Development is Something We Do With, Not To

Marketing guru David Meerman Scott is a total rock star (I was excited to see yesterday that my amazon.com preorder of his latest book, World Wide Rave, is now winging its way to my mailbox), but his recent summary of what marketers do left out a core element.

Scott wrote:

“Your job as a marketer is to tell stories that people are eager to share with their friends, colleagues, and family members.”

Another book from amazon.com, Authentic Conversations: Moving from Manipulation to Truth and Commitment, fills in what’s missing, namely: Most workplace conversations regrettably take the form of parent-child relationships, where the boss/parent controls the interaction with the employee/child such that the boss retains the power and gets what he/she wants.

In marketing/development/fundraising, is it really any different? In most marketing/development/fundraising interactions the organization/parent controls the interaction with the donor-customer-champion/child so as to retain the power and get what it wants.

That’s the shortcoming of Scott’s idea that marketing is about “tell[ing] stories that people are eager to share”. Though it’s not Scott’s intention, such storytelling can easily devolve into organizational parents storytelling for their donor children. The implication? Organizations create stories. Donors sit in rapt attention and listen to them with glee, perhaps passing them on to other potential donors but certainly at least writing a check.

Key element of Transformational Giving: It’s about co-creating individual stories with each of our champions–their own stories, now broadened to include meaningful interaction with and, ultimately, ownership of the cause in their sphere of influence.

Subject of these stories? The champion, not your organization.

Champions tell stories about their ownership of the cause in their sphere of influence, and they tell these stories to invite those in their sphere of influence into initial cause-centered participation with them.

Development, in other words, is something we do with champions, not to them.

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , | 2 Comments

YOU Are the Gift!

I came to a startling conclusion this weekend. I’ve been misreading Ephesians 4:7-16 my whole life.

As a result, I flat out missed the starting point of Transformational Giving…and the reason why many Christian ministries’ development efforts are not producing much more than gnashing of teeth.

You remember Ephesians 4:7-16? It’s where Paul writes that Jesus who descended is the one who ascended and gave gifts to men. He then goes on to say that He gave some to be prophets and some to be apostles and some to be evangelists, preachers, and teachers.

Here’s what I had been missing:

This is not a passage about Jesus giving the spiritual gifts of prophecy, evangelism, preaching, and teaching. The giver in the passage is indeed Jesus. But the recipients in the passage are not the guy who gets the gift of prophecy and the woman who gets the gift of evangelism.

The recipients in the passage are “the saints”–the Body of Christ!

The point of the passage is not that you are given a spiritual gift. The point of the passage is that if you are in ministry leadership, you are given as a gift to the Body of Christ.

So why does this matter when it comes to development/fundraising?

Transformational Giving doesn’t begin with you enhancing the generosity of your donors. It begins with God giving YOU to the Body of Christ!

  • God intends that you be given by your organization as a gift to your champions and potential champions. He did not send you out to raise support for your organization. He gave you as a gift to His champions and His potential champions so that they might produce fruit for Him.
  • This “coaching champions” work (what we used to call fundraising or marketing or development) is a huge investment of your organization’s time and money.
  • With what attitude does your organization give this gift to its champions? A begrudging one? Does your organization do this work as a necessary evil? As always seeking as quick and large a return for itself as possible? As unfortunate but necessary time away from the “real” work of the ministry?
  • 2 Corinthians 9:7 says that God loves a cheerful giver. How many Christian organizations cheerfully give their Executive Directors and Board Members and Development Officers to the saints–to the Body of Christ–to their champions and potential champions? Are they given cheerfully to disciple these champions?
  • What kind of fruit are you seeing and seeking from this giving of you and your board and your staff? Are you seeking that the first fruit be for God and His Kingdom in the form of  the perfecting of the saints for the work of ministry in relation to your cause? Or are you seeking that the first fruit be for your organization, to fund its own work? (Worse yet, are you seeking that the first fruit be a good personal relationship with your donor so that the second fruit can be money from the donor for your organization–the so-called “friendraising” philosophy?)

Giving from champions is always a response to your giving–the time and money your organization invests in discipling champions. And your giving to champions is always in response to God’s giving to you–raising you up to be a chief champion for your cause and equipping you with the gifts to replicate yourself. When you follow this approach, champions give to God–and God as the mover of the human heart controls what part comes to you.

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , | 5 Comments

Micro-philanthropy and agreggating social causes

Be sure to check out Peter Deitz’ related sites on micro-philanthropy and aggregating social actions…

http://www.foik.org/

http://www.socialactions.com/

Both sites add nicely to the discussion about giving circles built around Web 2.0 technology. One certainly gets the impression from both sites that there is much more to be written and that we have only scratched the surface, but there are some nice new tools here for the diligent explorer…

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment