The Fundraising Talent Podcast
Business:Non-Profit
Today I enjoyed a thought-provoking conversation with Killian, one of the newest members of our consulting team here at Responsive. Killian has found fundraising to be very meaningful work and enjoys assisting his clients in getting it right. Killian and I began our conversation by asking how many fundraisers actually want the responsibility of building meaningful relationships with their donors and will stick with relationships long enough to ensure the the most significant and sustainable levels of support. We went on to discuss whether fundraisers should aspire to be our community’s best boundary spanners, admired and recognized as being confident at the lunch table with people who are unlike themselves and whose experiences and world views are very different from their own.
Killian reminded me that it was Tocqueville who applauded Americans for their tendency to voluntary organize associations rather than rely on the marketplace and the state to orchestrate social relations. It has often occurred to me that, as our society becomes increasingly diverse and pluralistic, fundraisers have an opportunity to shine in a myriad of ways that extend far beyond their ability to secure large checks. Fundraisers have the opportunity to learn how to be especially confident in coffee shops and across lunch tables with people who see and understand the world very differently than they do.
As always, we are especially grateful to our friends at CueBack for sponsoring The Fundraising Talent Podcast. If you’d like to learn more about hosting the Responsive Fundraising roadshow in your local community, email me for more information. And, if you’d like to download Responsive’s latest edition of Carefully & Critically, just click here.
How does a fundraiser find more meaningful work?
What expectations should fundraising have of the board?
Does attending to the office do fundraising more harm than good?
What are the 3 types of donors that every fundraiser should understand?
Are you a reluctant fundraiser?
Can fundraisers create an equation that increases giving?
Should fundraisers learn how to “dwell”with their donors?
What holds fundraising back on larger, unrestricted gifts?
What does your boss have to say about fundraising’s competing ideologies?
Did the pandemic permanently change some of our fundraising pratices?
Will special event fundraising ever measure up to our expectations?
What can fundraising learn from bad market research?
What will your fundraiser say when the headhunter calls next week?
Will the current system deliver on fundraising’s higher aspirations?
Are we using the wrong approach for retaining fundraising talent?
Perhaps a field approach to fundraising expertise is a bit overdue?
Despite their set-backs, why do fundraisers recover so quickly?
What if fundraisers took a chance on convening genuine conversations?
Does fundraising need to get better at how we receive the gift?
Can we really expect fundraisers to succeed without social capital?
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