want a volunteer, and that often is a part of what companies want to give. So it’s more than the money, especially not only limited to companies, certainly, but especially companies don’t think just about, you know, dollars. Okay, so So how are your work? Is pediatric patients supporting them and their families? And how are these sick kids and their families benefiting from

[00:37:57.10] spk_5:
that great question. So we the healthcare landscape is constantly changing, and oftentimes the child, the patient, they’re stressed and terrified parents. They’re siblings kind of get missed. And so what we do is mobilize volunteers to really provide and come around the child that the parents, the family and to treat them the way that if we were the child, the parents or the sibling, we will wanna be treated. And so we do a number of different programs we provide in hospital based parties, bringing the joy of childhood into the into the hospital setting, letting kids be kids what we do. That’s one part, the part that we work with American Express and a lot of our corporate volunteers with its Are Sending sunshine program. So the Sending Sunshine program really what’s designed kind of with, I mean American Express was a big part of that. It’s office based volunteering, so volunteer corporate volunteers in their own offices get to Assam. Assemble these craft kids, so that’s a standalone craft that we sent to over 300 hospitals and medical facilities so that if you mean you can imagine if you’re a child and you just broken leg, You’re in emergency room. You’re gonna be there for four hours and you have a lot of stressed out doctors, child life specialists. They able to grab these and give give them to a child to decrease their anxiety, to decrease their even boredom to the end. To the the sibling who may be with them and and the care giver is a moment to breathe. So that’s one of the the activities. We also create these things called Sergi Dolls, which are medical play dolls. And we’ve make there’s research behind them about using these dolls to help empower Children to understand the treatment that they will be going through. And when I first joined projects on China’s sick does, this is really make a difference. And the overwhelming answer from our partners is yes, we have a wait list then. So clearly there’s a need there and the and that the need for on the hospital side for these Children, families that it’ll line so well with our corporate partners. I think it’s it’s kind of it’s amazing this win win that Anthony was talking about so over, I think with the last time we checked over 45,000 Children. Families received these craft kids or Sergio dolls that American Express employees put together, and one recently was around the hurricanes. So the we had sent American Express has a South Florida region regional area and Soviet made a bunch of craft kits sent them to a hospital suspected by the hurricane. We received this amazing quote phone call for my child life specialists who said You saved our lives. So basically, American Express volunteers saved our lives because we received, I think, something like 100 and influence of 150 Children, families who were clearly distraught and stressed. And the first thing they did was grab as many of these yellow projects on Shane bags that our volunteers put together as they could and went from chaos to calm. These were her words. Chaos to come immediately.

[00:38:24.14] spk_2:
Christine, how do you convey that message to American Express that they would feel the impact of their work?

[00:38:37.72] spk_5:
So we did have a phone call with Anthony, and we do try to. So we have a great development team that does a lot of social media and we’re trying to try to provide photos, reporting all the things that we had talked about on this panel so that we could make sure that our corporate incorporate partners feel that yes. So we did for that specific one. We were on the phone

[00:38:53.30] spk_2:
and then Anthony, you fed it back to the actual employees. Actually,

[00:39:45.87] spk_4:
it’s such a satisfaction, right on our employees and those who volunteer because you see the immediate impact, right? So it’s not like going on like a community center and painting a wall blew right. There’s really not much impact that you see there. Yeah, you paint the wall. But with these care kids, you know, if 100 volunteers create 1000 kids, you know that they’re going to get to 1000 kids who need them. So every time I post the Projects on Shine Project on our Internet site, it sells out in a matter of like five minutes like out get flooded with e mails because again, it’s a good way for employees. Thio just donate a now our of their time and see the immediate impact that these attacks

[00:39:53.44] spk_2:
I could tell Caitlin is burning toe and something will come back.

[00:40:51.11] spk_3:
I just wanted Thio say this is an example of where that sounds like a phenomenal volunteer opportunity, where it’s both beneficial, and it’s a meaningful volunteer opportunity that’s beneficial not just for the volunteer but also for the organization. I just want to say this is one of those moments or feel free to push back against your donor, where if they’re really excited and want to send volunteers your way, and it’s actually going to create more of a headache than be helpful or if you work in a context where it’s not appropriate. Tohave Caitlyn as, ah White, 32 year hold American Coming in, I’m thinking internationally, but with at risk youth are more sensitive populations. Feel free to say no because all too often I think organizations, especially if it’s a donor asking feel required to take on those volunteers. And sometimes it’s it’s more trouble than it’s worth there,

[00:42:41.06] spk_6:
Um, a shining of ah story that wouldn’t repeat that some of the themes that we’ve already heard and I, um, I’m reminded of a grand T partner of ours, that it was actually same grantee that I mentioned working in the rural areas of California. Uh, They’ve been a grantee of ours for 33 years. So not, you know, like a historic one for us, but not a baby. And we have had an amazing relationship. They send us that the updates we’ve met curated this relationship. We took a tour of the Central Valley of California. Seeing all the work they’ve done. We bought our CEO of our vice president. We met Dolores Huerta, and we really got to see their work after that site visit. You can tell that the relationship kind of tipped a little bit. Uh, you could tell that we had a shorthand. We had a common connection and fast forward to two weeks ago. The head of the project is doing great work and they’re trying to scale their program. We shopped this pro, this program director to the Ford Foundation to the Open Society Foundation and to an anonymous donor that works in this space. We introduced them thio like mine and thunders that we know here in New York City because we know that their work is so amazing. You know, in the rural areas of California, kind of far away from big foundation institutions, except for the California Endowment. So that’s that’s a story that I that I love, that I don’t think that maybe a lot of grantees would think to say, Please introduce us to your other funders. You might think that is a no overreach or going past, but I think you can get a read on that relationship once it reaches that tipping

[00:42:55.05] spk_2:
point. That’s something I’m sure a lot of organizations you wouldn’t even think to do. Introduce us to your other funders.

[00:43:32.35] spk_1:
It’s time for our last break turn to communications their former journalists so that you get help building relationships with journalists so that your call gets answered. They pick up the phone for you when there’s news that you need to comment on because they got the relationship with you so that you stay relevant in your work. Including they are former journalists at the Chronicle of Philanthropy. They understand the community. There are turn hyphen to DOT CEO. We’ve got butt loads more time for build your grantmakers relationships.

[00:43:37.53] spk_2:
You got a back story.

[00:46:35.53] spk_7:
I do have an impact story. So, um, in the foundation world, the most popular areas to fund our the arts, education and Children, and my foundation does not fund that. In fact, out of 105 1000 foundations in this country, only six air primarily focused on older adults. So very, very small group of funders that do work nationally in this space. And we really care about creating a JJ friendly health systems. You know, how are they gonna be responsive to older adults caring about serious illness and end of life and also about family caregivers? So one of the grants is here in New York City. It’s the center toe to advance palliative care. It trains people to provide care and make sure that they haven’t the obscure planning so that their, you know, their goals are what the care is that they get at the end that they relieve suffering. They make sure that people have the care that they need when they go through very serious illness, even when they’re gonna get better from serious illness to help them get through that serious illness. And so the kinds of impact this work has had, um, today palliative care is in roughly 90% of hospitals nationally. That’s huge. It only came to this country in the 19 eighties. We have been a long and sustained funder in this space, and we may be slowed a warm, but we tend to be a longer and sustained thunder around impact. Theo. Other thing was there were very few funders that were interested in this space. Does anybody remember the death panel conversations? Okay, well, thankfully, we’re not having a lot of those today. But there were very few funders that we’re doing focused work in this area. So I decided I was going to start having calls. This was not with the grantee. This was on behalf of the grantee. I wanted to create a safe learning space for foundations that might be thinking about this. They wanted to learn. And so what’s happened with that? We now have a very large collaborative. People are more strategic. They know people that they want to fund. We fund together some things we fund next to each other and other things. Things past year, about $80 million in new funding was in this space. And this is on behalf of the grantee, the grant. He could not have had those calls, but it was necessary to begin Thio bring people into the space. And now they’re coming out of the woodwork. We actually did a grant to give somebody money to help coordinate this group. You know, coordinate the calls and everything else. So Thean pact is huge. The thing only other thing about this was about seven years ago. I was diagnosed with stage four cancer, and I had been doing this work long before. My, you know, this is my my area. But then I made a decision. How could I make use of the situation to further healthy grantee? So I’ve been writing speaking. We’ve put on congressional briefings together. Eso any other way that I could be helpful. I am definitely shoulder to shoulder with the grantee.

[00:47:00.14] spk_2:
Thank you for sharing that. Thank you. Back story. And then we’re gonna come back to the come back to you. It’ll be peppermint lifesavers. Time very shortly after Caitlin’s Kitten’s got an example.

[00:49:33.10] spk_3:
Yes, and I would just go back to some power can fund your question around. Um, like what to do once you’re already a grantee and kind of in the medium term and how it can be really helpful for the relationship. So just to say one of the key criteria we look for when determining whether or not we’re going to fund an organization for a 2nd 1/3 a fourth year. Is this idea around? Are they a learning organization? And by that we mean a couple of things on one. Um, really, The most important is like I said, we don’t expect programs to go perfectly. There’s challenges that come up. Youth are dynamic and changing issue areas arise but really impactful. Grantees that we have in great relationships and the really impactful programming are constantly learning and adapting and analyzing what went well, what it’s our strange what’s an area for improvement and even again, the same grand T in Oaxaca, Mexico. So in the course of their programming found that the middle school population that they were working with were engaging in self harm and cutting, and they recognized we as an organization don’t have expertise on this. But they themselves reached out, identified an organization in Canada that focuses on this and then came to us and said, Listen and our next grant, we would love to include a line item to have training on this to better serve our young people, Um, and with a learning organization, I would just say also openness to feedback. We think, you know, we support programs across the globe and sometimes see similar challenges in best practices. So it’s not a donor driven by any means. But being open to feedback is really important, even if you don’t necessarily take it on. And then also, with this learning organization comes which some silly but playing well with others. So we often ask grantee organizations what other organizations are doing great work in their field. And it’s a red flag for us if they if they come back and say no one else is doing it as well as we are, which has happened. And, uh, yeah, so I would say, being a learning organization playing while collaborating with other service providers. It’s something that we look for, provides

[00:50:07.53] spk_2:
Question occurs to me based on what you and Amy and we’re saying, especially if you’re being funded. What about? So if none of your funders ask, can we meet your other funders? If you’re If you’re a grantee? What about staying? We’d like you to meet our other funders. What about the grantee putting that those that possibility together. Is there a downside we’re talking about? Could there be okay? So So the grantee could think of it. If none of the funders do, there’s no Doesn’t seem to be a downside to that. And just just a couple of sentences. Don’t do this. Stop your top. Don’t do this.

[00:50:27.51] spk_7:
Yeah. The worst thing that you could do is when you have an opportunity to get funding to listen to the thunder about what it is you should be funding. In other words, don’t move from your mission. If it’s not helpful to your mission and strategy, it’s a disaster.

[00:50:52.71] spk_5:
Okay, I’m gonna just I’ll answer this from my previous foundation experience. One thing was don’t get angry when you get like when you get defunded. So there was one of the things that was very difficult was when I was for a funder is to not fund again. That’s very hard, I think from I’m sure everyone here knows and to have to send out a declination is also hard to have that he met with anger and accusation. Not great.

[00:51:24.79] spk_4:
I would say. Don’t go into your automatic pitch right? Because we have objectives. You have objectives. So it goes just back to what we’ve been saying doing research and not just assuming all American Express is a company with so much money that we would necessarily support. I’m sure your mission is important, but it might be something that we’re not. Um it’s not within our government that we would support. So not just going into your pitch and assuming

[00:52:03.76] spk_6:
that. Okay, Miss Deadlines, this deadlock don’t miss deadlines. You can ask for an extension. Don’t do it. 11. 59 the day of, um, but my in my over four years in the land to be I know exactly those organizations that I think you’re gonna fall through the cracks unless our team reminds them. And I feel like that’s a perception issue happens with individuals. You won’t know that one person that made a bad impression in your family or at work and that perception than permeates it and then stays. So just have a schedule. Have reminders, have your assistance, remind you whatever but yeah, don’t.

[00:52:30.84] spk_2:
Please. There’s so many technical tools that can help you do everything from wake up to know when to go to sleep Everything in between. So use the use, the app to use tools. We have,

[00:53:01.58] spk_3:
um, to one I would say is don’t fall off the place. The face of the earth. So we’ve had some grantees just disappear. Yeah, and and not communicating, I would say, Even if it’s a one line, you know, again in Mexico, right after the earthquake, we reached out to guarantees. How are you doing? You know, we’re in the trenches, but thank you for thinking of us. Boom. Or, you know, where is your report? I’m sorry. There’s been delays. Just keep the communication open.

[00:53:12.25] spk_2:
So please, let’s join me in thanking

[00:53:31.56] spk_0:
way. Christine Damn Warner. And I hope you see

[00:53:37.69] spk_2:
all the connections between your individual fundraising and your newly invigorated institutional fund raising program

[00:54:36.35] spk_1:
next week. Now that you’ve got great grantmakers relationships, it’s terrible. Charge your grants. Fundraising with John Hicks. If you missed any part of today’s show, I beseech you, find it on tony-martignetti dot com were sponsored by wegner-C.P.As guiding you beyond the numbers wegner-C.P.As dot com by cooking meth and software Denali Fund Is there complete accounting solution made for nonprofits? Tony-dot-M.A.-slash-Pursuant mountain for a free 60 day trial and by turn, to communications, PR and content for nonprofits, your story is their mission. Turn hyphen to dot CEO. Ah, creative producer is Claire Meyerhoff. Sam Liebowitz is the lying producer. Shows Social Media is by Susan Chavez. Mark Silverman is that Web guy, and this music is by Scott Stein. Believe me next week for non profit radio big non profit ideas for the other 95% Go out and be great

Nonprofit Radio for February 16, 2018: Build Your Grantmaker Relationships

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Amy Berman, Caitlin Mitchell, Daniel Werner, Anthony Sanchez & Christine Kang: Build Your Grantmaker Relationships

Our panel of grantmakers and a grantee reveals savvy strategies for building and maintaining relationships with your institutional funders. Foundations are made of people. How do you get close to them? This is a panel I moderated at The Foundation Center in New York City.

 

 

 

 


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Hello and welcome to tony martignetti non-profit radio big non-profit ideas for the other ninety five percent on the aptly named host oh, i’m glad you’re with me. I’d turn probono genic if you got under my skin with the idea that you missed today’s show, build your grantmaker relationships, our panel of grantmaker tze and a grantee reveal strategies for building and maintaining relationships with your institutional funders. Foundations are made of people. How do you get close to them? This’s a panel i moderated at the foundation center in new york city. Tony take two show you love, we’re sponsored by pursuing full service fund-raising data driven and technology enabled tony dahna slash pursuing radio and by weinger cpas guiding you beyond the numbers. Wagner, cps dot com tell us turning credit card processing into your passive revenue stream tony dahna may slash tony tell us, here’s the beginning of build your grantmaker relationships, we’re here to talk about collaboration and impact, collaborate and impact, and our panel today is going to focus in the collaboration we’re gonna be talking about the relationship, building of collaboration, that aspect of collaboration between non-profits and the funders. All right, most of you are in non-profits potential grantees, and most of our panel are the funders. So i have maybe admonished, is too strong a word, but i have urged them to keep their advice, you know, relevant for potential grantees. How can each of you, in your non-profits collaborate, build relationships with potential funders, and even even when even when you get a no from a funder? What can you do after that? Our concern is that. This is scene is proceeding to transactional. It shouldn’t be transactional, your relationship with potential grant oars. Potential funders can be parallel to the work that you do in individual fund-raising in each of your individual programs, because funders, air made up institutions are made up of people, and we know people fund. So how can you build the relationship, keep the relationship strong, even in the face of a rejection, and thereby collaborate with your potential funders, which hopefully will become your funders? It’s. My real pleasure to introduce our winning panel of beginning with your on your left is caitlin mitchell. Caitlyn is a program and evaluation officer with empower the emerging markets foundation. Their work is around at risk youth in emerging markets in colombia, mexico and south africa. Next. Moving to your right. Dan werner. Stan is social justice program associate with the darkest foundation. Their priority is lgbt social justice, and we have amy berman she’s, senior program officer at the john john, a hartford foundation. And their work is around improving, improving the health of older adults. Christine can associate program manager at project sunshine. She he is our soul panelists who is among you apart, part of the non-profit five oh, one c three community, and their work at project sunshine is direct support to pediatric patients and their families, and anthony sanchez welcome. Anthony is corporate social responsibility manager at american express. They’re three priorities around csr, or preserving historic places, developing new leaders and encouraging community service. Each of their fuller bios is outside. Please, sze, give a warm welcome teo title, please. Now important to know about about christine and anthony, they’re actually they could be holding hands hyre american express that americans press is funding projects sunshine so we brought we brought to the panel one team that is actively collaborating, right? So keeping with you know what? I i, uh, i said is our purpose today we’re going to talk about relationship building, so i’m going, i’m going start with the most basic basic question means we’ll start with caitlin, um, creating strong relationships with funders again, for our, for our audience of small and midsize non-profits how could they what’s one or two ideas that come to mind about creating that strong relationship at the outset at the beginning of a potential relationship? One unique thing about power is that we strive to and have the opportunity to fund an organization for up to ten years, and i say that because when we enter a collaboration with new organization, um, there is not the idea that the organization is going to do everything perfectly, but there are a few characteristics that are really important to us. The first i would say is just honest communication, i’ve had a number of grantees over it’s inevitable that you will have adversity, that something won’t go well go won’t go as planned, and as a program officer in charge of managing our relationship, the most helpful thing to me and the kind of like star grantees versus ones that are a bit more difficult, we want to be star granted, yes are just goes who communicate, explain that, you know, there are delays in the project, often most of the time, for a very legitimate reasons. And in addition to that not only say, you know, unfortunately, caitlyn there’s been a delay, or we weren’t able to do this activity, but also have already problem solved around how to either overcome that challenge and or a different activity. So one grantee in oaxaca, mexico, thie end of their year long program, which was a leadership training for a group of twenty young people, was to take them to mexico city. These are young people who had never really been out of the way municipality in which they lived in right before, a few weeks before they were supposed to go to mexico city, there was extreme violence in their community and a lot of parents rescinded the permission for their young people or their their children to go, so six of eighteen that were planned to go. We’re able to go to mexico city, and that would be a big sort of, like what’s going on. Um, but when they approached me, they said, listen, only six of eighteen could make it. We still went on the trip, they still did all the activities, and we did a camping weekend closer to the community in which they live. They live where sixteen of eighteen were able to participate. We still went through the leadership training. We had hoped for the themes, the bonding that took place, and they still had that sort of new and broadening horizons experience. And then we’re gonna have a chance to talk about some examples, okay? Of impact. We’ll definitely get to that. Cool. So yeah, basically, it sounds like you’re suggesting honesty. If there’s if there’s tribulations if there’s trouble, let your funder no. Yes, much work inside, i think. A non-profit radio i host this podcast. We gotta keep it to an hour. So we got a concise pursuing the field guide for data driven. Fund-raising it’s, the latest resource on the listener landing page tony dahna slash pursuing radio there’s so much data available it’s overload just just the data that you already have these can be overwhelming makes me think of ah howard on network i’m mad as hell, and i’m not going to take it anymore. So much data. The field guide makes your data less daunting talk talk, howard down. This is what’s in it. Five high level steps so you can translate your business objectives into actionable steps. Ah, real world case studies showing you how other non-profits are using data to achieve their fund-raising goals and a worksheet for ah, conversation and thought creation to help your team find the right focus. It’s the field guide for data driven fund-raising tory dahna em a slash pursuant radio. Now back to build your grantmaker relationships. Then what? Aside from no being honest about potential problems, adversity? What else? What else can we do again? Looking to try to look at the outset. Wait! We don’t even have a relationship yet. It’s up to you. But early on at least no that’s. Great. And i was echo exactly what was just said i would also say from the outset you’re a new grantee and speaking from from position the foundation right work and some of the other foundations that we partner with, uh, i want this speaker anything but a new grantee is ah, in a new amazing relationship that your program officers excited about, and the foundation is excited about. Another dynamic within foundations is to not, um, overbear helicopter in and try toe add too much burden onto the grantee because we know that your work is paramount and we don’t wantto sit there and constantly be asking for you for updates because we know that you’ll probably be sending that in a report, so i’d say take the onus and agency to reach out to us and share updates in the interim we love when we get interim updates if you’re and i’ll keep it quick with this story, we have a grand t out in the rural area of california and the rural areas of california have more of ah sabat kind of economic climate of the us south it’s not all l a and the bay area we get updates about winds that they get at the local school board level and within the local court systems, and we love hearing those stories and we share them throughout our foundation on it goes all the way to the board level, so i would just say, be open and honest with us on dh feel free to reach out don’t think there that they’re the big foundation black box, and we will send a move. Port leader? Yeah, awesome open honesty and even reporting when it’s not required. Correct, right? You’re welcome. You’re welcome those okay, geever, by the way, let me also just remind each of you. If you don’t have the mic, you can still speak. You’ll be hurt by this. This fancy omni directional. So no, you’re welcome. You should have it. Yeah, but if you if you, uh, you know, make some quick or something, you’ll be hurt. Okay? So keep it clean because it’s gonna be it’s gonna be heard. It’s gonna be preserved, please. Amy berman. What? I advice for them. Oh, that starting that relationship real strong. So i’m going to go go to before you’re even a grantee. Andi, i agree with everything that i’ve heard so far, but before you’re a grantee, this is your opportunity to really understand who it is you’re going to be meeting with and you should be meeting with with the foundation that you want, teo get to know or go to an event where you know that they’re going to be and you should know enough about number one, their mission kind of grants that they do, because when you talk about the work that you want todo, it has to fit within the strategy of that foundation. But i’ll tell you even more than that, you need to look at the language on that website. So you know you’ve heard some hints here you’ve heard, you know, words like workforce or words like social justice, use those words in describing what you do if you were work, relates to that area, convey what you dio and what your interests are within that kind of language and context that will make it easier for you and the person that you’re meeting with, sometimes for the first time to see where the fit iss now, maybe the person is going to get where the fit is without you having done your homework, but it’s your job to really make that fit a parent so doing your homework in advance is really helpful. And one thing that i would suggest the first time that you meet with the foundation don’t hit an idea because that one idea may be the thing that is not within what they khun d’oh, let them get to know you and the range of things that you d’oh that will be the best entry. And one of the biggest mistakes that people make is they come in with a very specific pitch and there are other things that we then didn’t get to talk about and that’s the thing that would have been the right fit. Are you starting to hear the parallel between your individual giving and your potential institutional funding? Who goes into a meeting first meeting with a potential donor and solicit it doesn’t happen you get you have to get to know them. Amy’s, amy’s advising not only do your research, but very well your first meeting ought not be the pitch and again parallel with your similar to the work you’re doing in the individual fund-raising it’s kind of like asking something you’d marry. You on the way here, it’s, not really a smoker talking that’s where i’m going wrong. I realize that now fifty five years to hear that christine, please. So i’m for our relationship with american express and then other relationships. What we’ve learned is to is and i think why we’ve been so successful, is that as a non-profit we take, we tried really hard to understand the funder. So and previously i actually was at a foundation, so i kind of have both lenses too, but it’s so it’s exciting to have the two perspectives. But i think it’s sometimes you just need to think of funders as though they have all of this money and power, some just going to go in and they must be able to do x y and z i think there’s a lot of assumptions and and expectations that come with that relationship. But you think about the relationship from the point of view of how can i be helpful? What is thie funder going through? How can i? How can we make their lives easier while also maximizing our impact? So it’s not just about i need this from younger i want to get x get why, but okay, work. How can we create a conversation around? So for us at project sunshine, we focus on pediatric health care, so we always start with the child in mind. But we can’t do the work we’re doing without our amazing partners are funders, our corporate partners. And so while making sure that they understand our mission and the work we’re doing to ask them, okay, so that how can we make your life easier? So i think starting from that and doesn’t that sound like something you would ask? Maybe not in those exact words, but parallel again in your individual fund-raising what? What is it about your work? What is it? I’m sorry. What is it about our work that interest you that motivates you? That moves you back-up and what’s. You know, in terms of suggestion, how can we make your life easier? Are there different methods of giving that we could talk about? Maybe a plan to give to makes more sense for you? Maybe it’s structured over a period of years. It’s a one time outright gift. Maybe it’s a gift of something other than cash. Gift in-kind someone some other kind of asset. So, you know, again the suggestion, how can we make your life easier? You’re always thinking about how you can help your donors to make gifts to you. You see these parallels? Upleaf so just to add what toe what christine said, i think it’s important to set expectations, right? So on the corporate side, i mean, most csr teams in a corporation is probably a group of six to eight people at american express it’s a it’s, a team of ten, and we’re basically responsible for engaging over fifty thousand employees so it’s hard to do that, right? So we look for partners who can help us, we can help them with their objectives and to, you know, help with their mission. But on the other hand, we also expect them to engage our volunteers, right? So setting that expectation is important because it’s a win win situation, so we’re helping the non-profit achieve their goals, but we’re also engaging our volunteers, i think setting an expectation up front, it’s super helpful and your collaboration involves a lot of volunteer work out of service work by american express employees. We’re gonna get to that. That grants aren’t only in the form of money, by any means. Let’s. Open it up. Now we’re gonna come back, come to questions periodically through throughout time together. How about questions on this initial round of hi? Um, i was wondering how open funders are, too, like meeting new people, like cold calls, you know, email or phone call, like, how approachable would you say you are, how open to new relationships? This is perfect, it’s. Exactly. We’re talking about what you know we’re the beginning phases of the relationship, how open or you to increase. Sounds like everybody has something, say, uh, good, michael. So on. It’s it’s. Really important that’s a big part of my job. I’m constantly meeting people you know, my area is around aging it’s around care of older adults, so i am on the road as a national thunder. I’m on the road, probably almost every week. I am going and meeting with people. They have very easy access to may. Um, if people are committing their life for doing this work, i’m committing my life toward them, because my foundation’s mission is to do this a swell, so i’m completely accessible. Damn! Yeah, i would. I would say that in our experience, we are one of the largest lgbt thunders, so we get a lot of requests from us based global funders well from us based organizations, and we similarly only have a team of of six or so, so we just don’t have the band with and one of the one of the things i hate about my job is knowing that me, me and my team really don’t have the band with even though are you? We have open initial funding, concept submission so anyone can send them in. We all do look at them, but we don’t have the bandwidth to have that special touch and tell people. Oh, but this local foundation in seattle area is doing x y z, so? So i would say, just keep at people, find out where those funders in those spaces go, when we attend conferences and other things, you catch people in a different mindset, they’re not running the meetings, they’re not doing their grantwriting up, so i would say catching people in different spaces as opposed to the cold call is one avenue you could you could employ kayman and i would just say it’s a both a do innit don’t is because in power we are open to hearing from from perspective organizations, but do your homework ahead of time and make sure so empower supports work in fifteen emerging market countries. We say that on our website we list the country’s make sure it’s a country that you work in is one that we support uh, we support work with at risk youth ages ten to twenty four if you’re working with the elderly or with children were not the right organization. So in general, as dan was saying, we tried to respect our grand thi’s time, and hopefully the idea would be that then sitting organizations or are granted partners will also do their part too respect our time and something about you that initial really agree with that. Obviously, like i mentioned before, it’s very hard, teo, you know, answer every email, answer every inquiry, so doing research, i think our website is really good at providing as tony mentioned, we support three different pillars, but it it it’s a good place to start because it provides a list ofthe sample projects that we’ve supported there’s. Also an eligibility quiz. So going back to what hates that it it helps you figure out whether it would be a good match or not, because through that eligibility quiz, you know, if you were to select, you know, you’re in a place like arkansas, where we don’t have a large and employee base, that probably wouldn’t be a match because we like to support organizations in specific regions, especially you know, where we have a large employee headcount and and, you know, our biggest market, so doing research is super important. Yeah, so you’ve heard this a couple times now. So what do we do on the individual side? Oppcoll prospect research? You got to do it on the institutional side to you don’t want to embarrass yourself. Bye let’s say failing to send a letter of inquiry if that’s part of the that’s the first step, that latto dahna funder once no, so don’t miss step by not doing your research let’s move the relationship on a little bit now we’re not we’re not the inquiry stage. We’re not at the opening stage now. We’re funding. We are your hyre you’ve selected granted, how can we keep? The relationship strong now we already heard report when it’s not necessary. Keep us involved now some steel you can’t beat your idea. You gotta come with multiple ideas. That’s, why you’re here way also hurt. Share, adversity, tribulations, difficulties along the way. What other advice? Again? Keeping the relationship strong now that we are funded, uh, who wants to anybody could start. Okay, um one one thing that could be a challenge, but i think is also easy to find a potential volunteer for that really makes a difference for us is around honestly high quality pictures of the work that you’re doing if you have a really active social media page. And the reason is that we are not an endowed foundation. So we report to our donors about the work that we’re supporting and it’s really helpful. And unfortunately, some of the grand teeth like it featured the most are those that have really great documentation of their own world. So not every organization can can hyre it’s owned photographer that’s for sure. But i think that’s a good news that may be a volunteer who wants to come learn more about your program if they have. You know, photography skills could be a really great way just just yeah, raise awareness about the work that you’re doing and can i suggest that maybe it doesn’t always doesn’t have to be high production value to be moving and show impact? I’ve seen cases where hyre people who are benefiting from the organizations work? Do you sell do selfie videos and, you know, with some really simple editing tools that could be really compelling, so, you know, they might go on for twelve minutes or so that’s too long, but no, i guess the point is doesn’t have to be high production value necessarily two to convey impacts are so use your social media. Obviously we all know how important video is, how compelling that could be storytelling through pictures as well. Latto you know, let them let them know what the work is that they’re paying for. Please, dad, no, no on b we’ll keep it quick might sound very simple, but i know when i was in very early in my career non-profit that didn’t have much of a development office capacity, um but now i know being on the other and how important make sure your thunders are on your email list, so when you stand out everything about programmatic buy-in aspects or big announcements that, you know, all of your funders are getting those updates that we could focus on your work and that way. Hyre the funders are also updated. Follow him on twitter follow your funders on twitter i mean, it sounds basic, but it might it might get overlooked. Uh, facebook, you know, fan their facebook page, etcetera, etcetera, dahna connect in ways other than what what they’re what they’re requirements are for, you know, quarterly or semiannual reporting or something, you know, connect beyond that again relationship building, right? You’re doing it on the individual side, do it on the institutional side as well. You got something. My name is amy, so you suffer i don’t feel like i’m sorry, okay, so the other thing is about your expectation for us and, you know, it’s important that you have an expectation for us. There are people there are foundations that, you know, everything kind of goes into a black box when when i’m developing a proposal, i actually work with the grantee on the development of that proposal, so i’ll edit it, it’s, not a black box, it’s an intentional, so once we’ve decided we’re going forward, it is a very intentional act, but once you have the grant, the other thing is to consider me as a part of the team, so include us and convene ings, invite us, we may or may not be able to go, but we also have the ability to write and speak. I’ve given congressional testimony on behalf of grantees. You know we are, we can provide you with more than just grantspace port, we can actually provide you with elbow ovaries. We can be helpful to you. We can even bring other funders to the tape. So the more you engage with us as a grantee, more helpful, i can be for you. Excellent examples. Excellent. Thank you, wantto latto. So i know we’ve been talking about social media and videos and high tech stuff, so when i think, though, that that’s very helpful, i think and think don’t know old fashioned is just a meet in person so far after me and i had breakfast today before we came here, and we try to make it a point to remember that for organizations, companies that there’s a person there that you’re talking to, who maybe just got married or so to also build a relationship around the person, not just the institution, i think yeah, as i said earlier, institutions are made up of people i mean, how how plainer can we make the comparisons tear into your individual fund-raising program it’s the same it’s the same strategy keeping keeping informs, inviting you invite your major donors to things, invite your institutional, you’re you’re funders like you said, they may or may not come, but the invitation should always be out there. They should be getting all your press all your tweets, etcetera can’t drive home in it. Let’s, take a break! Wagner cps this testimonial quote, this is my first year and we’re a growing non-profit wagner, cpas. Was completely attentive and gave the impression as if they were right next door when handling our review engagement. Even though we’re in a different state, they made me feel like we were the only client they had, and they were able to walk me through starting up our accounts to finishing our yearly statements. Nothing was too small of a task for them to handle, and they were always available for questions and concerns. The customer service was exceptional, which is a rarity these days and was greatly appreciated. I received great advice and guidance for better business practices from a professional, all while feeling supported and genuinely cared for in the process when your cpa’s really stands out as a partner and i could not be happier with the results. End quote, small cancer research non-profit here on the east coast, supported and genuinely cared for are they butlers, front desk clerks, nurses, first responders, many petty girls are they made her desire somalia’s are they bus boys? Are they airline pilots? Are flight attendants who used to be stewardesses? Remember same baizman when they were stewardesses, slight tennis now of the massage therapists, acupuncturists, nutrition coaches, rehab counselors none of the above they’re wagner, cps, humble weinger cps more than cpas, trusted advisors, you know, they get to know you. I keep reading this testimonial because it’s it’s so, so genuine and just not what you’re goingto see about most certified public accountants. Um, i’ll take care of you and you want somebody who’s going to do that for you going beyond the numbers. Eat. Talk to huge tomb. You heard mi ri a lot about him last week. Talkto him. Good guy. Weinger cpas dot com. Now time for tony. Take two. Show your love. I need you to show your love to our sponsors. Please. These are the companies that are keeping this show. Ah, going to conferences, um, keeping it in the studio month after month, helping me produce the show by sponsoring it. So if cpa’s or fund-raising council and valuable fund-raising content and credit card processing our possibilities for you, then i would be grateful if you would check out our sponsors. You know who i’m talking about? Of course. Pursuing wagner and tell us please show your love to the sponsors. Check him out. Now return to build your grantmaker relationships. So on the corporate side, it about being, you know, you guys being flexible, right? Because, yeah, i can support you through grantmaking and providing volunteers, but there’s also other opportunities, so i always make it. I always make the effort of engaging non-profits where our affinity groups at american express because that if your woman empowerment organization there’s always a way to connect with employees and other ways, right? So we’ll offer volunteers, but we can also bring awareness to our employees, and they could make individual donations through our employees e-giving campaign or through our dollars for doors program, or maybe it’s an opportunity for you to come in and speak to a group of women and just bring more awareness, so the relationship doesn’t just have toe and at grantmaking were always big expanding that relationship and helping you as much as we can. All right, this is a time we’re going to turn teo storytelling. I want it. I want to turn to some examples of how these strong relationships have impacted work on the ground use. Use any example you like one of your one of your grantee organizations and let’s let’s start with anthony. And and the projects on shiny and and why don’t you talk about the work that goes beyond as you were just saying, perfect in trouble, you know, beyond money. So we started our partnership with project sunshine back in twenty ten, and our biggest challenge at that moment was engaging those i mean, where american express that we have several call centers throughout the u s and it’s harder to engage those employees who are you know, their job is basically being on the phone, being in a call center. So we were looking keeper ways to engage these volunteers because, let’s, be honest, most employees want to go out and violence here, but the challenge is finding the time, right? So not every employee has the luxury of going on park and planting a tree for four or five hours, so we thought, why not start this partnership with project sunshine? Who, i’m christine can talk more about what they do create thes care kids that are prepared in house. Esso employees don’t necessarily have to leave the office to volunteer. It only takes one hour. We started that partnership back in twenty ten immediately we got a huge response, because again, people felt like they were able to give back without having to invest so much time fast forward, i think two or three years later, the success of the program helped us build a case to go backto our leaders and say, hey, this is a great partnership were engaging more volunteers we expanded than to other locations on dh we’ve been partners now for seven years, and we’ve engaged over seven thousand employees in the last couple of years, and we’re now internationally. Last year, we started a partnership with project sunshine zoho it’s finding ways of thinking of all your employees population, right? So those who don’t have the flexibility and and i think that’s, what works? Well, that project’s on china heard the challenge that we were having, and they did a great job at finding a solution for us, especially if you’re talking to corporations think broadly again your course way said, your first meeting is not going to the solicitation, you know, make some enquiries. So after you’ve done your research on the web site, maybe talk to some other organizations that, you know they’re funding. However, however you go about your research, especially talking to corporations, you want to think about volunteers because anthony’s point is and please do want a volunteer, and that often is a part of what companies want to give. So it’s more than the money, especially not only limited to companies, certainly, but especially cos don’t think just about, you know, dollars out. Okay, so so how how are your work? Is pediatric patients supporting them and their families? And how are these kids and their families benefiting from this? Is that great questions? So we the healthcare landscape is constantly changing, and oftentimes the child, the patient, they’re stressed and terrified parents, they’re siblings kind of get missed. And so what we do is mobilized volunteers to really provide and come around the child, that the parents, the family, and to treat them the way that if we were the child, the parents or the sibling, we will let me treat it. And so we do a number of different programs we provide in hospital based parties, bringing the joy of childhood into the into the hospital setting, letting kids be kids. So we do that’s one part the part that we work with. American express and a lot of our corporate volunteers are sending sunshine programme, so the sending sunshine program really what’s designed kind of with i mean, american express was a big part of that it’s office based volunteering so volunteer corporate volunteers in their own offices get to ascend, assemble these craft kids so that’s like a standalone craft that that we sent to over three hundred hospitals and medical facilities so that if you i mean, you could imagine if you were a child and you just broken leg, you’re in emergency room, you’re going to be there for four hours, and you have a lot of stressed out doctor’s child life specialists, they able to grab these and give give them to a child to decrease their anxiety, to decrease there, even boredom, to the and to the the sibling who may be with them. And and the care giver is a moment to believe. So that’s one of the that the activities we also create these things called sergi dolls, which are medical play dolls, and we’ve made there’s research behind them about using these dogs to help empower children to understand the treatment that they will. Be going through. And when i first joined projects in china was like, does this really make a difference? And the overwhelming answer from our partners? That, yes, we have a wait list them so clearly there’s a need there, and the and that the need for on the hospital side for these children families that in a line so well with our corporate partners, i think it’s it’s kind of it’s amazing this wind wind that anthony was talking about. So over, i think, with the last time we checked over forty five thousand children, families received these craft kids hyre sergi dolls that american express employees put together, and one recently was around the hurricanes. So the we had said american express has a south florida region regional areas. So we had made a much of craft kits, sent them to hospital suspected by the hurricane. We received this amazing quote phone call from a child life specialist who say you saved our lives. So basically, american express partiers saved our lives because we received i think something like one hundred falik in floods of one hundred fifty two warring families who were clearly distraught and stressed, and the first thing they did was grab as many of these yellow projects on chain bags that are volunteers put together as they could and went from chaos to come. And these were her wits chaos to come immediately. Christine, how do you convey that message to american express that they would feel the impact of their work? So we don’t have a phone call with anthony, and we do try to sow way have a great development team that does a lot of social media, and we’re trying we try to provide photos reporting all the things that we had talked about on this panel so that we could make sure that power corporate incorporate partners feel that, yes, so we did for that specific one we were on the phone, and then anthony, who fed it back to the actual employees from actually we’re in a such a satisfaction right on our employees and those who volunteer because you see the immediate impact, right? So it’s not like going on like a community center and painting a wall blew right there’s really not much impact that you see there? Yeah, you paint the wall, but with these care kids, you know, if one hundred volunteers create a thousand kids, you know that they’re going to get to a thousand kids who need them. So every time i post project’s on shine project on our internet site, it sells out in a matter of like five minutes, like, okay flooded with emails because, again, it’s a good way for employees just donate a now hour of their time and see the immediate impact that these kids have. I could tell caitlin is burning, the answer will come back. I just wanted teo say this is an example of where that sounds like a phenomenal volunteer opportunity where it’s both beneficial in it’s a meaningful volunteer opportunity that’s beneficial not just for the volunteer, but also for the organization. I just want to say this is one of those moments where feel free to push back against your donor, where if they’re really excited and want to send volunteers your way and it’s actually going to create more of a headache, then be helpful or if you work in a context where it’s not appropriate tohave caitlyn as ah white, thirty two year hold american coming in, i thinkyou internationally. But with at risk, youth are more sensitive. Populations feel free to say no, because all too often, i think organizations, especially if it’s, a donor asking, feel i’m required to take on this hungers. And sometimes it’s it’s more trouble than it’s worth. Um the shining of ah story that one repeat that some of the themes that we’ve already heard, and i, i’m reminded of a grantee partner of ours, that it was actually same grantee that i mentioned working in the rural areas of california. Um buy-in they’ve been a grantee of ours for three, three years, so not, you know, like a historic one for us, but not a baby. And we have had an amazing relationship. They send us that the updates we’ve met curated this relationship. We took a tour of the central valley of california, seeing all the work they’ve done, we bought our ceo of our vice president, we met dolores huerta, and we really got to see their work after that site visit. You can tell that the relationship kind of tipped a little bit. You could tell that way had a shorthand. We had a common connection and fast forward to two weeks ago. The head of the project is doing great work, and they’re trying to scale their program. Um, we shopped thiss program director to the ford foundation, to the open society foundation and to an anonymous donor that works in this space. We introduced them tio like mine and thunders that we know here in new york city because we know that their work is so amazing, you know, in the rural areas of california kind of far away from big foundation institutions except for the california down men. Um, so that’s that’s a story that i love that i don’t think that may be a lot of grantees would think to say, please introduce us to your other fundez as you might think, that is a no overreach or or going past, but i think you can get a read on that relationship once it reaches that tipping point. That’s something i’m sure a lot of organization just wouldn’t even think to do. Introduce us to your other funders. Got to take a break, tell us credit card and payment processing. Check out the video at tony dahna slash tony tell us explains the process of businesses getting with tello’s making that switch and how you get fifty percent of the revenue that passive revenue month after month after month think about the businesses this makes sense for in your community and send them to watch the video after you watch. It you watch first, like that car dealership that which i was putting down car dealership. I was thinking i had such a bad such a bad experience. First time i bought a car, i don’t know where my mother and father were, but we agreed on a price. And then the guy the the finance manager put on this one act play festival with the supposedly his the executive above him. About what? What? Ah, what a great price i was getting. It was for me to over here in their office, and they kept the door open and the finance manager was being berated. I told you nothing below sticker. The guy giving me, like a hundred fifty dollars off sticker price, right? I told you nothing below sticker. This can’t happen again. One act play festival happening in this office with the door open for me, the client to hear outside. And so the finance manager comes out, you know, he’s looking sheepish, total total fabrication. I said, is everything okay with our deal? You know, he said he said, everybody has a boss. All right, think about those car dealerships. Tony got a slash tony tell us now, back to building your grantmaker relationships. I mean, you gotta you gotta impact story. I do have an impact story. So in the foundation world, the most popular areas to fund are the arts, education and children, and my foundation does not fund that. In fact, out of one hundred five thousand foundations in this country, only six are primarily focused on older adults, so very, very small group of funders that do work nationally in this space. And we really care about, um, creating age friendly health systems, you know, how are they gonna be responsive to older adults caring about serious illness and end of life and also about family caregivers? So one of the grant is here in new york city, it’s the center towards to advance palliative care, trains people to provide care and make sure that they haven’t vamp scare planning so that their, you know, their goals are what i care is that they get at the end that they relieve suffering. They make sure that people have the care that they need when they go through a very serious illness, even when they’re going to get better from serious illness to help them get through that serious illness. Um, and so the kinds of impact this work has had today, a palliative care is in roughly ninety percent of hospitals nationally. That’s. Huge. It only came to this country in the nineteen eighties. We have been along and sustained thunder in this space, and we may be slowed a warm, but we tend to be a longer and sustained thunder around impact. Um, the other thing was, there were very few funders that were interested in this space. Does anybody remember the death panel? Conversations? Okay, well, thankfully, we’re not having a lot of those today, but, um, there were very few funders that we’re doing focused work in this area. So i decided i was going to start having calls. This was not with the grantee. This was on behalf of the grantspace. I wanted to create a safe learning space for foundations that might be thinking about this. They wanted to learn. And so what’s happened with that. We now have a very large collaborative. People are more strategic. I know people that they want to fund. We fund together some things. We fundez next to each other and other things, um, this past year, about eighty million dollars in new funding was in this space. And this is on behalf of the grantee, the grant he could not have had those calls, but it was necessary to begin. Teo, bring people into the space. And now they’re coming out of the woodwork. We actually did a grant. Teo, give somebody money to help coordinate this crew. Um, you know, coordinate the calls and everything else. So thie impact is huge. The only other thing about this was about seven years ago. I was diagnosed with stage four cancer. And i had been doing this work long before my you know, this is my my area. Um, but then i made a decision. How could i make use of the situation to further healthy grantee? So i’ve been writing, speaking, uh, we’ve put on congressional briefings together. So any other way that i can be helpful, i am definitely shoulder to shoulder with grant. Thank you for sharing. Thank you, kayman a backstory. And then we’re gonna come back to the come back to you. It’ll be peppermint lifesaver time very shortly after caitlin’s kitten’s got an example. Yes. And i would just go back to some power can fund your question around, like, what to do once your rd, a grantee in-kind of in the medium term and how it can be really helpful for the relationship. So just to say one of the key criteria we look for when determining whether or not we’re going to fund an organization for a second a third, a fourth year, is this idea around are they learning organization? And by that we mean a couple of things on one, um, really, the most important is, like i said, we don’t expect programs to go perfectly there’s challenges that come up youth are dynamic and changing issue areas arise eyes um, but really impactful grantees that we have in great relationships in the really impactful programming are constantly learning and adapting and analyzing what went well, what it’s our strength what’s an area for improvement and even again, the same grantee in oaxaca, mexico. So in the course of their programming found that the middle school population that they were working with we’re engaging in self harm and cutting, and they recognized we as an organization don’t have expertise on this. But they themselves reached out, identified an organization in canada that focuses on this and then came to us and said, listen, and our next grant, we would love to include a line item to have training on this to better serve our young people and with a learning organization, i would just say also, openness to feedback, we think, you know, we support programs across the globe and sometimes see similar challenges in best practices, so it’s not donor-centric but being open to feedback is really important, even if you don’t necessarily take it on. And then also with this learning organization comes which sounds li, but playing well with others. So we often ask grantee organizations what other organizations are doing great work in their field and, um, it’s a rite of flag for us if they if they come back and say no one else is doing it as well as we are, which has happened and, uh, yeah, so i would say being a learning organization, playing while collaborating with other service providers, it’s something that we look four and yeah, provides question occurred to me based on what you and amy and we’re saying, especially if you’re being funded, what about? So if none of your funders duitz ask, can we meet your other funders? If you’re a grantee, what about saying we’d like you to meet our other funders? What about the grantee putting that those that possibility together? Is there a downside we’re talking about? Could there be a okay, so so the grantee could think of it. If none of the funders do there’s no doesn’t seem to be a downside to that, and just a just a couple of sentences. Don’t do this. Stop your top, don’t do this. Yeah, the worst thing that you could do is when you have an opportunity to get funding, to listen to the thunder about what it is. You should be funded. In other words, don’t move from your mission if it’s not helpful to your mission and strategy. It’s a disaster, okay. I’m going to just i’ll answer this from my previous foundation experience. One thing was, don’t get angry when you get there, like when you get defunded. So there was one of the things that was very difficult. Was when was for funder, is to not fund that’s very hard, i think, from i’m sure everyone here knows and to have to send out a declination is also hard to have that he met with anger and accusation. Not great. I would say, don’t go into your automatic pitch, right? Because we have objectives. You have objectives. So it goes just backto what we’ve been saying, doing research, and not just assuming all american express is a big company, with so much money that we would necessarily support. I’m sure your mission is important. But it might be something that we’re not is not within our gunman’s, that we would support. So not just going into your pitch and assuming that. Then don’t do it, miss deadlines, this deadline? Yeah, don’t miss deadlines you can man asked for an extension, don’t do it! Eleven fifty nine the day of but my in my over four years in philanthropy, i know exactly those organizations that i think you’re going to fall through the cracks unless our team reminds them and i feel like that’s a perception issue happens with individuals. You won’t know that one person that made a bad impression in your family or at work and that perception than permeates it and then stays. So just have a schedule have reminders have your assistance remind you whatever, but yeah, don’t nastad please there’s so many technical tools that can help you. You do everything from wake up to know when to go to sleep, everything in between. So i used the use the app to use the tools we have bonem to one i would say is don’t fall off the place the face of the earth so we’ve had some grantees just disappear. Yeah, and and not communicating, i would say, even if it’s a one line, you know again in mexico, right after the earthquake, we reshot guarantees how are you doing? So you know, we’re in the trenches, but thank you for thinking of us, boom, or, you know, where is your report? I’m sorry, there’s been delays. Just keep the communication open, so please let’s, join me in thanking that’s. It in-kind christine werner and xero miree. Buy-in i hope you see all the connections between your individual fund-raising and your newly invigorated institutional fund-raising program. Next week, turbocharger grants fund-raising john hicks returns you see how coordinated the show is, grantspace that grants week after week, this is all put together. If you missed any part of today’s show, i beseech you, find it on tony martignetti dot com were supported by pursuing online tools for small and midsize non-profits data driven and technology enabled. Tony dahna slash pursuant radio wagner, cps, guiding you beyond the numbers. Regular cps dot com and tell us credit card payment processing, your passive revenue stream durney dahna slash tony tell us our creative producer is claire meyerhoff. Sam liebowitz is the line producer, shows social media is by susan chavez. Our music is by scott steiner brooklyn, new york you with me next week for non-profit radio, big non-profit ideas for the other ninety five percent go out and be great. What’s not to love about non-profit radio tony gets the best guests check this out from seth godin this’s the first revolution since tv nineteen fifty and henry ford nineteen twenty it’s the revolution of our lifetime here’s a smart, simple idea from craigslist founder craig newmark insights orn presentation or anything? People don’t really need the fancy stuff they need something which is simple and fast. When’s the best time to post on facebook facebook’s andrew noise nose at traffic is at an all time hyre on nine a m or eight pm so that’s, when you should be posting your most meaningful post here’s aria finger ceo of do something dot or ge young people are not going to be involved in social change if it’s boring and they don’t see the impact of what they’re doing so you gotta make it fun and applicable to these young people look so otherwise a fifteen and sixteen year old they have better things to do if they have xbox, they have tv, they have their cell phones me dar is the founder of idealised took two or three years for foundation staff to sort of dane toe add an email address card. It was like it was phone. This email thing is right and that’s why should i give it away? Charles best founded donors choose dot or ge somehow they’ve gotten in touch kind of off line as it were on dh and no two exchanges of brownies and visits and physical gift. Mark echo is the founder and ceo of eco enterprises. You may be wearing his hoodies and shirts. Tony talked to him. Yeah, you know, i just i i’m a big believer that’s not what you make in life. It zoho, you know, tell you make people feel this is public radio host majora carter. Innovation is in the power of understanding that you don’t just put money on a situation expected to hell. You put money in a situation and invested and expect it to grow and savvy advice for success from eric sacristan. What separates those who achieve from those who do not is in direct proportion to one’s ability to ask others for help. The smartest experts and leading thinkers air on tony martignetti non-profit radio big non-profit ideas for the other ninety five percent.