Community Relations

Make It Easy for Donors to Make Online Tribute Gifts

Make It Easy for Donors to Make Online Tribute Gifts

Last month, I shared this Good Advice blog post encouraging nonprofit organizations to celebrate tribute gifts and intentionally promote them during calendar year-end and beyond. That piece was inspired by a client project—and by a data point from Nonprofit Tech for Good showing that while 46% of online donors make tribute gifts, only 19% of nonprofits actively encourage them. That gap is a huge opportunity for mission-driven organizations.

What I didn’t know then was how personally I would experience this advice from a donor’s perspective just a few weeks later when I learned that not all online giving opportunities are created equal.  

Take Time to Celebrate Tribute Gifts (And Encourage Them at This Time of Year and Beyond)

Take Time to Celebrate Tribute Gifts (And Encourage Them at This Time of Year and Beyond)

There’s something powerful about pausing to celebrate generosity—and even more so when that generosity comes in the form of tribute gifts. Recently, at a simple yet meaningful ceremony hosted by the HEB ISD Education Foundation, donors gathered to share why they chose to honor someone special through their giving. The event was held at the Pat May Center at HEB ISD, where the Cornerstone Walkway serves as a lasting tribute to those recognized through honorarium or memorial bricks.

Why does this matter? Because tribute gifts are more than financial contributions, they represent stories of gratitude, memory, respect, and love. When nonprofits create opportunities for donors to make tribute gifts and then take the time to celebrate those gifts, they deepen relationships that strengthen their mission.

Managing the Summer Schedule Shuffle

Managing the Summer Schedule Shuffle

Summer is a season of sunshine, travel—and for nonprofit leaders, a strategic juggling act. As board and committee members head to vacation homes, travel abroad, or simply unplug, keeping your organization’s momentum for strategic planning, fundraising and community engagement can feel like a challenge. Add in your own need for rest and vacation time, and it’s easy to see why summer requires a thoughtful approach.

Here’s some good advice for managing the shuffle of summer schedules while still making meaningful progress on your mission.

Three Takeaways for Nonprofit Leaders from NCN’s Webinar: The Legal Landscape and Path Ahead for Nonprofits and Philanthropy

Three Takeaways for Nonprofit Leaders from NCN’s Webinar: The Legal Landscape and Path Ahead for Nonprofits and Philanthropy

On March 17, the National Council of Nonprofits (NCN) hosted a webinar titled The Legal Landscape and Path Ahead for Nonprofits and Philanthropy. The event featured attorneys, nonprofit leaders, and philanthropists from organizations such as the Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law, Democracy Forward, the Robin Hood Foundation, and the David and Lucile Packard Foundation. (You can view the full webinar recording here.)

Three key insights from the panelists stood out as valuable guidance for local nonprofit leaders navigating the current, unstable landscape of government funding. 

Find Joy in the Job

Find Joy in the Job

With a recent invoice payment, we received a handwritten thank you note insert from a client, (and we were still in the middle of the assignment).

At a board meeting, we were given an iced sugar cookie in the shape of a unicorn with appreciative words of how unique our services were to the exact needs of that board and foundation.

Another time, we received a crystal vase from an executive committee with sentiments of how we served as the vessel for their cause to flourish and how they hoped we would remember them by filling the vase with fresh flowers in the future.