My first fundraising job was door-to-door canvassing for Campaign California, a now-defunct organization in Santa Monica, in the early 1980s. Of course, I didn't realize it was a fundraising job at the time. We were all recruited to be "activists" to gather signatures on petitions and get folks to join the organization. We considered ourselves to be door-to-door salesmen for a better world. But the bottom line was coming in from the field at the end of the evening with a pocket full of checks.
It was a great learning experience in so many ways. The good experiences (meeting some wonderful people) and the bad experiences (being threatened with assorted weapons people keep by their doors) all taught me much about different people, and how to talk to them all without getting myself in too much trouble. I also, without knowing it would someday become a major part of my career, learned about how to ask people for charitable donations.
What I learned then, and still practice now, is that it is your passion that is your greatest fundraising tool. Saying "I want your money" first, and explaining why later is never as effective and sharing your passion for your mission first and letting the money follow as a natural way for the listener to get involved. "Old-fashioned" maybe, but you stick with what works.
Raising Money the Old Fashioned Way
Reviewed by citra
Published :
Rating : 4.5
Published :
Rating : 4.5