publication date: Aug 31, 2011
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author/source: Jonathon Grapsas
Recently
someone told me about a personal venture to bring economic freedom and justice
to the world. It was fascinating stuff - really complex, but riveting at the
same time. I advised my friend not to struggle to secure funding from the mass
market.
Instead, I
said, the project was something a high net worth individual might consider
supporting.
Short
and simple wouldn't work
The project
required the sort of conversation that doesn't fit well within a mass or direct
marketing piece. It's difficult to explain, complex, and better discussed
one-on-one. But it's also the kind of highbrow proposition that often engages major
donors.
This concept is best explained in the sketch below of the
intellectual and emotional index, a
concept developed by my old boss
Sean
Triner at
Pareto Fundraising. My friend's project sits at one end of that
scale.
On the
other end of the scale are cute puppies, sick children, international aid:
things that strike a chord emotionally and make us stop everything we're doing
to respond after seeing a TV advertisement, reading a letter or receiving a
phone call. The average punter on the street resonates with the proposition,
and knows exactly what to do, and why.
Of course
there are those that fall somewhere in between. Some missions are easy to
transpose into a direct response message that a mass audience readily
understands. Yet they're also keenly supported by other funders, whether major
donors, charitable trusts or even government. Perhaps you're helping women with
maternal health issues or fighting human right abuses. Those issues have
universal appeal.
Some organizations will be a hybrid of all three, with some programs that
are geared for government funding, some that excite the rich, and some that
have broad appeal. Many of us would argue our organization falls into this
category.
Why does
this matter?
You need to
understand where you fit into the mix, particularly if you're looking for
public funding, fundraising for the first time or exploring different avenues
for growth.
Get it
wrong and you'll waste a lot of time talking to the wrong people, as well as
wasting a lot of time and money in the process.
Get it
right and you significantly increase your chances of raising loads of money. That
means helping more cute puppies. Or perhaps even bringing about economic
freedom!
Where do
you fit?
Jonathon Grapsas is the founder and director at flat
earth direct, an agency dedicated to fundraising and campaigning for good
causes. Jonathon spends his time working with charities around the world
focused on digital, direct response and campaigning stuff.
If you you'd like to chat to Jonathon you can email him, follow him on twitter @jonathongrapsas or check out www.flatearthdirect.com.