Mexico Fundraising Resources
"Your Fundraising Answers & Ideas"
Now! A mega-network of fundraising ideas & help available to nonprofits in Mexico (See also www.recaudaciondefondos.blogspot.com)

FREE Fundraising Consulting Hotline

You're just one click of your mouse away from getting the expert advice to increasing your fundraising success: 

1. Go to
www.fundraisershotline.com
2. Ask your question at any time.
3. You'll get personal, expert advice--your direct line to one of the world's leading experts in creating nonprofit success strategies.
4. There's absolutely no cost or obligation.


Here's how your consultant describes your hotline:
    “Nonprofit fundraisers in Mexico may ask anything they want—like How can I find donors? or How can I get my board to give more and to ask others to give? It’s absolutely one-on-one attention. They won’t be getting boilerplate answers,” says Dr. Stephen L. Goldstein, creator of the hotline and president of The Nonprofit Fundraising Institute, Educational Marketing Services, whose international network is headquartered in Fort Lauderdale, Florida.

           

    “Nonprofits always have a hard time raising money. But many are really struggling in today’s bad economy--everwhere. They need immediate professional advice tailored to their specific needs. But most nonprofits cannot afford to hire an expert to give them quick answers to their pressing questions. So, www.fundraisershotline.com gives you personal access to an experienced professional, your sounding-board to increase your fundraising success,” Goldstein adds.

           

     That’s what’s so unique about the hotline. It’s quick, efficient, direct—and free, of course. Getting answers from the hotline is simple. Go to www.fundraisershotline.com, fill out the short user form, ask a question, then send it to Dr. Goldstein. There is absolutely no cost or obligation. Every question is answered personally and within 24 hours.

                       

       Columnist, author, consultant, TV and radio personality, and workshop leader--Dr. Stephen L. Goldstein is a nationally recognized marketing, communications, and fundraising executive, as well as a trends analyst and forecaster. For more than 30 years, he has developed strategies for nonprofit success.

           

      Dr. Goldstein is now the co-producer and host of “The Forum for Nonprofits,” which airs on WNN & WSBR and may be heard 24/7 at www.forumfornonprofits.com. He was the producer and host of “Fundraising Success,” a weekly radio program on WXEL, 90.7FM/National Public Radio.                    

           

       Dr. Goldstein's "Fundraising Guru" columns have appeared in The South Florida Sun-Sentinel and have been a regular feature of the Scripps papers on Florida’s Treasure Coast. He is the author of the bestseller, 30 Days to Successful Fundraising.

           

       Goldstein is also the developer of “Self-Taught/Fundraising,” a series of totally interactive workbooks that are the basis for the workshops and tailored consulting programs he offers worldwide. The series is available at www.onlinefundraisingbooks.com. Order your copies today and they will be emailed to you!

 


Here are words that make people want to give!

Your Power-Words Prompt Prosperous Philanthropy
by Stephen L. Goldstein
"The Fundraising Guru"

Every fundraiser knows the shibboleth “People give to people.” But you can’t successfully reach them with any old “words, words, words,” in Hamlet’s lingo. Use powerful bons mots to propel people’s giving and to thank them with panache. Here’s a selection of particularly potent, pre-packaged phrases for solicitation letters and thank-you notes that you can massage to your advantage in your own text.

Edward R. Murrow, as he said farewell to his British listening audience on the BBC at the end of the Second World War, thanked them for living "a life, not an apology."

Thiruvalluvar, poet (c. 30 BCE): “The only gift is giving to the poor;/All else is exchange.”

Sharon K. Yntema: “You are rich enough to give small amounts of money to worthy causes when you can buy all the groceries you need.”

Franklin Delano Roosevelt: “The test of our progress is not whether we add to the abundance of those who have much. It is whether we provide enough to those who have little.”

Sanskrit proverb: “He who allows his day to pass by without practicing generosity and enjoying life’s pleasures is like a blacksmith’s bellows—he breathes but does not live.”

Friedrich Nietzsche: “Nothing ever succeeds which exuberant spirits have not helped to produce.”

Ancient proverb: “One hand cannot applaud alone.”

Winston Churchill: “We make a living by what we get. We make a life by what we give.”

Simone de Beauvoir: “That’s what I consider true generosity. You give your all, and yet you always feel as if it costs you nothing.”

Marya Mannes: “Generosity with strings is not generosity; it is a deal.”

Confucius: “To be able under all circumstances to practice five things constitutes perfect virtue; these five things are gravity, generosity of soul, sincerity, earnestness and kindness.”

Sir Francis Bacon: “In charity there is no excess.”

Scottish proverb: “Charity begins at home, but shouldn’t end there.”

Thomas H. Huxley: “I have no faith, very little hope, and as much charity as I can afford.”

Jewish proverb: “If charity cost nothing, the world would be full of philanthropists.”

Stephen L. Goldstein: “Angels rush in where fools fear to tread.”

W.J. Slim: “When you cannot make up your mind which of two evenly balanced courses of action you should take, choose the bolder.”

Samuel Taylor Coleridge: “The lamentable difficulty I have always experienced [is] in saying ‘no.’”

Herman Melville: “We cannot live only for ourselves. A thousand fibers connect us with our fellow men; and along those fibers, as sympathetic threads, our actions run as causes, and they come back to us as effects.”

Albert Pine: “What we have done for ourselves alone dies with us. What we have done for others and the world remains and is immortal.”

Sydney Smith: To do anything in this world worth doing, we must not stand back shivering and thinking of the cold and danger, but jump in, and scramble through as well as we can.”

Phoebe Low: “Someone said of nations—but it might well have been said of individuals, too—that they require ‘something sufficiently akin to be understood, something sufficiently different to provoke attention, and something sufficiently great to command admiration.’”

Kevin Kelly: “The only factor becoming scarce in a world of abundance is human attention.”

W.M. Paxton: “Ideas go booming through the world louder than cannon. Thoughts are mightier than armies. Principles have achieved more victories than horsemen or chariots.”

E-mail your questions and comments to Stephen Goldstein through www.fundraisershotline.com . He’s the author of 30 Days to Successful Fundraising and the host of the radio program, “The Forum for Nonprofits,” which you may hear 24/7/365 at www.forumfornonprofits.com.#

 

The Nonprofit Fundraising Institute
Educational Marketing Services, Inc. 
is offering
"Fundraising Success" Workshops throughout Mexico.
For information about specific programs,
go to www.fundraisershotline.com
and send an email
on the comment/question form

Other Fundraising Websites filled with
free advice!
www.recaudaciondefondos.blogspot.com
www.fundraisershotline.com
www.onlinefundraisingbooks.com
www.fundraisinghelpline.com
www.fundraisingassessments.blogspot.com

 

Fundraising only gels
if you sell well


Fundraising = Marketing

Marketing = Fundraising

By Dr. Stephen L. Goldstein
"The Fundraising Guru"

 

            I know that people who work on behalf of nonprofits like to think of themselves as doing something for the common good. I know that because, whenever I hold workshops, the first question I ask participants is, “What is a nonprofit?” And invariably, their answers accentuate an altruistic angle. “It’s an organization that serves society,” they say, or one “that helps the needy,” or it’s “a group of individuals who hold events to raise money for worthy purposes.”

            The last thing in the world that supporters of nonprofits like to think they are is salespeople; they consider themselves a cut above schnooks selling shoes or used cars. I know that because when I ask my second question—“What is fundraising?”—no one ever answers “sales.” Instead predictably, the answers have a mushy quality equal to the definition of a nonprofit. Fundraising is the “ability to raise capital for an entity,” “stewardship, relationship-building in order to raise funds for an agency,” “an effort to generate funds for a good cause.”

            So, it’s time for a major reality check for everyone who works on behalf of nonprofits. From doctors and plumbers to entrepreneurs and artists, successful people know how to sell--well. Fundraising is “nonprofit sales,” pure and simple. If you don’t know how to sell, you’ll never be an effective fundraiser. And if your first reaction to the idea of “nonprofit fundraising as selling” is to hold your nose, you’re probably holding back whatever cause(s) you support. So, here are some basic tips to help you increase your effectiveness in fundraising sales:

            1. Selling is the quintessential skill. It’s not about getting others to do something they don’t want to or to buy something they don’t need. At its best, selling is the highest form of communication: It’s about making the perfect match between what you have to offer and what someone else wants. It’s an art.

            2. Rejection isn’t rejection. So what if someone says no to you. It’s not the end of your life nor should you punish them on your voodoo doll. Think of how many times you may have said no to someone without meaning any ill towards them—and move on to someone else.

            3. Fundraising is not about “the ask,” but about “the listen.” Remember the lyric, “fools rush in where angels fear to tread.” Consider your customers before you chew their ears off about your cause. Too many do-gooder fundraisers have a “prima facie, ipso facto attitude.” They think that all they have to do is blurt out the basics of their case and their prey will open their wallet. Ain’t so! Do your homework: Find out about people you approach. Take an interest in them. You’ll be amazed at how interested they’ll become in you.

            4. Commit to selling 24/7. The best/most successful fundraisers even dream about raising money. Fundraising is a frame of mind, an all-consuming passion, not a 9-to-5 job. From a check-out line in the grocery store to a tuxedo-filled ballroom, fundraiser-salespeople know that there are six degrees of separation—or less--between them and the next contribution they receive.

            5. Multiply your donors’ gifts. Donors who are treated well beget other donors. The most successful fundraiser-salespeople know that fundraising only gels if you sell well.   

Dr. Stephen Goldstein is the author of the bestseller 30 Days to Successful Fundraising and the host of the broadcast radio program, “The Forum for Nonprofits,” which is also available 24/7 from anywhere in the world at www.forumfornonprofits.com. Email him through www.fundraisershotline.com.
          

 

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