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2014 The Salvation Army Community Resource and Development Conference Sessions. The Future of Fundraising . April 23, 2014 Indianapolis. Timothy L. Seiler, Ph.D., CFRE Director, The Fund Raising School. If past is prologue ….
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2014 The Salvation Army Community Resource and Development Conference Sessions The Future of Fundraising April 23, 2014 Indianapolis Timothy L. Seiler, Ph.D., CFRE Director, The Fund Raising School
2012 Contributions: $316.23 billion by source of contributions(in billions of dollars – all figures are rounded)
2012 Contributions: $316.23 billion by type of recipient organization(in billions of dollars – all figures are rounded)
Apology Pride
The Study of High Net Worth Philanthropy • Commitment to Nonprofits • In 2011, 95% of HNW donors gave to a charity. • In 2011, the average amount given by HNW households was $52,770 (a decrease of 7% from 2009). • Focus on major gifts • Disproportionately high share of all individual giving in the U.S. comes from HNW individuals • Top 1% gave 37% of all itemized contribution deductions in 2009. • Top 0.1% gave 18%.
Charitable Giving Forecast for the Next Three to Five Years Among High Net Worth Households Percentage (%) Source: 2012 Bank of America Study of High Net Worth Philanthropy
How Decisions About Charitable Giving Were Made in the High Net Worth Household in 2011 Percentage (%) Source: 2012 Bank of America Study of High Net Worth Philanthropy
The Study of High Net Worth Philanthropy • Commitment to Nonprofits • In 2011, 95% of HNW donors gave to a charity. • In 2011, the average amount given by HNW households was $52,770 (a decrease of 7% from 2009). • Focus on major gifts • Disproportionately high share of all individual giving in the U.S. comes from HNW individuals • Top 1% gave 37% of all itemized contribution deductions in 2009. • Top 0.1% gave 18%.
High Net Worth Donors Reporting Giving Based on Motivation Type in 2011^ Percentage (%) ^Respondents were asked to rank answers from 1 to 5, with 1 being “strongly disagree” and 5 being “strongly agree.” Responses shown here represent those respondents who were collapsed into the agree categories. *2009 and 2011 results are statistically significant (2009 data not included here). Source: 2012 Bank of America Study of High Net Worth Philanthropy
Old School Fundraising • Demand Side Philanthropy • “scarcity” • Scolding Model • Duty/Obligation Organization-centered “Needs”-Driven Giving is a contribution Fundraising is just about money
New School Fundraising • Supply Side Philanthropy • “abundance” • Discernment Model • Inclination • Donor-centered • Values-driven • Giving is creating change • Fundraising nurtures generosity
“Is that idea big enough?” Jim Hodge
Aspirational Inspirational