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Establishing A Solid Foundation in 2011
  • Establish UNIFIED Mission & Vision 
  • Assess what works and what does not work
  • Build on a solid foundation of excellence 
  • Commit to incremental improvement
  • Match organizational needs with appropriate skill levels 
  • Leverage demonstrated commitment 
  • Limit investments to produce solid outcomes 
  • Revisit the core focus points often
  • Eliminate those things that do not work
  • Recognize if you keep doing what you have always done...
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Hoosier Oncology Group 
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The Tamarindo Foundation, Inc. 

 ALlyd Articles  
Sunday, 30 December 2007
There is no magic wand in fundraising.  I wish there was.  I don't know of any magical solutions to answer the questions that have been posed by non-profit agencies for the 15 years that I have worked in development.  Yet, I remain optimistic about the fundamental process of development.  Why? Because good development is built one step at a time.  Strategic and thoughtful development practices work.

Over the years I've developed thicker skin as it relates to asking for money.  I have easily been told no as many times as I have been told yes.  At the point that I realized that my role was simply to connect people with the opportunity to support work that changes our community - I realized that there need not be sadness when people make other choices.  Assuredly, I wish every request resulted in more resources.  There are many many agencies that do tremendous work each year.  The role of development, however, is to provide opportunities to connect people with a way to express their concern, desire and commitment to the community.  Offering that opportunity is more pleasure than pain.

Occasionally, I will walk into a training or a workshop and someone will comment that they should all hold onto their wallet.  Not true, not true.  That statement is more of an advertisement that the person is ready to give.  When I walk into a room I'm not talking about giving money at all.  Often, I'm asking a few key questions.

1. What do you want your legacy to be?
2. What values do you hold most dear?
3. What evidence do you have that local agencies are working on the issues that matter most to you?
4. Would you be willing to listen to a brief interactive presentation about the challenges in our community that you care the most about?

For people who don't care, the equation is easy.  Those individuals usually head to the exit, or start filling out their grocery list early in our time together.  For those who are truly interested in their legacy, they recognize the tremendous opportunity and responsibility their personal resources in ways that make a difference - ways that have the potential to change lives.  Fundraising, at its best, connects people to the things that matter most to them.  The opportunity to invest - via time, talent, and treasure - matters not only to the potential recipient, but first and foremost, to the donor.  Many people recognize philanthropy as an investment in what matters most in life, especially for those who sacrifice to make the gift.

When an agency thinks about the role of development, it should also think about relationships.  How often are people offered the opportunity to grow in relationship with your agency?  Often, non-profit agencies have not because they ask not.  Fundraising is essentially the practice of asking diverse people for financial support.

If I did have a magic wand, it wouldn't work much differently than the time tested practice of growing individual donor relationships.   Exactly how does that happen?

1. Work intentionally to attract People, Attention and Resources for the agency.
2. Share the successes of the agency - via stories, newspaper articles, testimonials and demonstrated successes.
3. Leverage relationships of existing stakeholders - staff, board members, volunteers and members.
4. Ask for support - specifically, often and with a purpose.
5. Demonstrate gratitude and results.
6. Grow existing support through a tiered approach of reaching first time donors, retaining existing supporters and leveraging the gifts of long-term donors.

Maybe, systemic development, has a little long-term magic afterall.
 
POSTED BY: Aimee A. Laramore AT 10:35 pm   |  Permalink   |  E-mail this
What Clients Have Shared
“Aimee consulted with CICOA in the development of our current strategic plan. In this capacity she facilitated a series of stakeholder meetings, led a planning retreat of the agency's volunteer and paid staff leadership, and worked with the strategic planning committee to interpret findings, develop the planning documents and identify effective measurements of key outcomes. Aimee has excellent communications skills. She is highly effective in coordinating group discussions and soliciting meaningful input from others. She brings a fresh perspective and focused energy to the process. She is a good steward of agency resources and delivers a quality product. I would recommend her to other organizations that are considering a strategic plan or operational review.” 
November 10, 2009 ~ Orion Bell, President CICOA 

 “Aimee served as the development director for our human service agency and because of her great work with us we do a better job of connecting with donors and supporters. I'd happily recommend her to anyone who wants to get better at securing the resources needed to make the world a better place.”
 
November 11, 2009 ~ John Ziraldo, Lighthouse of Oakland County 

“I found Aimee to be a bright articulate consultant who engaged staff, board and leadership in a process to develop new organizational, strategic & fund development plans. Aimee was superb at engaging staff as well as board members in the process and getting buy-in for the process. She is a straight forward person and upfront about some people not always liking that. It was refreshing for us at EmberWood Center, especially me. Our relationship also included some executive coaching and that has been very helpful to me as my postion as President has been transitioning.” 
November 5, 2009 ~ Vince Failla, President Emberwood Center (formerly Community Addiction Services of Indiana) 
 
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