Fundraising Study Guide
Study Guide
📖 Core Concepts
Fundraising – seeking voluntary financial contributions from individuals, businesses, foundations, or government agencies.
Nonprofit focus – most fundraising supports nonprofit organizations (charities, schools, religious groups, etc.).
Traditional vs. modern – face‑to‑face (door‑knocking) versus online, mobile, and grassroots digital approaches.
Revenue types – OPEX (day‑to‑day costs) vs. CAPEX (infrastructure, endowments).
Campaign categories – annual fund appeals, major capital campaigns, comprehensive (total development) campaigns, and endowment building.
---
📌 Must Remember
501(c)(3) – U.S. tax‑exempt status for most charitable nonprofits; donors can deduct contributions.
Automatic withdrawal model – converts one‑time gifts into recurring donations (e.g., Doctors Without Borders).
Planned giving – includes gifts of appreciated property and bequests (written into wills).
Matching‑gift programs – 65 % of Fortune 500 companies match employee donations; 40 % offer volunteer‑grant programs.
Professional fundraiser compensation – salary allowed; percentage‑of‑funds raised is prohibited by AFP Code of Ethics.
Form 990 – publicly available financial filing that provides transparency for U.S. nonprofits.
---
🔄 Key Processes
Donor Cultivation Cycle
Identify prospects → Segment by amount/frequency → Personalize outreach → Acknowledge impact → Solicit repeat/major gifts.
Capital Campaign Phases
Private phase (quiet, major donors) → Public phase (broad appeal) → Close & stewardship.
Automatic Withdrawal Setup
Donor authorizes recurring payment → Organization processes periodic withdrawals → Monitor retention & adjust communications.
Online Donation Workflow
Landing page → Secure payment (credit/debit) → Confirmation email → Data entered into donor database → Follow‑up stewardship.
---
🔍 Key Comparisons
OPEX vs. CAPEX – OPEX funds day‑to‑day operations; CAPEX funds long‑term assets, building projects, endowments.
Annual fund appeal vs. Capital campaign – Annual: small, recurring gifts for OPEX; Capital: large, targeted gifts for CAPEX/endowments.
In‑kind gift vs. Cash donation – In‑kind: non‑cash goods/services; Cash: monetary contribution, easier to allocate.
Professional fundraiser (salary) vs. Percentage‑based pay – Salary is ethical/allowed; percentage pay is prohibited.
---
⚠️ Common Misunderstandings
“All nonprofits can solicit any donor” – Certain IRS designations (e.g., fraternal associations) have different fundraising eligibility.
“Bequests are only for the wealthy” – Any donor can include a charitable bequest in a will; it’s a key planned‑giving tool.
“Online donations are always tax‑deductible” – Only contributions to qualified 501(c)(3) (or equivalent) entities are deductible.
“Matching‑gift programs automatically apply” – Donors must submit proof; organizations must verify eligibility.
---
🧠 Mental Models / Intuition
“Revenue bucket” model – Visualize OPEX and CAPEX as separate buckets; match fundraising methods to the appropriate bucket (e.g., recurring gifts → OPEX, major gifts → CAPEX).
“Donor ladder” – Think of donors climbing rungs: one‑time → recurring → mid‑level → major → planned; each rung needs tailored stewardship.
---
🚩 Exceptions & Edge Cases
Corporate matching limits – Some companies cap the amount per employee or per year.
501(c)(3) vs. other designations – Fraternal societies (e.g., 501(c)(8)) may not qualify for charitable deductions.
Automatic withdrawals – Must comply with banking regulations and obtain explicit donor consent; retroactive withdrawals are prohibited.
---
📍 When to Use Which
Recurring automatic withdrawals – Best for sustaining OPEX and building a reliable cash flow.
Capital campaign – Use when funding a building, major equipment, or endowment; start with a private phase to secure lead gifts.
Online/mobile fundraising – Ideal for reaching younger donors, rapid response situations, and low‑cost acquisition.
Product fundraising (e.g., cookie sales) – Effective for youth groups and community engagement; generates both revenue and awareness.
---
👀 Patterns to Recognize
55 % online donors prefer credit/debit cards – Expect strong card‑payment processing needs on digital platforms.
Donor segmentation + personalization → higher response rates – Look for data‑driven communication strategies in successful campaigns.
Major gifts often precede successful capital campaigns – Spot early large pledges as predictors of campaign viability.
---
🗂️ Exam Traps
Confusing “percentage‑of‑funds raised” compensation – Remember it’s prohibited; only salary or fixed fees are ethical.
Assuming all nonprofit donations are tax‑deductible – Only contributions to IRS‑approved 501(c)(3) (or equivalent) qualify.
Mixing OPEX and CAPEX purposes – An answer that allocates event revenue to a building project (CAPEX) without a capital campaign is likely wrong.
Overstating the reach of matching‑gift programs – Not every employer offers them; the 65 % figure applies to Fortune 500 firms only.
or
Or, immediately create your own study flashcards:
Upload a PDF.
Master Study Materials.
Master Study Materials.
Start learning in seconds
Drop your PDFs here or
or