The Fundraising Talent Podcast
Business:Non-Profit
I recently asked my friends Rebecca and David to join me to discuss an article that David had written about what leaders in higher education should expect of fundraising in the next year. Our conversation offered a whole new layer of meaning to David’s encouragement that advancement leaders need to be carefully thinking about renewal, re-engagement, and raising the bar. Perhaps what was profound about this conversation was the notion that fundraisers learn how to appropriately “dwell” with a donor in order to ensure that they are putting the relationship ahead of whatever proposal we are trying to advance. Afterwards, I had to double-check my understanding of what it means to “dwell” with someone; it is not a term I’m accustomed to using and certainly something I wanted to contemplate more.
To “dwell” means to remain for a time, and when we say that we are dwelling with someone there is often a degree of intentionality that accompanies it. How many of us have learned how to dwell with a donor without finding it necessary to close the gift? This notion of dwelling echoes Rebecca’s challenge that, as we emerge from the pandemic, fundraisers will need permission to spend time with their donors having conversations that are about more than closing another gift. She insisted that we have to make room for listening to what people are saying to us, both directly and indirectly, about their experiences in the last two years and how all this will inform their decisions.
As always, we are especially grateful to our friends at CueBack for sponsoring The Fundraising Talent Podcast. And if you’d like to download Responsive’s latest edition of Carefully & Critically, just click here.
Has the window of opportunity for greater fundraising self-care begun to close?
How do we make professional development more accessible?
324 | What if we incentivize sticking around rather than raising lots of money?
Can fundraising embrace the science of muddling through?
Why don’t fundraising wizards talk about the messy middle?
Are fundraisers being more selective about whom they work for?
Can fundraising professionals let go of their favorite toys?
Are fundraisers spending too much time chasing after new donors?
Are fundraising professionals patiently earning the right to ask?
How many nonprofit organizations are stuck in the wrong story?
What are the most insidious myths about planned gift fundraising?
Can digital champions strengthen your online fundraising efforts?
When did professional fundraising become “guru-city”?
Should rested Black women take the helm of today’s nonprofit sector?
Are fundraising professionals being ruthless advocates for themselves?
Can fundraisers be recognized as our community’s best boundary spanners?
Is your nonprofit benefiting from both high and low context fundraising?
Is the fundraising community growing wiser in these challenging times?
308 | What if fundraising relied on more asset-based thinking?
How do today’s employers prepare for tomorrow’s workforce?
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