[ASK AN EXPERT] How To Budget For Major Donor Cultivation And Stewardship?
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Our Ask An Expert series features real questions answered by Claire Axelrad, J.D., CFRE, our very own Fundraising Coach, also known as Charity Clairity. Today’s question comes from a nonprofit employee who wants advice on creating a major donor stewardship budget:
Dear Charity Clairity,
We are in the beginning stages of creating a major gift program. Historically, we have spent almost nothing on stewardship. Is there a rule of thumb or suggestions on creating a stewardship budget? I’m thinking impact videos (less formal – low cost), gatherings, impact mailings, cost of donor meetings, etc. We will raise roughly $2M this year and are looking to increase that through major gifts. As I create a budget I have lots of ideas, but trying to be reasonable about my budget request.
— Responsible Steward
Dear Responsible Steward,
You are on the right track!
Cultivation and stewardship are the grease that keeps a major gift pipeline well-oiled.
If you don’t budget for this, you can’t realistically say you have a major gift program.
Period.
No exceptions.
In other words, you have to spend money to make money.
Major gift development has a natural arc.
Prospect identification… qualification… cultivation… solicitation… and, finally, stewardship.
My guess is you’re talking about both cultivation (moves and touches before the ask) and stewardship (the same thing after the gift has been made). You can never stop. Cultivation makes the plant bloom; stewardship makes the blossoms last longer.
If you simply bring a sapling home from the nursery, stick it outside and then hope it will grow (pretty much all by itself) into a major tree, you’ll be sadly disappointed most of the time. The same holds true with donors you identify as potential major gift prospects.
The cultivation phase is your opportunity to take your donor on a journey that crosses the bridge from the values they hold dear and the values you enact.
Bridge building takes great care. If you do a sloppy, careless job you’ll get a careless gift. That’s not what you’re after. You need a cultivation plan and budget; you need to follow that plan. You need to think about the donor’s needs every step along the way of that plan. Don’t expect this to happen overnight. You need to learn more about them, and vice-versa. They need to come to trust you, and this results from increasing levels of engagement and follow-through on your part. Perseverance is key.
All of the strategies you’re suggesting are excellent. Think of these “moves” as things you design to emotionally and psychologically move your prospect to make an impact gift. In this regard, the more tailored and personal you can be, the better.
Every single major donor prospect on your list should have their own individual cultivation plan.
Some of the moves and touches can be similar, but not all of them. For example, if John is most interested in helping seniors, John should get an impact video with the story of a senior his gift will help. Jane, who prefers to designate giving for children’s services, should get a different video with a story that sparks her interest.
The larger the gift you intend to ask for, the more personal your cultivation should be. And it needn’t be expensive. For example:
Let’s get back to budgeting for cultivation.
Keep in mind major gift programs will show a lower ROI in the first year or two than in the years that follow. This is because major gifts development takes time. Once you get in the groove however, major gifts (and legacy gifts) will deliver the best ROI and net income of any fundraising program. By far.
You’ve got to plan for the upfront investment.
There’s no one right way to do this, but here are some guidelines:
It’s very responsible to spend money to make money!
— Charity Clairity (Please use a pseudonym if you prefer to be anonymous when you submit your own question, like “Responsible Steward” did.)
How do you budget for major donor stewardship? Let us know in the comments.
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