This blog is dedicated to scaling your nonprofit’s revenue.
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The Great Nonprofit Reframe (Cost vs. Investment)
Nonprofit CEOs and board members, let me ask you this: Can we do a big (alright, HUGE) reframe in our sector, together?
Here’s what I’m proposing... cost versus investment.
A real-life example: The first time I invested in a coach to help me with a sticky part of my business, I was terrified by the cost. My finger hovered over the send button on my “YES” email for longer than I’d like to admit.
How’d it work out?
My 2nd coach… cost 4X
My 3rd… cost another 10X
My 4th… you get the picture
Now, I don’t flinch when I see the cost. The value and results each have provided has been beyond transformational.
Nonprofit CEOs: Where’s Your Ah-Ha Moment Hiding?
Nonprofit CEOs - What’s the last “AH-HA” moment you’ve had?
Mine is a good one. And it happened after starting to follow personal finance coach Ramit Sethi on Instagram. Ramit was talking about how many of us have learned how to SAVE our money, but we didn’t necessarily learn how to SPEND money.
[AH-HA!]
The last person I want to be is the one who saved blindly for decades, penny-pinched at every corner, and just kept my head down in a stockpiling strategy...but never enjoyed it.
You must learn how to spend well, too. Not only to enjoy the fruits of your labor, but know that, “If I take a risk with my money, it won’t be catastrophic.”
I can’t stop thinking about this in the two months since I heard it.
Nonprofit’s Great Disruptor: Embracing Risk
Here’s something I ask all of my clients and potential clients to consider (get ready, it’s a mind flip!):
The revenue trajectory of your organization has way more to do with the leadership's comfort level with investing in spending than some of their revenue-generating ideas.
People come to me all the time saying:
We’re not growing.
We need more money.
We just can’t seem to get ahead.
But, too often they haven’t been truly honest with themselves. They haven’t considered if they’re spending enough money to equip their teams to make more money.
You see, when you want to raise more money for your nonprofit, this is simply self-sabotage. And often, this approach tends to yield mostly restricted revenue—a double whammy.
So, how would you secure more unrestricted revenue, so you can invest in the growth of your organization. Not just from a “What are the needs of this program?” perspective, but also in terms of operational expenses, administrative expenses, and my favorite word . . . OVERHEAD.
Where do we start?
The Nonprofit Sector Cannot Afford a Scarcity Mindset
Is your Fundraising Team making decisions for your donors (and leaving money on the table)?
Can you guess where I see the most money left on the table?
Fundraisers making decisions for the donors, preemptively. But, I’m telling you, those donors are dying to give more. To really understand the need of your mission—and contribute to it.
How do I know? I see Advancement Teams’ eyes opened to this all the time. They are shocked to see how much money they’ve been leaving on the table for years.
Instead of predetermining what any one donor might give, and sticking to that, what if you could look at the process with the expectation of:
It takes more to do more…
…especially to solve the giant problems the sector is solving.
COMPREHENSIVE WHITEPAPER [THE BIG FUNDRAISING SECRET]
Over the last few months, I've been working hard to put together a brand new White Paper for 2021 - it's called The Problems with Traditional Nonprofit Fundraising & WHAT TO DO INSTEAD.
I'm anxious to hear your thoughts because, well, my advice is different from a lot of the old fundraising systems we've been trapped in for too long. You'll see how to stop your team from putting too much time and energy into the wrong activities that never secure the unrestricted money you need to grow.
Nonprofit Growth: Goal Setting vs. Fear [ PART 2 ]
In my last blog post, I was talking about the freedom that comes from goal setting.
Because it naturally sets your boundaries. It allows you to align your time very easily within those boundaries.
Boundaries help us know what to ‘say no’ to and what to ‘say yes’ to.
Boundaries tell us what to start doing and what to stop doing.
Boundaries remove the guilt, shame, and all the ‘we ought to do X.’
I don’t need to tell you what that looks like in the nonprofit sector. You know, things like:
“We don’t make any money during Giving Tuesday, but it would look bad if we didn’t do it.”
“The staff spends way more time on the golf event than they should, but our two chairs love doing it even though it raises very little money.”
“Our board wants us to write more grants, but I spend days writing them and am rarely rewarded the funds.”
“I don’t have time to find individual donors or eve do relational fundraising, because there aren’t enough hours in a day. I’m expected to do it all.”
Successful fundraisers align their TIME with DOLLARS.
Nonprofit Growth: Goal Setting vs. Fear [ PART 1 ]
Are you a natural a goal-setter?
I am.
Some would say that my goal setting, corresponding spreadsheet creation, and cadence of activities to hit said goal are, well, obsessive.
(Some = my husband)
Run a half marathon when I’ve never ran around the block? ✔️check
Hit business stretch goals every year the last three years well before year-end? ✔️check
Complete my family by adopting two pre-teens we’d never met before? ✔️check
Speak 100+ times last year? ✔️check
You get the picture.
An honest moment? I wish I could say I did each one of these with ease, no fear, or anxiety.
That would be a lie.
But, as I’ve invested in myself as a leader, entrepreneur, and business owner over the last decade, I’ve slowly embraced the fear and anxiety present in each one of these situations.
It’s a muscle I continue to flex.
I’ve learned my fear and anxiousness about change that needs to come about to reach goals is a good thing.
4 Experts on the Top THREE Things Nonprofit Professionals Need to Know [Summer HOT SEAT ]
What are the Biggest Things Nonprofit Professionals Need to Know About…?
A client once said to me, “I don’t know what I don’t know.” That’s really stuck with me. Keeping that beginner’s learning mindset, asking questions, and remaining curious can really take you far in fundraising.
This is as true for me as anyone else. I’m so happy to be part of a community of fantastic expert consultants, who are always there for me when I have questions.
And I do have questions! Yes, I know a LOT about major gifts fundraising. But there’s always more to learn. Planned giving, DEI, content strategy, online giving...I need to know more. This month, I asked four experts on these topics to share what nonprofit professionals who are just getting started with these topics need to know most.
I learned a lot this month, and I think you will, too. Want to see the entire interviews with all four experts?
New Podcast Announcement: Nonprofit MBA Podcast 3.19 with Stephen Halasnik
When Your Nonprofit Funding is Plateauing Featuring Sherry Quam Taylor on The Nonprofit MBA Podcast
Read an Executive Summary or Listen to the Podcast HERE
Nonprofit Consultant Sherry Quam Taylor from QuamTaylor LLC talks with Stephen Halasnik from Financing Solutions about the signs and solutions for when a nonprofit fundraising has stopped growing. The solutions are much more counterintuitive then one would expect.
How a nonprofit’s funding can plateau through Irrational Frugality . . .
Last week, I shared with you some advice Bobbi Rebell shared during a guest interview on The SimplyBe. Podcast. I follow her because she’s a financial guru and runs a super successful business and brand.
I also told you that I’d circle back and tell you my favorite new phrase she used! I had literally told about 30 people this within a week of listening to the podcast. Why? Because it resonated so much with me.
Here’s what happened to me.
My husband and I celebrated our ten year wedding anniversary in February of 2020. We went to Italy on our honeymoon. And when we were in Italy ten years ago, we made the pact to come back on our tenth anniversary.
Well, a lot has changed in ten years.
Back then we had full freedom to time vacations whenever we pleased. Go anywhere in the world without much planning or looking ahead. Life is full of surprises.
Nonprofit Leaders: What do you need to decide today?
I can’t believe the year is almost halfway over. How did that happen?
One thing I’m trying to be really intentional about this year is taking time for learning - I’d gotten out of the habit of listening and learning from other experts. Luckily, I’m back to regular reading and podcast consumption.
Earlier this month, I found myself in the car for about six hours headed downstate for a funeral. During those hours I binged a podcast that had been recommended to me called, The SimplyBe. Podcast. One of my favorite episodes was a guest interview with Bobbi Rebell, author of “How to Be a Financial Grownup”. Bobbi is a Certified Financial Planner and has so many fancy endorsements and accolades behind her name. She runs a super successful business and brand - I’m inspired by her.
Nonprofit CEOs: You Are Your Most Valuable Fundraising Asset
Last April I took a life-changing program taught by Tracy Goodwin. It’s a program about the psychology of the voice. I thought her vocal techniques might help me get rid of my ‘ummmms’ when teaching Webinars. It not only did that, but it changed my entire business and even how I approach solicitation coaching with my clients. For example:
She helped me show up . . . and not some version of me or who I think I should be when speaking. It’s the same for fundraisers. I see so many people showing up to donor meetings thinking they’ve got to be more . . . more professional, more polished, more of what the donor wants.
But only the real you needs to show up.
Tracy taught me how to stay in the moment during the conversation and not let stories of the past, or fears of the future creep in. That’s how you get rid of your ummms . . . but it’s also how you serve, listen, and connect deeply and authentically. This is huge in fundraising.
But you need to quiet your mind.
Nonprofit CEOs - you’re going to be the most successful fundraiser when YOU are YOU.
The Top 3 Reasons Your Fundraising Has Plateaued
When nonprofit executives come to me, they are often a bit stuck. Often their organizations are raising the same amount of money every year and their development plans aren’t helping them grow because they’re simply based on the same thing, plus a little more than last year.
My advice?
“Break out of your comfort zone . . .”
“You’ve got to start doing something new to get different results . . .”
“Get comfortable with feeling uncomfortable . . . “
As I’ve researched where organizations’ funding tends to plateau, I find that there’s typically one important first step.