However, if you didn’t catch some of the other crazy fun happening over the last month:
If you’re not a Swiftie, you may have missed her generosity to food banks on her 52-stop Eras Tour. Since last March, Swift has donated the equivalent of hundreds of thousands of meals to help feed the growing number of Americans. She chooses to give without celebrity fanfare.
Swift’s support has been meaningful, food bank operators say, especially in drawing attention to their crucial service for low- and mid-income people. Food banks fortunate enough to receive a slice of her wealth have praised the pop star for drawing more attention to their efforts to reduce hunger amid inflation, rising food and energy costs, and increased demand for their services. She might have just created a New Era for Food Bank Donations.
Year end is truly right around the corner, and that’s when all the charity rating websites are most frequented by donors. If you would like to know how to maximize your Candid/GuideStar profile for the giving season, you can sign up on Candid for their upcoming free training from 2 - 2:45 p.m. ET (11 - 11:45 a.m. PT) on Wednesday, Oct. 2. I highly recommend you update your organization profile before Oct. 2, then go back and make it more robust with what you might learn at the training.
For more insights, jump over to RKD Group’s LinkedIn articles and grab Ronnie Richard's Thinkers Newsletter on LinkedIn. He shares fundraising and marketing insights inspired by his own experiences as well as blogs from our own strategists and partners. He’ll have a new August edition launching just around the corner.
More good reports and fundraising tips were released last month, so grab your favorite beverage and dive in.
The 2024 Q1 Fundraising Effectiveness Project quarterly report measuring giving for 2024 Q1 January-March 2024 vs. 2023 was released July 30.
FEP Q1 2024 Report Key Takeaways:
Developing tactics to encourage donor retention and broader solicitation will be essential in 2024.
“There appear to be two diverging trends: We are losing broad support from a large number of small-dollar donors, while the International and Foreign Affairs segment is gaining ground with these very same donors," said Ben Miller, Chair of the Fundraising Effectiveness Project, and SVP of Data Science at Bonterra. "This indicates that the numbers do not reflect a decline in donor generosity, but rather a need for our sector to adapt and figure out new ways to unlock that generosity more effectively."
Shortly after Giving USA released their new annual report, a new study was released that is quite eye-opening on the $20 billion in giving that didn’t happen due to the 2017 Tax Cuts and Job Act’s implementation of a standard deduction.
A new study by researchers at Indiana University and the University of Notre Dame finds that U.S. charitable giving fell by about $20 billion in 2018, the first year of the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act’s (TCJA) implementation. The drop was caused by the law’s change to the standard deduction for individual income taxes. The research provides the first available estimates for the dollar amount of TCJA’s impact on giving.
“The 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act is the largest change in U.S. tax policy in a generation, and our research shows that it had a large effect on charitable giving,” said Mark Ottoni-Wilhelm, a professor of economics at IUPUI. “Among households that had previously been itemizing but switched to taking the standard deduction in 2018, the amount they gave to charity decreased by an average of $880.”
Applying the $880 per household decrease to the 23 million households that switched from itemizing charitable deductions to the standard deduction suggests an aggregate drop of about $20 billion in giving.
The researchers estimate that about $4 billion (20%) of the $20 billion decline is attributable to households “re-timing” some of their giving, i.e., moving forward into 2017 amounts they had planned to give in 2018, in order to benefit from itemizing deductions in 2017. They estimate that the remaining $16 billion (80%) is a permanent annual drop caused by TCJA.
TCJA’s increase in the standard deduction had little to no effect on giving to religious congregations, whose primary focus is on religious purposes and spiritual development, the study finds. Most of the decrease was in giving to other types of organizations, especially in giving to organizations whose primary focus is helping people in need of basic necessities.
The GivingTuesday Data Commons released "The Giving Bridge: Lookback at 2023 Trends in Global Generosity," its fourth annual exploration of global giving trends. This comprehensive report offers an in-depth analysis of generosity worldwide, aiming to foster a more effective and evidence-driven social sector.
The Giving Bridge goes beyond familiar philanthropic metrics, often narrowly focused on financial donations to charities, to also report on giving money, time, items and voice in many different contexts, including giving to community groups and non-family individuals.
Key findings include:
The GivingPulse Field Guide is a comprehensive resource designed to provide nonprofit organizations with actionable strategies and insights drawn from the GivingTuesday Data Commons' quarterly GivingPulse Report.
The GivingPulse Field Guide was created in collaboration with GivingTuesday's Data Commons team. RKD and GivingTuesday share a commitment to advancing the understanding of generosity trends and improving nonprofit outcomes. This partnership ensures that the guide is grounded in the latest research and best practices, making it an invaluable tool for organizations of all sizes.
GivingTuesday’s quarterly GivingPulse Report has a wealth of data, but people can get overwhelmed by so much and think, “OK, now what?” The Field Guide has three main themes:
1. Connection to the community
"Combining RKD's fundraising strategy leadership with GivingTuesday's data leadership is a game changer for nonprofits in the U.S. and around the globe," said Woodrow Rosenbaum, Chief Data Officer at GivingTuesday. "The combination of the GivingPulse Report and Field Guide create a powerful resource set that will help organizations maximize their impact and foster deeper connections with their supporters."
GivingTuesday and Giphy partnered together to create “an epic collection of GIFs” that you can use on your socials: https://giphy.com/givingtuesday
More GT resources available here too: https://www.givingtuesday.org/logos/
DAF Day is a new kind of giving day to redefine how donor-advised funds are used—and who uses them.
Leaders from The Michael J. Fox Foundation, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center and International Rescue Committee held a workshop on July 31. There’s an area on the website for nonprofit organizations to join the movement and unlock the full power of DAFs with your donors.
An upcoming webinar, DAF Day Prep: Your Playbook for Success, will be held Tuesday, Aug. 20 at noon ET to prepare your team for the big day on Oct. 10!
The 2024 DAF Fundraising Report, which looked at DAF-related data from 2019 to 2023 that was provided by nonprofits, found that among the 20 organizations studied, DAF-generated revenue grew by 214% from 2019-23. At the same time, the revenue sourced from donors outside of DAFs rose by only 1%, illustrating a “really drastic comparison.
The study comes at a time when scrutiny of DAFs continues and as more individuals are opening and funding these vehicles.
The research by Chariot and K2D also found that the average annual retention of DAF donors was higher than non-DAF donors by more than 15 percentage points over the five-year period they studied.
Key Findings:
If an active donor file had 10,000 non-DAF donors in 2019, it’s likely 600 have been lost by 2023, based on the data from the 20 nonprofits. But if there were 500 DAF donors in 2019, there would be 895 in 2023, making 19 times larger gifts than non-DAF donors, on average, the authors said of the data.
Nonprofits must harmonize fundraising strategies to successfully manage clients focused on annual campaigns versus those oriented toward major gifts. Here’s a practical approach:
Adopting the right mindset is critical when managing clients focused on annual campaigns vs. major gifts. By understanding and appreciating these nuanced differences, nonprofits can strategically navigate donor relationships, leading to sustainable philanthropic growth and stronger partnerships in the fundraising landscape.
What can be done to boost nonprofit fundraising in an election year? Research from Blue State suggests steps organizations can take to position themselves for success this election year and for future sustainable growth.
Findings show donors in swing states are less likely to give to nonprofits in 2024. Here are three steps Candid shows to bolster nonprofit fundraising in an election year:
The 2024 election cycle demands that nonprofits, especially those in swing states, rethink their fundraising strategies. This is not a year we can put programs on autopilot or expect the “same-old” tactics to yield better results.
To realize sustainable growth, organizations need a new mix of channels and messages, as well as a renewed focus on audience diversification. Start now to maximize nonprofit fundraising long after the election.
Charities are losing out by failing to see the importance of adapting their fundraising appeals across device types. Donors are less likely to give to charity and also give less money when they’re engaging with their smartphones, according to a new report, “The Mobile Giving Gap: The Negative Impact of Smartphones on Donation Behavior,” from researchers at the University of Connecticut and the University of Notre Dame. The researchers call this phenomenon the “mobile giving gap.”
While nonprofits tailor their fundraising appeals for direct mail, personal phone calls, face-to-face meetings and online communications, they are not adapting their messaging for different types of digital devices. Ferguson says charities are losing out on bringing in more charitable donations and new donors when they ignore this difference.
The report’s authors offer several simple strategies that fundraisers can use to close the mobile giving gap. One key insight: Fundraisers should create “other-focused” messaging that highlights the needs of individuals or groups, or spells out that the potential donor can help those who are less fortunate, instead of focusing only on details of the fundraising campaign. The report says this approach leads to increased awareness, which in turn can lead to increased donations.
News released on July 25 reported that U.S. economic growth increased last quarter to a healthy 2.8% annual rate. There were talks of Goldilocks for third quarter. But then, jobs data reported on Aug. 2 triggered a stock sell-off, prompting a sudden switch in the economic narrative from a soft landing to a hard landing. In fact, Aug. 5 was the worst day for U.S. stocks in nearly two years.
RKD Group: Thinkers Monthly LinkedIn Update:
So many insights from the annual and inaugural reports that have been released over the past few months. How will you apply these to your October-December fundraising plans? Would love to hear from you.