Everyone wants something in the world to change. And everyone has something to give. If these two statements are true, or even partially true, the marketplace for charity is even bigger than our donor databases suggest.
To begin with, many people don’t know how to get involved, or even where to start. Why? Because people can’t easily discover charities that match their interests, and, when they do find charities they love, it’s not intuitive or easy for them to help.
The first problem is the big one. Existing donors and passionate advocates of your cause can be a big part of helping you solve this problem, but your organization must also have two things in place:
Your website needs to make it super easy and obvious for people to know that they can give to, fundraise for or share your charity with their networks. Tools that help charities manage and amplify their fundraising efforts are plentiful and inexpensive so the first barrier is somewhat easy to resolve.
The second barrier can take a bit more work. Here’s why you need a mindset and strategy to embrace fundraisers who don’t get paid to raise money for you.
Why fundraisers who don’t work for you are a great asset
People will fundraise for your cause for the same reasons they donate money to you: Because someone asked them to and because they care. Your external champions have three things going for them that paid professionals don’t have.
1. Scale
Traditional fundraisers grow their prospect lists in all sorts of ways, including networking, distributing marketing collateral, grant writing and giving presentations. It may be necessary work, but it is slow, laborious and expensive, and it can only progress as quickly as their limited time and resources allow.
Fundraisers who don’t work for you have their own, new to you, lists of family, friends and co-workers - people with whom they’ve already got strong connections. By empowering them to fundraise on your behalf, you give yourself the opportunity to meet some of these connections without having to do all the traditional legwork.
2. Genuine relationships
Getting access to new people is great, but only if they give you some of their time and attention. And we tend to give our time more readily to people we already know.
So when an ask comes from fundraisers who don’t work for you, instead of from you, the chances their contacts will pay attention is much higher. Leveraging the genuine relationships of fundraisers who don’t work for you gets you in the door with more people more easily.
3. Low cost
By empowering people to fundraise for you, you enable them to amplify your results in ways you simply can’t do on your own. Multiply each champion by dozens (or even hundreds) of connections and that’s a powerful and cost effective way to spread your message and ask.
The way forward for professional fundraisers
Although social fundraising is proving more effective, less expensive and more scalable than traditional in-house fundraising, that doesn’t mean it’s time to dump professional fundraisers. What it does mean, however, is that it’s time to update their job description.
With social fundraising facilitating access and scale, professional fundraisers can be more strategic with their time and shift their role to include:
Like it or not, people are fundraising socially for causes they care about. But social fundraising is still very young, and there’s lots of room to start experimenting with what works best for you and your champions.
By embracing and encouraging social fundraising, you empower donors and champions with more ways to support you. Social fundraising, when properly executed, will expand your fundraising network and results by leveraging the genuine relationships of your supporters.
Every fundraising strategy you develop must consider how you are going to engage and leverage social advocates and crowd fundraisers.
John Bromley is the founder and CEO of Chimp.net, and the co-founder of Benefic Group. He facilitates benevolence full time by helping people, companies and charities plan, execute and track the charitable impact they aspire to create.