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Donor-Advised Funds

Big Gifts, DAF Contributions Will Be Key to Year-End, Fundraisers Say

Some nonprofits are sharing blunt messages about financial woes in an effort to spur donations

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Oleksii Kozodaiev for Project HOPE

December 11, 2023 | Read Time: 9 minutes

Nonprofit fundraisers are now in the thick of the all-important year-end fundraising period, when many groups raise the bulk of their annual revenue. After an unimpressive fundraising finish last year, charities are hoping for a better outcome this year.

But the calendar year’s final fundraising push comes on the heels of a lackluster GivingTuesday, where donor participation fell 10 percent and total giving stayed flat at $3.1 billion. But that outcome doesn’t mean year-end giving will also be flat, according to Laura MacDonald, principal at Benefactor Group, a fundraising consulting firm.

“I don’t think it’s a good indication of the sentiment of high-net-worth donors,” she says. That’s because GivingTuesday typically appeals to donors giving small sums. Major donors, she says, are generally more responsive to the highs and lows of the stock market, giving more when the market soars and giving less when it falters.

However, the decline in participation seen on GivingTuesday worries MacDonald. While it’s not yet clear why fewer donors joined in this year, she says it’s “continued evidence of the troubling trend that we’ve been seeing for a while, which is the declining rate of participation in charitable giving in America.”

With the loss of these everyday givers, high-net-worth donors have been powering donations in recent years. This year-end, these big donors are expressing more confidence in giving than they did last year, says Chris Collins, director of national philanthropy at Genesys Works, a nonprofit that places high schoolers in paid corporate internships. That could be due to improved stock market performance and the fact that a full-blown recession never materialized in 2023, he says.

“There’s just a little bit more of a sense of optimism,” he says, “and maybe more of a willingness to make larger philanthropic investments.”

In a bid to make this year-end better than the last, fundraisers are shaking things up by appealing for gifts via donor-advised funds and making their budget needs plain to donors.

All Eyes on DAFs

At Project HOPE, an international-aid nonprofit, fundraisers are encouraging donors to consider making contributions from their donor-advised funds this year. The charity is running a social media campaign asking donors, “Have you done a health check on your DAF lately?” Fundraisers will also discuss gifts from donor-advised funds when they talk to donors at year-end. Direct mail and email marketing will also mention these gifts.


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The nonprofit raises roughly 40 percent of its revenue in the last two months of the year, according to Cinira Baldi, its chief development and communications officer.

“It’s really critical that people understand that we rely on their donation preemptively, before the emergency even occurs, so that we can respond quickly,” she says. “Having funding that is not available because it’s tied up in DAFs really creates constraints for any of the NGOs who are responding to the urgent [crises] around the world.”


Reaching the Youngest Donors

As the number of donors continues to fall, some nonprofits are hoping to engage a new generation of donors: children. Through activities, games, and family conversations, children can learn new ways to help others and find their favorite cause.

One way to introduce the concept of giving is for families to talk with young children about how to set aside money to spend now, save for a special purchase, or share with others, says Jeanette Betancourt, senior vice president for U.S. social impact at Sesame Workshop. The nonprofit, which broadcasts educational shows for children, offers online resources for parents about how to begin these discussions.

One lesson encourages parents to help children label three jars, one each for spending, sharing, and saving. Parents can help children think through how to allocate any coins or cash they have, and guide them toward a financial goal.

Parents can also help children understand the difference between wants and needs, and that they can assist others without giving money, Betancourt says. “The giving could be simple things,” she says, like making a card for a sick kid at the hospital, going for a walk with a lonely neighbor, or having a video call with a grandparent.

“This should be something that is not just during the holiday time, but almost part of the culture of a program and a home,” she says.

In November, GivingTuesday, the nonprofit that organizes the annual giving day of the same name, partnered with other charities and launched the app Give As We Grow to help children ages 8 to 11 practice giving. The app includes an educational game that allows kids to practice giving back and learn about charitable causes. Players create an avatar who helps their community in different ways, including cooking meals for people in need or building a birdhouse to beautify their neighborhood.

“The game shows how everyday giving manifests in every facet of your life, and how you already have this in you,” says Celeste Flores, director of GivingTuesday’s United States and Canada hub.

Give As We Grow also includes a resource guide of activities and projects that families can do to practice giving together.

Project HOPE is making this appeal as more donors are choosing to put their money in donor-advised funds. In 2021, giving to donor-advised funds outpaced giving to private foundations, according to the Institute for Policy Studies research project, Inequality.org.

Baldi says Project HOPE earned $3.5 million in fundraising revenue from contributions via donor-advised funds last year.

Given the popularity of donor-advised funds, Baldi says it’s tricky to make the pitch to donors to disburse money out of them — not just put money into them. “It’s a fine line. You don’t want donors to ever feel like what they’re doing with their money is not smart,” she says. The charity’s campaign focuses on boosting donors’ awareness of how they can be involved in giving from their DAFs, with the hope that the knowledge will inspire them to make a contribution.

Collins at Genesys Works says this year he has tried to build relationships with community foundations in the seven regions where his nonprofit operates. “We’ve found the sweet spot is just being on the radar of community foundations and [DAF] providers,” he says. That way if a DAF holder expresses an interest in making a grant toward workforce development, the community foundation can point them toward Genesys Works.

Donor-advised fund contributions to Year Up, a nonprofit that provides career training and mentorship for low-income young adults, have quadrupled since 2020, according to Susan Murray, its national director of corporate engagement, development, and revenue operations. While gifts from DAFs are notoriously hard to trace, Murray’s team does “very unsexy operational work” to uncover the donors behind those gifts, as long as they haven’t asked to be anonymous.

If fundraisers know a donor has previously given through a certain DAF provider, for example, they might confirm with the donor that a recent check from that provider was from their fund. Some checks from DAF providers will give the name of the donors who opened the funds. Others will include cover letters identifying the donor and requesting a report on how the gift was used. When checks contain no donor information at all, fundraisers will sometimes ask the fund’s sponsor whether the donor wanted to share more information about themselves so that they could receive a thank-you note or other communication. While Murray says this doesn’t always yield more information on the donor, it sometimes does.

“At least we tried,” she says. “We don’t want someone to give to us, and we don’t say thank you, and they wanted us to — a fundraiser’s worst nightmare.”


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Appeals Get Real

Some nonprofits aren’t sugar coating their budget needs this year-end, in hopes of encouraging donors to open their pocketbooks. YES!, a nonprofit media organization that publishes stories about solutions to big issues, notified supporters on October 12 that it was letting go of five staff members and cutting its budget by a quarter.

“We’ve experienced a double hit with declines in individual donations, and in print subscriptions (a trend that started a decade ago and accelerated last year), which together make up 60% of our revenue,” reads an email signed by the organization’s senior leaders.


The magazine announced a year-end fundraising goal of $350,000.

Vermont local nonprofit news site VTDigger also noted its tough financial situation this year-end. The nonprofit’s resources were strained in July when it produced round-the-clock coverage of severe flooding throughout the state. The rising waters also damaged the outlet’s office in Montpelier — which experienced some of the worst flooding — and forced the newsroom to relocate.

“We want to be direct: Due to a number of factors, 2023 was a difficult financial year for us, and we need help to continue the level of coverage you’ve come to expect from VTDigger,” Chief Operating Officer Sky Barsch wrote in a November 14 email to readers. The nonprofit hopes to raise $550,000 to advance its journalism.

One reason some nonprofits are getting more candid could be the declining rates of mid-level giving, says fundraising consultant Michael Rubin. With fewer donors giving overall, nonprofits are trying to hit home the difference everyday donors can make.

“In general, I always think transparency is a good thing, as long as you’re not complaining to people that you don’t know how to run a good organization,” Rubin says. “Because I don’t think that that resonates very well with donors.”

Appeals that emphasize the impact a nonprofit makes are typically most compelling, according to Rubin. As an example, he points to public radio’s shift in tone from almost desperate appeals to help stations stay on the air 10 or 20 years ago to today’s more sophisticated pledge drives that emphasize how donors benefit from the organization’s coverage.

“Donors want to be associated with successful organizations,” he says, “however you define that.”

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About the Author

Contributor

Emily Haynes is senior editor of nonprofit intelligence at the Chronicle of Philanthropy, where she covers nonprofit fundraising. Before coming to the Chronicle, Emily worked at WAMU 88.5, Washington’s NPR station. There she coordinated a podcast incubator program and edited for the hyperlocal news site DCist. She was previously assistant managing editor at the Center for American Progress.Emily holds a bachelor’s degree in environmental analysis from Pitzer College in Claremont, Calif.