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  • Holm Skovbjerg posted an update 5 years, 4 months ago

    Earlier in my career, I worked for a training and technical assistance service provider with significant revenue from foundations and corporations. What was the key to success? It was targeted fundraising based on the needs of the donors.

    Unfortunately, many organizations take another approach. They send a shower of requests hoping one might land in the right spot. As a board member of a grantmaking organization with no paid staff, I review requests that are based on this "shower" approach. They have little chance of being funded. Why? In most cases, the requests either do not relate to our grantmaking initiatives or the amount of money requested is well above our capabilities.

    In the current fundraising environment of fewer dollars and more nonprofits, you can’t afford to waste your time and resources. There are four keys to more successful fundraising.

    Be clear about who you are

    You must be clear about:

    The community need you are addressing

    How your mission addresses that need

    The precise activities or services for which you are seeking support

    Who will benefit from these activities or services

    Your expected outcomes

    Your measures of success

    The type and amount of resources you need to achieve your desired results

    Invest in prospect research

    Once you are clear about your needs, shift your focus to the needs of your potential donors. Learn their history and their unique interests. Learn their guidelines, policies and grantmaking procedures. Learn their funding patterns, including the specific types of grants and the dollar amounts. The more information you gather the more likely it is that you will be able to find a realistic match.

    Create value

    All nonprofits exist to make a difference. But in order to attract funding, you must be able to answer two key questions:

    Will your request help the donor meet their philanthropic goals?

    In what specific ways will the donor benefit from contributing to your organization?

    If you can develop a compelling statement describing "what’s in it for them", you have probably found a good match.

    In addition, you must demonstrate that you are a mission-focused, results-oriented organization by:

    Presenting a well-developed plan for implementing and evaluating your activities

    Providing evidence of your competence and capacity to deliver

    Documenting that you will be able to sustain your proposed activities.

    Build community partnerships

    Foundation and corporate funders receive many more requests than they are able to fund.

    Donor Prospect Research Software for Nonprofits are keenly aware of the duplication that is prevalent in the nonprofit sector and the large number of nonprofits requesting funds to address related issues.