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How to Bring in Money for Your Organization

April 5, 2007 | Read Time: 1 minute

NEW BOOKS

Capital Campaigns
by Stuart R. Grover

โ€œNothing you do in your life will ever give you more personal satisfaction than leading a successful capital campaign,โ€ writes Stuart R. Grover, a nonprofit consultant. โ€œIt will be your chance to be a hero, even if that is the furthest thing from your mind.โ€

The book provides amateur fund raisers โ€” board members, volunteers, employees of small groups โ€” with the basic knowledge to run a capital campaign.

The book includes commonly accepted guidelines โ€” for example, that organizations can expect to spend 5 to 15 percent of the campaign goal on staffing and other fund-raising expenses, and that half of what the campaign raises usually comes from about a dozen gifts.

In the first section, Mr. Grover provides a framework for planning a campaign, from a feasibility study to Web sites and other materials to knowing where to find the best potential donors. The second section deals with the campaign itself: raising the biggest gifts, seeking money from foundations and companies, and reinvigorating campaigns that have lost momentum.


The final part of the book discusses what to do when a campaign ends, including maintaining relationships with donors. Appendices include samples of budgets, organization charts, pledge forms, and other materials.

Mr. Grover emphasizes transparency at all times โ€” both during the campaign and after, when supporters expect to see results. โ€œYou have to be willing to share your outcomes with your donors,โ€ he writes. โ€œThatโ€™s what theyโ€™ve paid for.โ€

Publisher: iUniverse, 2021 Pine Lake Road, Suite 100, Lincoln, Neb. 68512; (800) 288-4677; http://www.iuniverse.com; 201 pages; $17.95; ISBN 0-595-41472-9.

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