Transforming traditional/transactional fundraising events into TG events

Golf scrambles, auctions, jog-a-thons, and wine and cheese tasting events:

The problem with utilizing the aforementioned activities in your development program is that they attract people on a basis other than the cause, building a relationship with you from the outset that is not a mutual accountability relationship.

The traditional/transactional formulat goes something like this:

  • golf and then hear about our cause in the clubhouse afterward;
  • bid on an item totally unrelated to our cause so that we can use your money to impact the cause;
  • taste the wine and cheese with your friends, and don’t mind me while I tell you a little bit about our cause.

It all sounds so sensible, but I can’t resist asking just one teeny-tiny question:

Why do we assume that our causes in and of themselves are so unattractive to people that they must be paired with wine and cheese to make them palatable?

What, in other words, would it look like for you to do an event where the evening’s activities are based entirely and only around enabling individuals to directly participate in the cause?

The key is that the event needs to provide the occasion, the equipping, and the opportunity for your owner-level champions to invite those in their sphere of influence to actually do the word related to your cause. Not just learn about it. Not just be emotionally impacted by it. Not just to give money towards it. But to be it.

There is a potentially risky but highly rewarding path, however, that involves your ministry taking these kind of traditional/transactional events (e.g., golf scrambles, auctions, jog-a-thons, and wine and cheese tasting events), completely upending people’s traditional experiences of them, and utilizing them to enable direct participation in the cause.

I say potentially risky because:

  • What many ministries do when they hear this is to keep the essential traditional/transactional structure of the event intact but add a transformational element or two. There’s certainly nothing illegal about that, but there’s nothing highly rewarding about that either. If you’re still recruiting people on the basis of the wine and the cheese, you’re still recruiting people on the basis of the wine and the cheese.
  • You don’t want to do a bait-and-switch. The idea isn’t to convince people they’re coming to a traditional golf scramble and then surprise them by assigning a homeless person to their threesome. There again, you’re recruiting people on the basis of the golf scramble and upending their expectations…in the wrong order (and in a way that will make you far more foes than friends).

So the key is to do the upending in the invitation process. That is, make sure the potential guest knows what they’re getting into. Do it right and not only will your owner-level champions have a powerful vehicle for recruiting new people to the cause, but the event may gather a word-of-mouth velocity of its own that causes even participant-level champions to want to replicate it in their own sphere of influence.

I saw a particularly powerful example of this last week, with Yorba Linda-based With This Ring.

Much of the gold and diamonds used in wedding rings is mined in Africa. Although “blood diamond” abuses are more rare these days than in the past, there’s no denying that the mining takes its toll on the miners themselves (in the form of low wages), not to mention the environment (runoff from mining can contaminate water sources). You can see more on the With This Ring website.

What With This Ring does is to invite people to donate their wedding rings to the organization so that the organization can sell the rings and use the money to drill drinking water wells in Africa. It’s a neat P/E/O organization that enables champions to be involved in any number of ways at each step in the process.

Recently With This Ring began holding auctions…but not the typical nonprofit auction where a mishmash of items and services are sold to raise money for charity.

Instead, With This Ring auctions are auctions of the actual wedding rings people have donated…and the story of how they came to donate the ring, as well as the history of the ring itself, are told as part of the auction.

In essence, the auction enables a ring to be “redeemed”.

After all, engaged couples are unlikely to be satisfied by going ringless or using crayons and colored markers to decorate cigar bands. Why not “redeem” a ring by purchasing it through the With This Ring auction, such that 100% of the proceeds of the purchase don’t go to the jeweler but rather back to Africa to aid the people who mined the materials in the first place?

And while you’re at it, why not take your honeymoon to Africa and participate in the drilling of the well that your donation helped make possible?

Note, by the way, that the auction is a platform With This Ring provides to its champions. The champions are the ones providing not only the rings themselves but the stories and the histories that make the rings compelling items on which to bid.

How can your ministry redeeem an event like an auction or a wine and cheese tasting event or a golf scramble? World Vision transformed the “-athon” into direct interaction with the cause through the 30 Hour Famine. What about you?

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At home as it is in the field: applying your calling when you coach champions from a distance

I’m really going to have to encourage World Gospel Mission‘s Todd Eckhardt to write a blog, or at least guest-write on mine. Brother’s got a knack for Transformational Giving, and I love reading everything he writes.

One of the principles Todd utilizes in coaching WGM’s missionaries is that your calling is not something that you turn on and off like a light switch. If you work with kids on the mission field, work with kids when you’re on home missionary assignment. If you oppose gambling while on the mission field, help your champions oppose it when you’re back home. It’s a great approach because it keeps the cause center stage. In addition, you’ll be equipping your champions to imitate you as you imitate Christ in relation to the cause.

Eavesdrop with me as Todd coaches a WGM missionary who serves at a hospital in Africa on how she can coach her champions from the field.

The missionary writes:

I just finished reading Coach Your Champions during my recent vacation and enjoyed the book.

However, I am a bit confused because my support team isn’t “next door” to me, so I am not sure how I could get them involved actually seeing the work when they can’t just jump in the car and come to the hospital in Africa to a birthday party of one of my “grandkids” because I have lots of “kids” as our students and graduates.

It seemed much easier in the book to get the Champions involved and involve others when they were “next door”.  Maybe you can explain how to help get them personally involved except for prayer and financially for many of my champions.  Or are they supposed to personally help nurses in the USA and pray for me in Africa?

Replies Todd:

It is true that your champions cannot pop over for a ‘party’, however this does not prevent them from acting in other ways, both for you and for their home community.

For example:  Every nurse taking one of your exams would love for people to pray for them.  Sometimes my kids will call their grandma the night before a test and ask grandma to pray for them.  You can do the same with your students.  Ask some of your champions if they would be willing to be assigned a student and then they can pray for the student. Perhaps even have the champion and student exchange emails so that when a student faces an exam or a difficult time they can email their “grandma/grandpa” and ask them to pray.  Then a day or two after the exam the champion can email back and see how the exam went.  If a student does not have email perhaps you would be able to facilitate this with your email. The champion could also reach out to a local nurse as you suggested.

Just think if a woman’s group at a local church organized with a hospital or doctor’s office to come once a month during lunch or break time and had 10 minutes of prayer with the nurses?  They could ask the nurses to share needs and pray for them.  Then if they ask why they can tell them about Jesus and about you and how you are nursing in Africa and through you touching their lives as your champions they wanted to touch other nurses lives to ‘pay back’ in the name of Jesus. They could even have your prayer cards with them in case they would want to connect with you and your nursing role in Africa.

Deb Cunningham, a WGM development officer (and a nurse herself by background), added this terrific response as well:

As far as nursing (me being a nurse and a Parish Nurse), I am intrigued with the total care and chaplaincy (spiritual) care that is taught and practiced at the hospital in Africa. I did not know if you had something like that in your area in the States and sharing that with nurses and engaging them this way. It would be a way to teach principles to the nurses here as well as make them aware of your ministry in Africa. I could talk to you more about it.

Todd and Deb, my TG bully pulpit here is open any time you have a word to share. Great job coaching your missionary champions on how to coach their champions!
I just finished reading Coach Your Champions during my recent vacation and enjoyed the book.
However, I am a bit confused because my support team isn’t “next door” to me, so I am not sure how I could get them involved actually seeing the work when they can’t just jump in the car and come to Tenwek to a birthday party of one of my “grandkids” because I have lots of “kids” as our students and graduates.  However I do think my emails help people with email access to “come and see” and hear what they are doing as I send out my picture emails.
It seemed much easier in the book to get the Champions involved and involve others when they were “next door”.  Maybe you can explain how to help get them personally involved except for prayer and financially for many of my champions.  Or are they supposed to personally help nurses in the USA and pray for me in Africa?
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Ode to TMI: TG before TG was TG

Every so often I run across an organization that I feel like really embraces the principles of Transformational Giving…without having ever heard of Transformational Giving.

Voice of the Martyrs is my paradigmatic example.

I connected with Voice of the Martyrs in 2003, teaming up to do Bibles Unbound (which this month, I’m delighted to report, tallied its millionth Bible sent out by Bible mailing champions! Woo hoo!).

When I connected with them, I discovered they were already operating a champion development program utilizing many of the principles that we teach in Transformational Giving (TG). They had never embraced traditional/transactional fundraising (ttf) to begin with. And they were (and are) active around the world in creating owners of the cause of the persecuted church…so much so that Seoul USA, the organization my wife and I founded, now operate Voice of the Martyrs/Korea. And in 2010, Lord permitting, we’ll be launching Bibles Unbound/Korea.

I have a similarly warm spot deep in my heart for Teen Missions International.

My only interaction with TMI came a decade ago, when my wife enrolled our two eldest children in the program one summer.

I hadn’t thought about TMI since then, until I stumbled across a year-old article about the organization the other day on Christianity Today’s website.

When I read the article, I was struck how TMI had accomplished in our two kids the very kind of transformation we talk about in Transformational Giving.

In fact, it’s hard to read the article’s description of TMI without thinking about Transformational Giving:

At Teen Missions, campers give up virtually their entire summer for evangelism. They spend two weeks in Merritt Island, Florida, learning the work of a missionary before heading into the world in teams of about 25. They are schooled in evangelism, construction, and Bible studies. They don purple construction hats as they work the ground with hoes and wheelbarrows. They practice public speaking and learn to share their faith in ways that transcend linguistic and cultural barriers, such as through puppet shows. After their mission trip, they return to Merritt Island for a few more days to reflect on their experiences before heading home at summer’s end.

Whereas churches often mistake participation in an annual short-term mission trip for maturity in the cause of missions, TMI utilizes short-term mission trips as an opportunity to build into youth not only participation but also engagement and ownership with the cause of missions as a whole, not only with a particular field.

For TMI, what happens before and after the short-term mission trip is as important as the mission trip itself. I know that personally, since Daniel and Christine would write home to us about the obstacle course (designed to build teamwork), the mosquitos and lack of air conditioning (designed not only to equip campers to survive on the field but to give them a taste of how life just is in quite a bit of the world), and how they were required to clean their plate just like at home (an intentional practice in both places designed to help kids comprehend not only hunger and the value of food but also the importance of graciously receiving hospitality wherever you go).

Besides, Daniel and Christine got their first training in sharing their faith and doing public speaking at TMI boot camp.

Daniel’s trip to France and Christine’s trip to Canada were like icing on the cake. But unlike in many short-term missions programs at churches, the trip itself wasn’t mistaken for the cake.

In fact, even the fundraising the child must do to go to TMI is transformational:

Campers also raise their own camp and travel fees, plus enough for another child (from $2,500 to $4,000) that funds 34 international boot camps where, for instance, an African child can train to be a missionary in his or her own country.

The article on TMI is living proof that there’s really nothing new in Transformational Giving. It is truly nothing more or less than an effort to apply biblical principles to discipleship, including giving.

That being said, what’s sad is the degree to which we Christian organizations have clung (and continue to cling) so tenaciously to traditional/transactional fundraising (ttf) strategies such that Transformational Giving seems risky, or novel, or impractical. I praise God for organizations like Teen Missions International and Voice of the Martyrs which were TG before TG was TG, and which remind us of the power of grounding our development efforts deep into the pages of scripture.

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