Tag Archives: philanthropy

Philanthropy 100 Years Ago

The New York Times of January 1, 1911, featured a review of the largest gifts within the $163 million dollars given to charity the year before. Take a stroll with me through 1910’s large-gift philanthropy.

  • The article presumes the largest gifts were made “with no purpose on the part of the possessors of wealth beyond a desire to relieve and uplift the condition of those less fortunate than themselves.” Well, there are a few counterexamples to the pure altruism theory and I mention them below.
  • Education got 46% of the total giving and 19% went to religion. That’s very different than today. In 2008, Giving USA says religious charities received 35% of total giving compared to 13% for education. Religion has gotten the lion’s share of charitable gifts for many years running.
  • There is speculation about how much John D. Rockefeller would contribute to his foundation the following year, with anticipation that a majority of his wealth would be directed there.
  • There are multiple references to “returning wealth to the people,” as if wealth were a loan with expectation of repayment. That’s quite interesting.
  • The wealthy who give anonymously are especially admired.
  • Andrew Carnegie donated $3.5 million to Carnegie Technology Schools (now, Carnegie Mellon University, my alma mater), bringing to $23.5 million his total contribution to the college. That’s roughly $450 million in present value, inflation adjusted money.
  • The largest charitable gift by will in 1910, Isaac Wyman’s $10 million bequest to Princeton, put the university “near the front of American universities in point of wealth.” It’s at or near the front today.
  • Ten thousand acres on the Hudson River in New York from Mary Harriman created a family-named state park, which features prominently in my high school year book. It seems everybody but me enjoyed something “memorable” there.
  • Separately, to receive a gift of $31,000 for a new train station, Turner, NY had to change its name to Harriman. That’s a little less than altruistic. The town acceded. How would that go over today? Bloomberg, NY?
  • In another show of ego, James Scott willed $500,000 to Detrioit for a fountain, on the condition that it include a life size statue of him. Or was he modest, not insisting on a larger-than-life representation?
  • Mrs. Mary Baker G. Eddy is the founder of Christian Science and willed $1 million in furtherance of the church.
  • Here’s an unfortunate cultural insight: it is considered “remarkable” that an “invalid,” Miss Martha R. Hunt, could have sufficient savvy to quadruple the wealth that her father left her. Miss Hunt’s will left gifts to religion, hospitals and social services.

The Times says, “America’s men and women do not build for themselves . . .” That was mostly true in 1910 and I think–wealthy or modest–it’s mostly true today.

(I didn’t find this myself. I owe someone credit for bringing it to my attention, but I don’t remember who. Thank you, good person.)

Have You Heard These 5 Ways To Be A Planned Giving Evangelist?

Street Evangelism (ca. 1961). Courtesy of Sherlock77 (James) on Flickr

An evangelist is an enthusiastic advocate, someone zealous about a cause. I’m an evangelist for Planned Giving, and I highly recommend the work. Want to join my crusade?

This is what I think it takes:

  1. Love Planned Giving. Believe deeply that this type of giving can transform nonprofits–whatever their missions–and help donors make their ultimate gift to the charitable works they love. Recognize that a nonprofit without some form of Planned Giving program is hurting its future and leaving money on the table.
  2. Spread the word. You love it so much you want everyone to share. When you’re at events, in kitchen table donor meetings, with colleagues, in front of a board, in the web, you exude the value of planned gifts to build endowment; expand other giving; secure financial futures; create lifetime donor relationships; bring families closer; and save the lives of the people you serve.
  3. Be unashamed. You beam when you solicit planned gifts, never asking humbly or apologetically. And that’s how you spread the word, with a slight swagger and a good dose of pride, but never haughty or overbearing. You’d love for people to understand, you know they need to understand. You love what you do and want others to know why. You spend your time with those receptive to your message.
  4. Be a lion, not a sheep. Do what others don’t. Rethink the ordinary and typical. Is there an entirely different way? If not, can the same be done better? How can you improve your annual donor seminar? Make it a panel discussion. Make it a webinar. Serve drinks. Make it shorter, more to the point, and part of a larger event. Host it outdoors or in a donor’s living room. Hold a few and make them more intimate. Consider with an open mind that it may not be worth doing. What do you want to re-imagine?
  5. Fill needs. I started a company because no one provided comprehensive, onsite, start-up Planned Giving for nonprofits. I wrote a book on Charity Registration because there wasn’t a comprehensive guide for nonprofits that want to get into compliance. I created a radio show because small and mid-size nonprofits struggle with the same issues that big nonprofits hire experts to help resolve. What void, gap, need, unfulfilled demand makes you lose sleep and shake your head? Finish this sentence: “There really should be . . .” Now go out and make it.

You can be an evangelist for anything, not only Planned Giving, or even fundraising and philanthropy. I think you should be an evangelist for whatever you spend your time doing.

For me, it’s Planned Giving (and my other pursuits).

Join my crusade–or kickoff your own–and enjoy the feeling.

Nonprofit Radio for April 1, 2011: Ask Awareness for Small Shops

Big Nonprofit Ideas for the Other 95%

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

Amy Eisenstein, author, 50 Asks in 50 Weeks, and founder, Tri Point Fundraising.

Ask Awareness for Small Shops:

Amy is the author of “50 Asks in 50 Weeks.” She will share lots of valuable insights for opening up relationships, identifying prospects, cultivating and soliciting.

  • How do you start individual and major giving programs?
  • Who is responsible for fundraising?
  • What should your board be doing for you?

Top Trends. Sound Advice. Lively Conversation.

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

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

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

When and where: Talking Alternative Radio, Fridays, 1-2PM Eastern

Sign-up for show alerts!

“Like” the show’s Facebook page.

Don’t forget to subscribe to the show’s podcast on iTunes. Download and listen whenever and wherever you want.

Here is a link to the podcast: 035: 50 Asks in 50 Weeks
View Full Transcript

Are You Following These 6 Tips To Mastering Fundraising Relationships?

Fundraising in the dictionary courtesy of Howard Lake on Flickr
Earlier this year I got an advertisement for a “master series” on fundraising. For $950, Mastering the Gift. For $500, Mastering the Ask. I guess gifts are twice as valuable as asks. At least, they take twice as long to master.

This promo piece led me to think about what’s missing from the series: relationships.

Here, for free–and no travel expenses–are 6 tips you can call “Mastering the Relationship.”

  1. Be a good listener.
     
    You can learn so much from active listening to–and engagement with–your prospects and donors. Much more than the best prospect researcher can find for you. I’ve written about meetings versus research. Focus conversations on why people love your work, then listen carefully. You’ll hear all kinds of clues about what they want to give to; what moves them; what they don’t like; how your work has been important to them and their families. That’s all valuable in strengthening your relationships–and your solicitations. (Follow my advice or pay $500 for Mastering the Ask.)
  2.  

  3. Remember anniversaries.
        
    Not merely weddings and birthdays. If you want to stand out, remember donors’ gift-making anniversaries. In Planned Giving, remember the anniversary of when bequest donors informed you they put you in their will. Apply this to all types of fundraising. You’re commemorating anniversaries your donors don’t even recognize. Their gift was that important to you. Will you impress your donors! (You have the data you need in your fundraising management software.)
  4.     

  5. Write handwritten notes.
        
    Why? Because hardly anyone does. I can’t say, “no one does” because our clients do. But you’ll be among the very few. Now that you’re remembering anniversaries, do it this way. Planned gift donors especially appreciate handwritten notes. Most of them grew up writing on stationery. But they’re not the only ones. Plus, you save time writing a sincere, heartfelt note rather than struggling to fill an eight-and-a-half-by-eleven sheet in Word. I avoid Word for personal, heart-whole correspondence.
  6.     

  7. Get out of the office.
        
    If your job is fundraising, you have to get out of your office and see people. Seventy-five percent of your time should be outside. Delegate. Stop volunteering for committees. Plead with your boss to offload administrative tasks. Spend time with your prospects and donors where they live, work or play.
  8.     

  9. Make introductions.
        
    Do your prospects know donors? Do your donors know other donors? They should. The more relationships you can build through your nonprofit, the more valuable it becomes to those you’re cultivating. So many fundraisers are buzzing about relationship-building using social media properties. Let’s not forget the strength of an introduction, a handshake and a new friend. Don’t ignore the value of, “There’s someone I’d like you to meet.” You are the connector. Your nonprofit is the connection.
  10.     

  11. Be good to people.
        
    I hope you genuinely enjoy the company of people, because you’re in a people business. It’s not tax codes and net income charitable remainder unitrusts with make-up provision. You’ve got to like people. That will make it so much easier to treat them with respect, sensitivity, good humor, honesty and compassion. To treat them the way you’d like to be treated.

People give to charitable missions they love that are represented by people they like.

You’ll be more liked if you take these tips to heart.

Nonprofit Radio for March 11, 2011: A Conversation with Sasha Dichter

Big Nonprofit Ideas for the Other 95%

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

Tony Martignetti Nonprofit Radio for March 11, 2011:

Sasha Dichter, Director of Business Development for Acumen Fund, a nonprofit that invests patient capital in enterprises that combat poverty.

Sasha is also a popular and inspirational blogger and speaker.

We’ll hear why Acumen’s work, and Sasha’s body of personal work, translate into ideas for your nonprofit–and your career.

  • What is Generosity Day?
  • Why does Sasha say, “I’m sick of apologizing for being in charge of raising money?”

Top Trends. Sound Advice. Lively Conversation.

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

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

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

When and where: Talking Alternative Radio, Fridays, 1-2PM Eastern

Sign-up for show alerts!

“Like” the show’s Facebook page.

Here is the link to the podcast: 032: A Conversation with Sasha Dichter
View Full Transcript