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1. The Influential Fundraiser UWNYS Summer PAC MeetingCooperstown, NY
Thursday, July 29, 2010
2. The Old Perspective on Fundraising- Moves Management Constituent /customer relationship management (CRM): Finding, analyzing and tracking constituent information to form personal, lifelong relationships with your donors.
Solicitation strategy: Increasing the success of your efforts by targeting prime donor prospects.
Program and pipeline management: Move prospects through successive pipelines: identify, qualify, cultivate and solicit with the intent of progressively turning them into donors and predicting future gifts.
Strategic analysis and execution: Evaluating your program in light of specific goals and objectives to ensure optimal results. http://www.blackbaud.com/files/resources/downloads/WhitePaper_MovesManagementSuccess.pdf
Drawn from old fashioned sales techniques crudely applied to the donor relationship, with an emphasis on closing the deal, rather than mobilization of the donor beyond the intended ask.
You can no longer just write a good case statement, share it and expect buy-in and support. Our new community impact focus as United Ways needs to be on mobilizing our stakeholders to action
whether is be giving, advocating or volunteering, all commitments require a cal to action, no longer just a mechanical process cross off the step and move to the next one approachhttp://www.blackbaud.com/files/resources/downloads/WhitePaper_MovesManagementSuccess.pdf
Drawn from old fashioned sales techniques crudely applied to the donor relationship, with an emphasis on closing the deal, rather than mobilization of the donor beyond the intended ask.
You can no longer just write a good case statement, share it and expect buy-in and support. Our new community impact focus as United Ways needs to be on mobilizing our stakeholders to action
whether is be giving, advocating or volunteering, all commitments require a cal to action, no longer just a mechanical process cross off the step and move to the next one approach
3. Remember Good to Great? Defining Great- superior performance, distinctive impact and lasting endurance
Level 5 Leadership- personal humility and professional will
First Who- getting the right people both on the bus and in the right seats
The Hedgehog Concept- what can your organization be the best and the most efficient at?
Turning the Flywheel- building momentum by building the brand
4. A New Perspective on Fundraising-Building on the Good to Great Themes The Influential Fundraiser: Using the Psychology of Persuasion to Achieve Outstanding Results
Written by Bernard Ross and Clare Segal (Wiley & Sons, 2009)
Book review highlighted in The Chronicle of Philanthropy
Case studies available at: http://influentialfundraiser.com/case_studies.html =mc (The Management Centre)- internationally based consulting firm that works exclusively with nonprofit and charity organizations
Other books: Breakthrough Thinking for Nonprofit Organizations: Creative Strategies for Extraordinary Results
The key proposition in this approach is that other people do not necessarily share our way of thinking or making decisions. To be successful we will need t recognize differences and be flexible enough to adapt to them. =mc (The Management Centre)- internationally based consulting firm that works exclusively with nonprofit and charity organizations
Other books: Breakthrough Thinking for Nonprofit Organizations: Creative Strategies for Extraordinary Results
The key proposition in this approach is that other people do not necessarily share our way of thinking or making decisions. To be successful we will need t recognize differences and be flexible enough to adapt to them.
5. What is Influence?
The managed relationship of helping others to:
Understand
Accept
Act on
your point of view We make lots of assumptions in fundraising that may serve as a barrier to our success
Managed relationship- steps and stages that have to be organized systematically
Understand- the prospect may not even know that the challenge exists
Accept- you need to be sure that your prospect agrees that the issue is their responsibility
Act on- you and the prospect need to be clear on the change that you want/action that you want to occur
Point of view- how do you make your point of view become their point of view without using coercion or manipulation
We make lots of assumptions in fundraising that may serve as a barrier to our success
Managed relationship- steps and stages that have to be organized systematically
Understand- the prospect may not even know that the challenge exists
Accept- you need to be sure that your prospect agrees that the issue is their responsibility
Act on- you and the prospect need to be clear on the change that you want/action that you want to occur
Point of view- how do you make your point of view become their point of view without using coercion or manipulation
6. The Cog Metaphor The 5 Ps of Influence:
Passion
Proposal
Preparation
Persuasion
Persistence
7. Passion Emotional engagement- your commitment to the cause
The elevator pitch
think, feel, do
Emotional intelligence- your ability to internally and externally manage your relationships
Self awareness, self regulation, motivation, empathy, social skills
Understanding donor motivations- their passion is the driver to action
8. Donor Motivation . Hygiene factors- people need to feel safe with your cause; if these things are missing, they will feel dissatisfied or demotivated; absence of concerns (security, credibility, meeting expectations)
Neutrality- no strong feelings either way
this is where many of our donors are; they know we do good work, but they are not excited about it and are not motivated to any more than hey are currently doing
Motivating factors- drivers that encourage someone to take further action; to gain peer respect, feelings of guilt, to celebrate an occasion, desire to make a difference, sense of anger or outrage, personal experience with a cause, commitment to value or belief
Key drivers to action: features (essential characteristics), benefits (how the features will pay off), motivators (the specific payoff they need to spur them to action)Hygiene factors- people need to feel safe with your cause; if these things are missing, they will feel dissatisfied or demotivated; absence of concerns (security, credibility, meeting expectations)
Neutrality- no strong feelings either way
this is where many of our donors are; they know we do good work, but they are not excited about it and are not motivated to any more than hey are currently doing
Motivating factors- drivers that encourage someone to take further action; to gain peer respect, feelings of guilt, to celebrate an occasion, desire to make a difference, sense of anger or outrage, personal experience with a cause, commitment to value or belief
Key drivers to action: features (essential characteristics), benefits (how the features will pay off), motivators (the specific payoff they need to spur them to action)
9. Proposal The case statement- must have time and impact component (either negative or positive future)
Opportunity, crisis, vision, risk
A good, strong case statement:
Favors short, familiar words
Keeps most sentences short
Uses active verbs
Puts people in the writing
Like a good brick- simple, memorable, powerful
Case statements end to have lots of issues; too long, too much lingo/jargon, too fixed, too internally focused
What do you need, why is there a pressing need, how is your organization uniquely qualified to tackle this need, what are the benefits of your action, what are the negative consequences if you fail?Case statements end to have lots of issues; too long, too much lingo/jargon, too fixed, too internally focused
What do you need, why is there a pressing need, how is your organization uniquely qualified to tackle this need, what are the benefits of your action, what are the negative consequences if you fail?
10. Preparation Outcome versus fundraising goal
Paralysis by analysis- moves management focuses on biographical data collection based on propensity and potential to give; you will never have perfect data Paralysis by analysis- moves management focuses on biographical data collection based on propensity and potential to give; you will never have perfect data
11. Establishing the Outcome You Want The seven steps
Be clear what you want.
Establish the evidence.
Consider the context.
Establish the resources you control.
Consider the consequences.
Anticipate the challenges.
Develop a flexible plan.
LIM-its- like, intend, must
12. Persuasion Research has demonstrated that high achievers in many fields partly owe their results to the quality of their communication skills (neuro -linguistic programming- NLP)
Build rapport
Speak the language of influence
Auditory- sounds and words
Visual- pictures and images
Kinesthetic- mostly feelings and touch
3 channels of communication: 55% body language, 38% voice, 7% words
Leading- in order to change someones view of the world, you first have to enter into their world
The language of influence- visual (35-45% of people), auditory (5-15%), kinaestheticn(25-35%); notice the donors preference
3 channels of communication: 55% body language, 38% voice, 7% words
Leading- in order to change someones view of the world, you first have to enter into their world
The language of influence- visual (35-45% of people), auditory (5-15%), kinaestheticn(25-35%); notice the donors preference
13. Perceptual Positions Important in Fundraising Influence Position 1: The way you experience the world
Position 2: The way someone else experiences the world
Position 3: Observing the interaction from an objective external position
from the balcony
Position 4: Getting the big picture
14. Persistence and Filters Answer Fs: 7
Unhelpful filters: deletion, distortion/misinformation by linking tow unlinked issues or experiences, generalization
Positive filters: match or mismatch, associated or disassociated, toward or away from, big chunk or small chunk, past, present or futureAnswer Fs: 7
Unhelpful filters: deletion, distortion/misinformation by linking tow unlinked issues or experiences, generalization
Positive filters: match or mismatch, associated or disassociated, toward or away from, big chunk or small chunk, past, present or future
15. Dealing with Objections The nine fundraising NO s:
No, not for this
No, not you
No, not me
No, not unless
No, not now
No, not in this way
No, too much
No, too little
No, go away ?
16. Persistence: How to Make a No a Yes Chunk it up
Anticipate the killer questions and be prepared for them
The secret is both timing and decision making strategy
Automatic
Number of times
Period of time
Consistency over time
17. Influencing a Group: The Presentation During your presentation:
Adopt confident body language
Make gestures for impact
Use eye contact to build rapport
Use living language and meaningful pauses
Use audio-visual resources
18. In Summary
The 5 Ps of Influence:
Passion
Proposal
Preparation
Persuasion
Persistence The cog metaphor againThe cog metaphor again
19. The Five Last Steps
1. If you always do what you have always done, you will get what you have always gotten
2. Everyone has their own unique map of the world- to change it you need to first understand it.
3. You already have most of the resources you need to influence people.
4. If someone else can do something, you can learn from that persons success and you need to model your success.
5. The meaning of your communication is the response you get- there are no failures in influence, only outcomes.
20. Thank you! For more information: www.theinfluentialfundraiser.com
Elizabeth Monaco, Executive Director, Chenango United Way, 27 West Main St., Norwich, NY 13815; 607-334-8815 or cuwemonaco@frontiernet.net