Don’t let one more minute of this new year go by before you cross off the following five things in your major gifts caseload management:
Many non-profits around the world operate on a fiscal year – a 12-month period specifically designed by accountants and managers to make things easier for themselves.
I don’t begrudge the move to manage this work at a time that is convenient, but I’m concerned that the fiscal year thing gets MGOs and their managers misaligned with how donors think and act.
Here’s what I mean.
Donors consider their gifts in terms of calendar years. It could be because of the tax benefits, or because of the giving season around the holidays, especially in North America and Europe. Or it could be that a year ending and a new year beginning is a good way to do one’s personal budget and plan for expected donations.
This is why January and February are so critical to caseload planning – because there are lessons to be learned from what just happened last year, and there are opportunities to be pursued in the new year.
Jeff and I find way too many MGOs and their managers just sailing past January without a care in the world, almost as if the donors had bought into their fiscal year thing. It’s interesting to watch. It’s also disturbing because a lot of retooling of caseloads, strategy, and resource allocation must happen in these first months of the calendar year. And as I write this, we are already in February, so I hope you’ve already started this work (if the books in your organization are closed).
So, if you’re doing this work already, good for you. If you haven’t, it’s time to get started. And be urgent about it. Because your success this year depends on you getting this right.
Richard
This post originally appeared on the Passionate Giving Blog on January 9, 2013.