Tag: teamunityinc

Western sanctions pushes Russian philanthropy closer into Kremlin arms

Two years on since Russia launched a full-scale invasion of Ukraine, President Vladimir Putin’s grip has tightened across society. The recent death of opposition leader Alexei Navalny, held in an Arctic prison camp, is a timely reminder of suppression at large. For Russian philanthropy, these are …

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* This article was originally published here

Patience: The Missing Piece of Your Fundraising Strategy

The frequency of disasters – from floods, to earthquakes, hurricanes and war – is borderline desensitizing. There’s one thing, however, that never fails to fill me with hope: no matter where tragedy strikes, people and institutions always rally with help for those affected.

Due to the nature of these now-constant emergencies, charitable giving must be swift – seconds matter, lives are at stake. As a result, the general public, as well as scores of fundraising and philanthropy professionals, are being conditioned to give (and to ask) reactively and fast. This makes it difficult to practice a fundamental step of good relationship-based fundraising: patience. Many Trustees and CEOs don’t like to hear that it may take between 18 to 24 months of cultivation before securing a major gift (irrespective of how you define major) from a new donor.

Again, the scale of most problems – particularly to those actively working to solve those problems – is tangible and immediate. That’s why every organization dependent on voluntary income must have a diversified approach to income generation that includes the type of fundraising built on long-standing relationships that take months, and even years, to bear fruit.

I started my career as a major gifts officer at the New York Public Library. I raised money for a wide variety of projects, everything from the acquisition of papers of prominent authors to the renovation of the lions that guard the flagship 42nd Street building. Early in my tenure, I was taught by more senior fundraisers the importance of waiting for the ideal time to solicit a donor. Knowing that the 25th anniversary of an award established in her honour was two years away, I worked with colleagues to develop a cultivation strategy for an individual donor that resulted in her making a major gift to celebrate the occasion.

‘People give to people. People tend to give more when solicited by people who’ve taken the time to build a genuine relationship with them’

The cultivation consisted of event invites, a tour of the Library, a breakfast with the Library’s President, and three different meals with me where we talked about everything from her career as a journalist, my favorite New York restaurants, and my upcoming wedding. During each of these touchpoints, there was no solicitation. The solicitation came in the form of a letter, written by me and signed by the President, 18 months after our first lunch. Everyone knew, including the donor, that there would eventually be a chat about money. But given the quantum involved (six figures), the approved strategy centered on first re-engaging her with the Library and developing a personal connection. We got to know each other; so much so that shortly after I got married, a surprise gift arrived from her.

Cultivation touch points can feel pointless in the moment but part of having patience is keeping the faith and trusting that if you build a relationship effectively, it will pay dividends. It’s also worth noting that one does not need a fancy building or Michelin star meal to make an impression or to deepen a connection with a donor. We were leveraging the assets we had for relationship-building; a simple coffee and croissant, a sit-down chat with an implementation partner, or a personalized email with some pictures are just as effective.

Throughout my fundraising career, the more patience I had to invest in developing a meaningful connection with a donor, the more they tended to give. While this is no ironclad rule or guarantee, there’s a level of truth and lived experience in this. People give to people. People tend to give more when solicited by people who’ve taken the time to build a genuine relationship with them. This is true at both the individual and the institutional levels; it is also true whether you’re fundraising to build a new children’s room at a neighborhood library or to facilitate the rollout of a life-saving vaccine.

The scale of the social and environmental problems that need tackling is so large, that it is understandably difficult to be patient. But patient fundraisers, along with organizational leadership, must be if they want to build long-standing sustainable relationships with their donors. No one, irrespective of giving capacity, likes being made to feel as if they are a cash machine, even when there’s a natural disaster that requires immediate action.

It takes time and patience to build the type of relationship that results in regular giving at the major gift level. Institutions change their giving strategies regularly; the public (and media) also refocus frequently. While donors who you’ve built relationships with can change their charitable priorities (donor fatigue is real) they tend to be the most loyal advocates. Think about your own portfolio. Odds are that many of your regular donors (and those who show up to your events, reshare your social media posts, and run marathons on your behalf), have a personal relationship with you. A relationship that’s been nurtured over months and years.

Trustees and CEOs would do well to acknowledge, encourage, and reward good cultivation for the sake of relationship building. The best time to start investing in a relationship-based fundraising strategy was two years ago. The second-best time? Today. You can’t short-circuit time. So embrace it. Even the most enlightened and generous donor – those that give big, unrestricted multi-year gifts with no strings attached (or in-depth reporting required) – will dig deeper into their pockets if you’ve taken the time and put the effort in to patiently (and strategically) build a relationship with them.

Carlos Miranda is the founder of I.G. Advisors

The post Patience: The Missing Piece of Your Fundraising Strategy appeared first on Alliance magazine.

* This article was originally published here

How small grants can empower local communities to tackle air pollution

Everyone deserves to have access to clean air. And yet, 99 percent of the world’s population still breathe air that is harmful and dirty. In the UK alone, it causes approximately 40,000 early deaths each year. Air pollution also contributes to a range of medical conditions, including strokes, dementia, heart disease, asthma and lung cancer.

Research shows that deprived communities in England typically live in places with the highest emissions of air pollution. Yet tackling it is not just important for our health and social equity. Air pollution also impacts businesses through reduced workforce productivity. In the UK, it costs the economy £1.6 billion annually due to employees taking sick days or time off to care for sick children.

By combating air pollution, we are taking action on climate change, as both air pollution and climate change have the same source and solutions – reducing our dependence on fossil fuels. By cleaning the air, we can reap the rewards of improved health, climate action, tackling inequalities, and better economic outputs.

For our health and our planet, it’s imperative that we find innovative ways to fund air quality initiatives. This doesn’t always need to take the form of big donations. Smaller grants for local air quality projects are essential to encourage communities to engage in tackling air pollution and campaign for clean air.

We know that engaging local communities is important as they can harness their expertise to drive effective local action. For example, the main cause of air pollution is burning fossil fuels, but what that looks like varies from region to region. While the main source of air pollution in urban areas may be from cars, rural areas may experience air pollution from wood burning. Tackling air pollution needs a targeted rather than a one-size-fits all approach and, for this, local, grassroots collaboration is essential.

No one knows a local area as well as the people who live there. They possess an intimate understanding of their environment and have a vested interest in improving the air quality around where they live. Because of this, local campaigning can be more effective in holding local politicians and policymakers to account.

Communities deserve to have their voices heard in shaping new initiatives and policies that impact them. Empowering community organisations and individuals to take action is fundamentally democratic and encourages personalised investment in their local area, enabling citizens to have a say over their health and their environment.

Localised messages can be extremely effective in mobilising citizens on a national level to act on air pollution. In the UK, we’ve seen this with the success of individual clean air campaigners such as Rosamund Adoo-Kissi-Debrah from the Ella Roberta Foundation and Jemima Hartshorn from Mums for Lungs.

Local projects also serve as prototypes for larger-scale projects. If a campaign is successful at a local level, funders can consequently extract learnings and use these as a basis for funding and planning national or international projects.

For these reasons, the Clean Air Fund and UK Community Foundations have launched the Breathe Better Air Community Fund in the UK. The learning-focused programme has provided smaller grant funding to grassroots organisations selected by community foundations across Manchester, Liverpool and Birmingham. The goal of the Fund is to increase local awareness, empower communities, and co-create local air quality solutions in these regions.

We’ve already seen some impressive results. In Manchester, we funded Forever Manchester, which channelled funding towards 15 activities. These included creating informative materials and running awareness workshops for local Jewish and deaf communities. Further funding went towards creating new signs around Manchester that guide pedestrians and cyclists towards safer, healthier paths away from traffic-heavy areas.

In Liverpool, Community Foundation for Merseyside funded 12 groups to run initiatives ranging from collaborating with researchers to monitor air pollution at main junctions and green spaces, to running air pollution activism workshops and holding community consultations with local policymakers.

In Birmingham, Heart of England Community Foundation funded 10 local groups, including one which organised a 100km group bicycle ride to raise awareness around how air pollution harms our health. Another organisation installed air quality monitors in local areas around Birmingham to gather data during commuter hours and create air quality awareness campaigns.

Learning from these small grant-led projects will help both the Clean Air Fund and UK Community Foundations to identify successful types of local action against air pollution, which other funders and decision makers can replicate elsewhere.

Local initiatives, whether to combat air pollution or for other causes, should become mainstream funding targets for philanthropists. Though larger initiatives are often better known, nothing mobilises people to act more than having a role to play in their own area, thus securing a better future for themselves, their families and their local communities.

Imogen Martineau, Head of UK Portfolio, Clean Air Fund

Ben Robinson, Deputy CEO and Director of Strategy, UK Community Foundations

The post How small grants can empower local communities to tackle air pollution appeared first on Alliance magazine.

* This article was originally published here

How small grantscan empower local communities to tackle air pollution

Everyone deserves to have access to clean air. And yet, 99 percent of the world’s population still breathe air that is harmful and dirty. In the UK alone, it causes approximately 40,000 early deaths each year. Air pollution also contributes to a range of medical conditions, including strokes, dementia, heart disease, asthma and lung cancer.

Research shows that deprived communities in England typically live in places with the highest emissions of air pollution. Yet tackling it is not just important for our health and social equity. Air pollution also impacts businesses through reduced workforce productivity. In the UK, it costs the economy £1.6 billion annually due to employees taking sick days or time off to care for sick children.

By combating air pollution, we are taking action on climate change, as both air pollution and climate change have the same source and solutions – reducing our dependence on fossil fuels. By cleaning the air, we can reap the rewards of improved health, climate action, tackling inequalities, and better economic outputs.

For our health and our planet, it’s imperative that we find innovative ways to fund air quality initiatives. This doesn’t always need to take the form of big donations. Smaller grants for local air quality projects are essential to encourage communities to engage in tackling air pollution and campaign for clean air.

We know that engaging local communities is important as they can harness their expertise to drive effective local action. For example, the main cause of air pollution is burning fossil fuels, but what that looks like varies from region to region. While the main source of air pollution in urban areas may be from cars, rural areas may experience air pollution from wood burning. Tackling air pollution needs a targeted rather than a one-size-fits all approach and, for this, local, grassroots collaboration is essential.

No one knows a local area as well as the people who live there. They possess an intimate understanding of their environment and have a vested interest in improving the air quality around where they live. Because of this, local campaigning can be more effective in holding local politicians and policymakers to account.

Communities deserve to have their voices heard in shaping new initiatives and policies that impact them. Empowering community organisations and individuals to take action is fundamentally democratic and encourages personalised investment in their local area, enabling citizens to have a say over their health and their environment.

Localised messages can be extremely effective in mobilising citizens on a national level to act on air pollution. In the UK, we’ve seen this with the success of individual clean air campaigners such as Rosamund Adoo-Kissi-Debrah from the Ella Roberta Foundation and Jemima Hartshorn from Mums for Lungs.

Local projects also serve as prototypes for larger-scale projects. If a campaign is successful at a local level, funders can consequently extract learnings and use these as a basis for funding and planning national or international projects.

For these reasons, the Clean Air Fund and UK Community Foundations have launched the Breathe Better Air Community Fund in the UK. The learning-focused programme has provided smaller grant funding to grassroots organisations selected by community foundations across Manchester, Liverpool and Birmingham. The goal of the Fund is to increase local awareness, empower communities, and co-create local air quality solutions in these regions.

We’ve already seen some impressive results. In Manchester, we funded Forever Manchester, which channelled funding towards 15 activities. These included creating informative materials and running awareness workshops for local Jewish and deaf communities. Further funding went towards creating new signs around Manchester that guide pedestrians and cyclists towards safer, healthier paths away from traffic-heavy areas.

In Liverpool, Community Foundation for Merseyside funded 12 groups to run initiatives ranging from collaborating with researchers to monitor air pollution at main junctions and green spaces, to running air pollution activism workshops and holding community consultations with local policymakers.

In Birmingham, Heart of England Community Foundation funded 10 local groups, including one which organised a 100km group bicycle ride to raise awareness around how air pollution harms our health. Another organisation installed air quality monitors in local areas around Birmingham to gather data during commuter hours and create air quality awareness campaigns.

Learning from these small grant-led projects will help both the Clean Air Fund and UK Community Foundations to identify successful types of local action against air pollution, which other funders and decision makers can replicate elsewhere.

Local initiatives, whether to combat air pollution or for other causes, should become mainstream funding targets for philanthropists. Though larger initiatives are often better known, nothing mobilises people to act more than having a role to play in their own area, thus securing a better future for themselves, their families and their local communities.

Imogen Martineau, Head of UK Portfolio, Clean Air Fund

Ben Robinson, Deputy CEO and Director of Strategy, UK Community Foundations

The post How small grantscan empower local communities to tackle air pollution appeared first on Alliance magazine.

* This article was originally published here

Yes Country for Old Men

Dear Intelligent American,

 

Let’s leave it thus: The headlines and stories about current, geriatric politicians can speak for themselves. This missive avoids direct commentary on what might be construed as partisan affairs.

 

As for the nexus of age and the leadership of this Republic, it is Benjamin Franklin—near-fossil at 70 when he signed the Declaration of Independence—who remains a poster boy for undiminished wisdom at a moment of relative dotage.

 

What is age, in so that it means elderly . . . and even overripe? Past the recommended sale date? After all, the patriarch Methuselah, son of Enoch and grandfather of Noah, was 969 years old when he kicked the bucket. In more modern times, John Glenn was 77, and a United States Senator, when he re-astronauted aboard the Discovery. (When he did that his colleague, Strom Thurmond, was approaching nonagenarian status—the South Carolina solon and coot would be a centenarian before he hung up his Senatorial spikes.)

 

Shall we have youth, then? Maybe. Maybe not. Mao Zedong, history’s great murderer, was in his 50s when he turned China red, Stalin in his mid-40s when he started to hold the late Lenin’s bloody reins, and the (as General Patton so eloquently called him) “paper-hanging sonofab*tch Hitler” was too a relative tyke (just 44) when he became Germany’s Führer.

 

(Forgive the aside, provided to note Churchill’s lovely description, from The Gathering Storm, of the “maniac of ferocious genius, the repository and expression of the most virulent hatreds that have ever corroded the human breast—Corporal Hitler.”)

 

The polls seem to decry America’s political gerontocracy, but at the ballot box, the people elect, time and again, those long in the tooth, maybe those even on their second set of dentures.

 

Speaking of which: We celebrate Old Woodentooth’s birthday next week. It’s George Washington’s 292nd—a youth by Methuselah’s standards. Would that those who dare to represent the people, no matter their age, model themselves after this great man.

 

Fasting Applies Only to Food, So Dine Plentifully on the Forthcoming Courses

 

1. At The American Mind, fan favorite Daniel J. Mahoney makes mincemeat of the ideology of “postcolonialism.” From the piece:

 

Let me add some examples of my own to show that the ritualistic identification of empire with slavery and racism is far more ideological sloganeering than measured political and historical analysis. The counter examples are abundant and instructive. Edmund Burke, the great Anglo-Irish parliamentarian and political philosopher, despised slavery and wrote “A Sketch of the Negro Code” in 1780 in order to lay out a workable plan for gradual emancipation. He loathed Warren Hastings’s heavy-handed direction of the East India Company, accusing the governor general of corruption and cruel disdain for long-established Indian customs. Hastings, Burke suggested, ruled India like a rapacious, conquering army. Burke spent 12 years fiercely pursuing an ultimately failed impeachment of Hastings.

 

Burke also took pointed aim at the anti-Catholic penal laws in Ireland and argued that the majority Catholic population needed to be brought into the political community, their rights respected, and their interests represented (at least partially), in the Irish parliament. It is true that Burke never condemned empire per se. But he worked for an empire whose spirit was humane and magnanimous, rather than heavy-handed and dominated by self-aggrandizement and a petty concern for lucre. As such, he was a partisan of civilized and civilizing empire, however contradictory that might seem to our contemporary postcolonialists. For them, condemnation and self-loathing are the alpha and omega of postcolonial discourse and ideology. They desperately need to expand their moral imaginations.

 

2. At The Wall Street Journal, Benjamin Storey and Jenna Silber Storey urge conservatives to reform higher education by following the Left’s example. From the article:

 

When the academic left seeks to innovate, they do what scholars have always done: They create new disciplines. Academics who thought women’s lives and perspectives were neglected created women’s studies. Those who saw that scholars overlooked the literature, history, and art of black Americans created African-American studies.

 

This is a legitimate tactic. It’s how universities work. Academics perceive that some phenomenon is overlooked by existing modes of inquiry. They write studies about it; they describe ways of examining it. They attract scholars in related subjects, who become the initial faculty of the new programs. They develop ways of thinking that cohere as a discipline, in which students can be trained. They create associations; journals spring up; grants get funded; students get degrees. One generation of faculty acts as mentors to the next.

 

To make enduring change in the academy, conservatives must identify important areas that aren’t getting attention and create programs to study them.

 

The most promising academic innovations today are Republican-led efforts at public universities to remedy the deficit in university-level civic education. Arizona State University’s School of Civic and Economic Thought and Leadership, or SCETL, is the model. The Arizona Legislature launched it in 2016, and political scientist Paul Carrese developed the program. SCETL now employs 20 faculty, teaches more than 1,000 students annually, and has bipartisan support. Its success has encouraged similar efforts in Florida, Texas, Tennessee, Mississippi, Utah, North Carolina and Ohio.

 

3. At The European Conservative, Vytautus Sinica hears from Jordan Peterson about strengthening Judeo-Christian civilization against the attack from “cultural Marxism.” From the interview:

 

Marxism always divides people up into groups. As soon as you’re dealing with someone who proclaims that the core of identity is some group affiliation, [it] doesn’t matter what it is—ethnicity, gender, sex, race, socio-economic class—the ideas they possess have essentially been derived from Marxist presuppositions.

 

The classic liberals tend to concentrate more on the individual, the atomized and isolated individual. They tend to see the individual as constrained by the state, [and] by all social relationships. It’s the individual striving to be free to pursue their own rational self-interest, which is a stupid idea because our self-interest isn’t exactly rational. The liberals concentrate on the individual, and I prefer that to Marxism hands down, but the problem with the liberal viewpoint taken to the extreme is that you end up with this deracinated, atomized individuality as the core of identity, and it just doesn’t work because identity can’t be found within the individual. You exist in relationships. So, if you only stress the individual and strip away the relationships, you leave the individual virtually with nothing, maybe with their hedonism. And that is why there is an alliance between liberalism and hedonists. Because liberalism will collapse into hedonism and that’s just not helpful; it’s not sustainable; everyone knows that. You can’t just gratify your whims. And the classical liberals would say, “Well, you have your set of whims, and I have mine, and we can find a balance between them, and your right to your whims ends where my right begins.” And that’s pretty much their whole definition of the state. . . .

 

Part of the reason young people are so desperate to insist that they define their own identity is because everything else has been stripped away from them. Well, “the family is just a patriarchal institution; you shouldn’t have children, and business is nothing but the predations of capitalism.” And it’s just one thing after another; it’s demolishing; it leaves them with nothing.

 

4. At The Daily Signal, Allen Mendenhall explains that campus diversity can be had sans “DEI”—and down in Alabama, he has the proof. From the article:

 

How much did Troy University, where I teach, spend on DEI? Zero dollars.

 

Yet Troy enrolled 4,421 blacks in 2022—almost 32% of its student population.

 

Instead of feeding bloated DEI bureaucrats on Troy’s campus, the school actively recruits international students from across the world to our small town in southeast Alabama—hence our nickname “Alabama’s international university.”

 

Troy University has achieved diversity in part by rejecting DEI, which negatively affects organizational culture, fostering fear and resentment rather than friendship, openness, and dialogue.

 

5. At The Diplomat, Mercy Kuo questions logistics expert Christopher O’Dea about Red China’s efforts to create a maritime empire. From the piece:

 

In a tragic irony, China has used the shipping container, an American invention, to reverse-engineer the historical logic of international power and conquest, just as it has done with housewares, electronics, pharmaceuticals, solar energy, and now electric vehicles. Rather than attack Western ports and then seek to impose Chinese political control on hostile, conquered populations while rebuilding destroyed infrastructure, China has opted to use its state-owned shipping and port companies to gain effective control of critical infrastructure and then use the physical presence of those companies on the territory of dozens of developed countries to exert political influence.

 

China recognized that the shipping container would require construction of new infrastructure to move containers between ships and shore. Starting with its own shipping lines and ports in the late 1970s, China began to develop the ability to build ships, ports, containers, cranes, and eventually software for logistics management. By enabling the offshoring of Western manufacturing to China, the American shipping container helped China generate export earnings to pay for building what is now the world’s dominant maritime imperial network.

 

China has also recognized that ports embody power – ports are the sites where the physical, digital, and governance networks of the world converge. There are different channels of power projection. First, control of terminals enables Chinese SOEs to maximize the impact of Chinese manufacturing power. Second, less widely recognized but noted by some U.S. admirals, the presence of Chinese SOEs as port or terminal operators creates a cybersecurity threat to U.S. naval vessels, making most off-limits. For China, this achieves what is known as “anti-access/area denial” effects, reducing the forward power projection capability of the U.S. Navy and blunting a key element of U.S. deterrence policy.

 

6. At Law & Liberty, Andrew Carico wonders, with a twist of Alexis de Tocqueville, as goes the Super Bowl, goes too America? From the essay:

 

When Americans assemble to watch the Super Bowl, they are exercising a very American activity. In the early 1830s, Alexis de Tocqueville identified the very act of associating as a unique characteristic within the American democratic experience. He commented on the proclivity of free and equal citizens to combat individualism and despotism by forming free associations to address a variety of issues. While many associations can address political concerns, that is not the case for all of them. As Tocqueville wrote, “Americans of all ages, all conditions, all minds constantly unite. Not only do they have commercial and industrial associations in which all take part, but they also have a thousand other kinds: religious, moral, grave, futile, very general and very particular, immense and very small” (II.ii.5 [489]). Thus, for Tocqueville, the art of associating with others represents a true distinctive in the American democratic experience. Through these experiences, Americans learn how to exercise their liberty and engage in cooperative relations with others. As a result of these associations, claims Tocqueville, “the heart is enlarged, and the human mind is developed” (II.ii.5 [491]). . . .

 

Can Americans still claim such high levels of association? Political scientist Robert D. Putnam’s 2000 book Bowling Alone suggests that Tocqueville’s assessment may no longer apply. Whereas Americans once associated to address all sorts of issues, Putnam documents how such associations wilted in the modern era, using the decline of organized bowling leagues as an example of this decay.

 

7. More L&L: Jonathan Jacobs delves into that persistent, nefarious, and—to some—alluring question, “What should be done with the Jews?From the essay:

 

The Jewish Question became a malignant obsession of Adolph Hitler (and plenty of others) and perhaps the most terrible period for the Jews of Europe was very recent, the mid-twentieth century. But the notion that murderous anti-Semitism is something distinctively Nazi and that the Nazis were alone in perpetrating the Holocaust, is false. In Poland, Belarus, Russia, Romania, Croatia, Lithuania, Latvia, and other countries there was extensive participation in the program of extermination, and other countries did little to protect Jews from being sent to their deaths. Far too many people seem to think along the lines, “The Nazis; now they were anti-Semites. But we’re not Nazis, so, how can anyone say we are anti-Semitic.” Both the logic and the moral claim are fallacious.

 

Christianity has largely separated itself from condemnation and condescension toward Judaism and Jews but a fifteen-century cultural transmission of ignorance and loathing doesn’t just evaporate. The post-war Soviet Union and East Bloc continued state-sponsored Jew-hatred and there were pogroms in Poland as recently as the 1960s. In the Soviet Union, Jew-hatred wasn’t motivated by Christianity but the disposition had deep roots and could be secularized in its expression. There is a long history of anti-Semitism both on the Right and the Left.

 

Some among the secular Left have cultivated a form of anti-Semitism also based on a notion of supersession. For many on the Left, the central idea is not that Jewish religion has been theologically and morally superseded and is now over, but that the legitimacy of the State of Israel is in doubt. Many so-called “progressives” (as well as Muslim militants) have embraced anti-Semitism and Israel-bashing with an almost giddy enthusiasm. For secular Leftists, this is a non-theological matter, but it has the same result for Jews. Namely, Israel has been a state for seventy-five years, and that is long enough; its legitimacy is over because getting rid of it will help bring about peace and justice in the Middle East. Whether focusing on theology and morality, or on politics, the question of the legitimacy of Judaism is still being asked by self-appointed authorities on the matter.

 

8. At The American Conservative, a century after Woodrow Wilson’s death, Sean Durns declares that we continue to deal with the consequences of his presidency. From the article:

 

Wilson hasn’t lost the ability to divide. In 2020, for example, Princeton University announced that it would be removing Wilson’s name from its vaunted school of public affairs, citing the late president’s “racist thinking and policies.” Much of the controversy around Wilson centers on his retrograde views on race—as president he resegregated the federal workforce—or his dramatic expansion of the administrative state. In Woodrow Wilson, there is a little bit of something for both conservatives and liberals to hate. . . .

 

Many of his supporters, both then and now, have argued that Wilson’s strident support for liberal internationalism was ahead of his time. In this telling, Wilson was a prophet, arguing for post-war measures that, had they been adopted, could have prevented another World War. “Isolationists” in the U.S. Senate, such as Senator Henry Cabot Lodge of Massachusetts who headed the Foreign Relations Committee, were short-sighted men who thwarted Wilson’s ambitions, notably his cherished League of Nations. Wilson “looked over the heads of other men, above the confusion of contemporary events, to distant horizons,” his son-in-law and Treasury Secretary William McAdoo claimed.

 

But history isn’t always a Greek tragedy. Wilson’s opponents weren’t “isolationists.” Rather, they had “reservations” about Wilson subverting American sovereignty—and they were right to have them. Wilson’s failures were consequential. In the final analysis, blame rests with the 28th president himself. The man was not up to the moment.

 

9. At Comment Magazine, Jack Bell becomes an object of curiosity for a bird, and begins to wonder about the language of Creation. From the essay:

 

We’ve experienced kingfishers to be a wary species. Every time we see or hear one (and they are nearly always alone), we try to move in for a closer look. When we do, the bird will usually scold us with its odd, rattling call before disappearing through the trees. But on the day that the kingfisher visited us, the boundary between the hidden life of the pond and the family of humans who live close by suddenly became porous. We were used to watching wild animals, not having them interrogate us. And yet there the bird sat on a branch, like a totem, examining my family and chittering away, as two parents prepared to leave home and consider a move someplace else.

 

For example, humpback whales have been observed not only to make very elaborate forms of communication over long distances but to “mark the passage of time by changing their songs from year to year.” Researchers have long argued that another marine mammal, the bottlenose dolphin, can have beliefs, feelings, and reasons for performing certain actions. And they have astonishingly sharp memories: in a pod of dolphins, a dolphin’s whistle can function like a name, and one study suggests that dolphins can recognize the whistle of other dolphins from whom they have been separated for twenty years.

 

Animals don’t need to have large brains to perform complex forms of communication, perception, and deliberation. Some researchers have argued that the decision-making of bees resembles a central nervous system whose parts have been scattered among individual members of a whole group. When bees decide to swarm and make a new colony, they will send out scouts to find new locations. When the scouts return, they perform dances before the rest of the hive. The more complex the dance, the more favorable the location. If enough bees return and perform the same dance—if, that is, they share enough consensus about the promise of the new location of a hive—the hive will split and form a new colony.

 

10. Philanthropy Watch: At The Hill, Robert Stilson raises concerns about the involvement of nonprofits spending millions to bankroll “climate change lawfare.” From the piece:

 

Over the last several years, dozens of dubious climate change lawsuits have been brought by state and local governments against the oil and gas industry. They are bringing these cases with help from white-shoe law firms, funded by non-profit money from Big Philanthropy.

 

Such attempts at “legislation through litigation” represent yet another example of the deeply regrettable tendency toward the ends-justify-the-means rationalizations common in contemporary political activism. The millions in tax-exempt philanthropic dollars apparently underwriting this lawsuit campaign also raise serious questions about the proper relationship between charity, politics and the judicial system.

 

Citing recently released tax filings, Fox News reported that the New Venture Fund, a registered 501(c)(3) charity and the largest constituent member of the giant left-of-center political nonprofit network managed by Arabella Advisors, had granted $2.5 million to the for-profit law firm Sher Edling in 2022. This was after it had funneled $3 million to the firm last year.

 

Sher Edling is best known for representing state and local governments in a slew of lawsuits against oil and gas companies, accusing them of downplaying or otherwise misrepresenting the impact that their products have on the global climate. The governmental plaintiffs (which include the states of Rhode Island and Delaware, the cities of Charleston, South Carolina and Baltimore, the county of Anne Arundel, Maryland, and others) are suing to force “Big Oil” to pay them compensation for the vast costs that these governments claim they are incurring due to climate change.

 

11. More Philanthropy: At the New York Post, Naomi Schaefer Riley and James Piereson tag team to explain why Big Apple philanthropists—what’s left of them—are passing on the mayor’s plea for funds to plug budget shortfalls exacerbated by the influx of illegal immigrants. From the op-ed:

 

A century ago, philanthropists did a great deal to help settle newcomers in the city.

 

They assumed, in offering that assistance, that it would help recent arrivals find legal work, housing, and educational opportunities for their children, and assimilate them into the culture of their new land. In time they would turn themselves into patriotic American citizens.

 

Today such a path no longer seems workable, given the magnitude of the crisis and the fact that most migrants have entered the country illegally and without documentation—not to mention a school system that has little interest in creating a “melting pot.”

 

There are some problems that donors need the government to solve—crime and homelessness, among them.

 

No one can expect philanthropists to move the mentally ill off the streets, prevent violence in schools, or maintain effective police and fire departments.

 

12. At the Arlington Catholic Herald, Anna Harvey reports on a diocesan program to help kids with special needs getting big boosts from generous souls. From the article:

 

Several donations to the Cathedral School of St. Thomas More in Arlington left administrators in delighted astonishment. The school recently received two pledges amounting to nearly $150,000 that will bolster the school’s inclusive instruction program, Bridges to More, for students with special needs.

 

“These generous contributions allow us to fulfill our mission because we believe that learning begins in a faith-filled, inclusive environment where the promise of every child is nurtured and developed according to our Gospel values,” said Principal Ann LaBarge.

 

The first pledge from Jennifer McIntyre was compiled from multiple gifts that were matched by her employer, the Boeing Company. The pledge amounted to more than $50,000. McIntyre has made gifts to the school since her oldest daughter entered kindergarten at the cathedral school in 2015. McIntyre’s youngest daughter, Annie, began attending the cathedral school in 2019 and became the first enrolled student with Down syndrome.

 

“I naturally envisioned her going to school with her older siblings and receiving the same faith formation and all of the other benefits of a Catholic education that her sister and brother were receiving,” McIntyre said.

 

The cathedral school embraced Annie as a member of the school community, McIntyre said. “They committed themselves to finding a way to meet her educational needs and make the necessary accommodations to include her fully in the life of the school. It has been a wonderful experience for Annie and for our family, and it is my hope that other similarly situated students and their families will have the same opportunity that we have had,” she said.

 

Lucky 13. At National Review, Andy Puzder declares Britain’s “Net Zero” fiasco should be a warning to the U.S. From the article:

 

British politicians boast of cutting greenhouse-gas emissions faster than any other major economy but ignore the unfortunate fact that Britain’s economy has been performing poorly since 2008.

 

In 2020, even before the recent surge in energy costs, everyday Britons were paying about 75 percent more for electricity than Americans, the result of a double whammy—cap-and-trade policies on the one hand and renewable subsidies on the other. And then came the Ukraine shock. During the 2022 energy crisis, electricity rates for British businesses were more than double the average paid by U.S. businesses.

 

In Britain, the impact of cap-and-trade on the cost of fuel to generate electricity is massive. In 2022, government-imposed carbon costs averaged $128 per megawatt hour (MWh) for coal-generated electricity and $51 per MWh for natural gas. Those costs are on top of actual fuel costs, which averaged $150 per MWh for electricity generated from coal and $160 per MWh for natural gas. These mean that it cost $278 to generate 1 MWh of electricity from coal and $211 from natural gas.

 

Bonus. At The Washington Free Beacon, Rob Long details the chore of watching television. From the piece:

 

Watching TV has never been so baffling. You don’t just walk in the house and flop down in front of the TV and start flipping around anymore. Watching television in 2024 requires what psychologists and self-help gurus call intentionality. You have to know what you’re looking for and exactly where to find it, which means the entire process usually starts with a Google search. We’re all familiar with today’s Television Catechism. It goes: What was that show we wanted to see, again? Followed by: Which one of the thingy’s is it on? And ends in an exasperated: Do we even get that one?

 

If you’re at my house, the Anglo-Saxon vulgarism for sexual intercourse is inserted before the words “show,” ‘see,” “on,” “get,” and “one” in the above.

 

It’s also possible you will find yourself re-inputting a forgotten password, which will inspire more profanity.

 

And then there’s the quiet anxiety all of this programming evokes. “I’m way behind on my TV stuff,” a friend of mine told me recently. “I need to catch up on The Crown and I’m working my way through The Gilded Age. I tried to add Better Call Saul to my list because I haven’t seen any of it and I feel bad about it, but I don’t want to keep adding shows to watch and then failing at keeping up with them.”

 

Working my way through. Way behind. Feel bad. Need to catch up. Failing. These are the phrases people use now for watching TV, an activity that used to require basically zero mental or physical effort. Watching television shows is now showing up on “To Do” lists, like tax returns and colonoscopies.

 

For the Good of the Order

 

Uno. At Philanthropy Daily, Jonathan Hannah suggests ways for early retirees to plan for philanthropy in their Golden Years. Read it here.

 

Due. Celebrate the Leap Year by attending a February 29th Center for Civil Society webinar on philanthropy capacity-building with leaders from the (very!) important Stanley M. Herzog Foundation and the M.J. Murdock Charitable Trust. It’s free, via Zoom, from 4:00 to 5:00 p.m., and requires your attendance. Register here.

 

Department of Bad Jokes

 

Q: How is the Moon like dentures?

 

A: Both come out at night.

 

A Dios

 

Testaments Old and New speak of 40—days, years—of penance, wandering, purifying, preparing, fasting. As Lent is now upon Christendom, these matters are at the mind’s forefront. Why? Because, as in all recent years, the anti-tradition types—you know, the ones who abandon ornate churches for cinderblock Bauhauses of worship, who have replaced sacred music with nails-on-chalkboard “hymns,” who are keen to constantly rewrite liturgy and the Bible itself (The child was born in a . . . feeding box)—are on their annual quest to cast these weeks as some Up with People concert.

 

Amongst we of the Roman persuasion (and not only we), the conscious call to deprive oneself of a favorite thing (for Lent I am going to give up TCM) is annually under assault by the modernist flacks lobbying for us to instead do something positive (Such as what . . . take a walk?).

 

Before we turn this missive into a locus of sectarian alleyway fights, Your Humble Correspondent takes this moment to defend the proposal: Less is more. Doing without, intentionally depriving, is, in the Judeo-Christian tradition, essential for purifying the soul, for conversion, and for rightly preparing (this just in: Moses fasted for 40 days before receiving the Commandments) for something of utter consequence.

 

You want to volunteer at the local pound? Go ahead! Walk that dog! Hey, we all appreciate the Pied Pipers crooning “Accentuate the Positive.” But when it comes to Lent, we need the professional theologian types to back off. Leave us to our fish sticks and all the giving up—snacks, ice cream, watching TV, and the like—so we can have a scintilla of greater relate.

 

But: Must sambuca be on that list?!

 

May The Creator’s Unfathomable Kindness Imbue Us,

 

Jack Fowler, who is eating fish at jfowler@amphil.com.

The post Yes Country for Old Men appeared first on Philanthropy Daily.

* This article was originally published here

Black Love Founders Co-Host U.S. Senate Candidate Hill Harper’s L.A. Fundraiser

U.S. Senate candidate Hill Harper was joined by his campaign staff, family, friends, and Michigan citizens at a fundraiser co-hosted by “Black Love” creators Tommy Oliver and Codie Elaine Oliver.

The post Black Love Founders Co-Host U.S. Senate Candidate Hill Harper’s L.A. Fundraiser first appeared on Black Love.

The post Black Love Founders Co-Host U.S. Senate Candidate Hill Harper’s L.A. Fundraiser appeared first on Black Love.

* This article was originally published here

Text-to-Give Messaging: 4 Strategies to Boost Conversions

Imagine that you’re a donor who recently opted into an animal welfare nonprofit’s text-to-give campaign, hoping to give to a great cause. However, you’re met with uninspiring, generic messages that don’t show how your donations will make an impact and feel impersonal. As a result, you opt-out of the campaign and look toward donating to another organization.

To avoid this situation from happening with your nonprofit’s text-to-give campaign, you need to create emotionally compelling and persuasive messages that convince your donors to give (and give right away!). After all, when you’re operating under tight fundraising deadlines, you need supporters to act with urgency so you can meet your goals and push forward your mission. 

In this article, we’ll cover the top strategies to increase your donor conversion rate and meet your text-to-give fundraising objectives. Let’s begin.

1. Leverage storytelling in your text-to-give messaging

Storytelling has been around for centuries, and for good reason! People like to root for a hero and feel a human connection. This is especially true for your nonprofit’s communications. By incorporating storytelling into your text-to-give messages and appeals, you can foster stronger relationships with your supporters and ignite giving at a large scale.

Use these strategies to tell a compelling story:

  • Highlight a protagonist: Every story needs a main character! Spotlight a beneficiary your organization has helped and share their impact story with their permission. For example, a healthcare nonprofit might tell the story in their text-to-donate appeal of how 10-year-old Brianna received lifesaving surgery thanks to donors’ support.
  • Show the before and after: Explain the situation your hero was in before your nonprofit helped and after. This helps to illustrate the role of donations in driving change in your community while adding credibility to your nonprofit, helping to build trust with supporters. 
  • Connect the story back to your mission: Tie your story back to your nonprofit’s core purpose so supporters understand how their donations can help even more individuals receive this same support. 

Remember to keep your stories short and sweet so you can sustain your supporters’ attention. You can always share a link to a blog post on your website that tells a beneficiary’s story in greater detail. This is also a great way to encourage supporters to explore your cause further on your website and potentially sign up for more ways to get involved, like joining your email newsletter or applying to volunteer. 

2. Include multimedia elements

Compelling visuals can help to supplement your stories and catch your audience’s eye, increasing the likelihood that they’ll read and engage with your messages. Whether you’re conducting community outreach for your church or supporting a specific fundraising campaign for your nonprofit, sharing attention-grabbing visuals will go a long way. For example, you might share:

  • Photos: Share pictures of the beneficiaries you’ve helped, your nonprofit’s volunteers in action, your staff, or any other relevant image that can help to legitimize your organization and show the powerful work you’re doing in the community. 
  • Videos: Videos are another great storytelling tool. Consider filming a fundraising video that highlights why you’re asking for revenue and how the funds will be used. You might also create a testimonial video that features interviews from the beneficiaries you’ve helped. 
  • Graphics: Create compelling graphics, like infographics, that help to illustrate the impact your nonprofit is making. For example, you might generate an infographic displaying how much you raised from your last fundraising campaign and the difference it’s made in the community. This way, you can prove that your nonprofit is using donations as promised to meet its mission. 

You can also add other types of multimedia elements, like emojis or gifs, to make your texts more visually appealing. This can help to break up longer messages and keep your subscribers engaged. 

3. Personalize your text messages

Donors will be much less receptive to a text message that begins with “Dear Valued Donor” than one that begins with their own name. However, manually messaging each of your supporters will be nearly impossible and eat up way too much of your team’s time. Instead, Tatango’s guide to nonprofit text messaging recommends leveraging software with built-in automation and personalization capabilities so you can greet each of your donors by their preferred first names in all of your messages. 

The right text messaging platform will also come with a variety of segmentation capabilities, allowing you to create highly relevant text streams that will inspire your different types of supporters. This way, you can create messages that are meaningful to different audiences and are more likely to propel them to act. 

You should be able to segment your contact list based on a variety of factors, including:

  • Donation frequency, recency, and amount
  • Location
  • Involvement in your nonprofit
  • Demographics 

This can be helpful for getting certain groups of supporters to act. For example, you might create a segment for volunteers where you can send out available opportunities and shifts to help out at events, programs, and more. Plus, you can prompt volunteers to play an even more rewarding role in your organization by donating. 

4. Create a clear call to action

A call to action is a brief phrase or sentence that gets to the point of what you want your supporters to do. Keep the following best practices in mind to create effective calls to action:

  • Stick to one per message: Asking your donors to complete more than one action in a single text message, such as registering for your event and donating to your cause, can overwhelm them and cause donors to refrain from taking any action. Instead, create just one ask and separate your requests into different messages as needed. 
  • Be straightforward and specific: Ask supporters to give a certain amount to your fundraising campaign to take the guesswork out of how much they should donate. For example, you might say “Donate $10 today to support our mission to end hunger this holiday season!” or “Give a minimum of $20 by midnight to have your gift matched!”. As seen in these examples, it’s also important to create immediacy by adding a time-bound element to your texts. This will prompt supporters to give sooner rather than later and lead to an increase in donations
  • Include a mobile-friendly link to your donation page: Make it as easy as possible for supporters to act on your requests, no matter where they are, by providing a mobile-friendly link to your donation page. Supporters should be able to simply tap on the link to your giving page and complete the donation process in just a few moments right from their phones. 

You can also provide links to other relevant resources that would be helpful in the context of your calls to action. For example, let’s say you’re encouraging new donors to sign up to volunteer. Getting Attention’s guide to volunteer recruitment recommends sending a link to a landing page on your website that overviews your volunteer program and includes an embedded application form. This makes it very simple and convenient for your supporters to complete your requests. 

Wrapping Up

Churches, associations, and so many other organizations find success through powerful text-to-give campaigns. Your nonprofit can follow their lead by creating high-impact, emotionally compelling texts that inspire donors to give. Use your text messaging platform to track metrics, like open rate and click-throughs, so you can adjust your strategy as needed. 

The post Text-to-Give Messaging: 4 Strategies to Boost Conversions appeared first on marketing for the modern nonprofit.

* This article was originally published here