Many times when Veritus Group begins to work with a major gifts officer, the MGO gets a little cranky. He or she will get cranky having a sense that we are going to bring a new level of structure and accountability to their work than they have ever experienced before.
I don’t blame them. Hey, if I had free reign to do what I wanted, and then all of a sudden that was taken away, I’d be a little cranky as well.
But when the major gift officer finds out that the structure actually allows them to be free and they see the results, the MGO fully embraces it. They realize that within structure is freedom.
It seems counter-intuitive, and it’s probably the reason Richard and I see so many major gift programs with absolutely no structure at all, why we have MGO’s who are “gunslingers” out there. Oh, how we wish we could just wrap our arms around these good people and let them know they could actually be more successful if they just embraced the concept that structure = freedom.
We have been getting a lot of folks responding to our Major Gift Academy survey who have asked us, “What is the right way to do Major Gifts?” Well, I’m going to tell you.
Richard and I believe that the ONLY way your major gift program will be successful is if you have a structure in place. Then you must allow the MGO to have the freedom to work within that structure. Here is what we mean by that. It’s very simple:
- No more than 150 donors in the portfolio of a full-time major gift officer.
- A revenue goal attached to every donor, cash-flowed by month.
- A communication and solicitation strategy attached to every donor for how you are going to attain the goal.
- The caseload tiered A through C.
- A weekly meeting with a manager to stay accountable and focused.
That is it. That’s the structure. The beautiful thing about all this is that within this structure, you as the MGO can do almost anything you need to do, to deepen your relationship with donors. Notice I’m not telling you how many calls per day you have to make, or how many visits in a year you have to hit.
If you are meeting or exceeding your monthly revenue goals with your donors, and you are entering all the information in the database, I personally don’t care if you are working 25 or 60 hours a week to get that accomplished. I don’t care if you are out of the office four days a week. I don’t care if you are going to a matinee movie on a Wednesday afternoon. Why? Because you have been given the freedom to succeed in whatever way works for you.
From our experience working with great MGOs over the years, I will tell you definitively that freedom without structure (or structure without freedom) does not work. Structure with freedom is what makes a major gift program – and a major gift officer – successful.
The only time that freedom is abated is if you are doing two things: 1) consistently not making your monthly revenue goals, and 2) failing to communicate with your manager about your donors in a proactive way.
When that happens, your freedom must become more regulated into micro-management of what you are doing with your time. I will want to know your phone calls, visits, solicitations per week, month and year until you get back on track. It’s not fun.
You know those cranky MGOs I told you about at the beginning of this post? Well, once they start realizing that the structure is there to work for them, and that they still have the freedom to do their work… they get very happy. And when an MGO is happy, so are their donors… and then they see success. It’s beautiful.
Jeff
I am new to an organization that has not maintained or started relationships with the majority of their donors. I am filing in information about them, calling, writing personal notes.
It would be great to have a goal and plan for each one, but I am beginning a relationship with them. At what point does it make sense to have a goal.
Thank you
Wendy, you can start doing goals immediately. The first area I would look is their past giving. Then, I would ask folks in your organization who knows the donor to give you and idea for capacity. At least you have something then to try to attain. After a year of getting to know your donors the following year’s goals will be much sharper. But, we believe you need to start somewhere.
Great article, but you make it sound easy to the first, second and third steps – which I believe are the most critical – listing each donor, the $$ amount expected and finally one of the most difficult tasks, a communications/solicitation strategy. I find that I get bogged down in ‘just getting it done’, and that there’s no time to do the initial strategy. When I look at the To Do list, urgent priorities overtake the thinking time. I don’t think I’m on my own, and it can be overwhelming. I am part of a micro charity (less than 13 FTE). Having said all that, and subscribing to the ‘know thyself’ doctrine, I absolutely agree that structure can create freedom. Pity it’s out of reach.
Denise, it’s not out of reach. Block out one or two full days and just work on it. This is what we do with our clients. You can do it. Our book and our blog goes into great detail how to do a strategic plan that isn’t so ominous. You can do it!!
Jeff