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Schreiber, Joseph C., II – Currents, 1992
An estate planning seminar is a personal and cost-effective tool for alerting college constituents to a financial opportunity. Such seminars are not hard to coordinate, are a service to alumni and friends, and may bring long-term benefits to college and participants. Experiences at a number of colleges illustrate diverse approaches. (MSE)
Descriptors: College Administration, Donors, Estate Planning, Fund Raising
Clotfelter, Susan – Currents, 1990
Steps in developing a major college donor weekend program are outlined, including goal setting; tailoring events to reflect the best the institution has to offer; drafting an appropriate guest list; calculating costs; dealing with common problems such as low attendance, damaging media coverage, and guest list errors; and getting feedback. (MSE)
Descriptors: Donors, Fund Raising, Higher Education, Program Administration
Larson, Wendy Ann – Currents, 1990
The University of Notre Dame (Indiana) fund-raising program uses first-class transportation and hospitality in major donor weekends. Features include careful research, personalized correspondence, transportation provided by trustee-owned private planes, scheduled ground transportation, accommodations, information packets, and a weekend of…
Descriptors: Air Transportation, Case Studies, Donors, Fund Raising
Ryan, Ellen – Currents, 1995
Large, flashy college fund drives may be falling out of favor with alumni and friends of the institution. Advancement professionals recount their experiences and suggest ways to adapt campaigns to new needs and environments. Inherent problems with large campaigns are enumerated, and the importance of clear communication to audiences on and off…
Descriptors: College Administration, Donors, Fund Raising, Higher Education
Dessoff, Alan L. – Currents, 1993
Alumni leaders should be included in a school or college capital campaign drive. The alumni office can help find prospects, provide events and programs for fund raising, promote the campaign, involve alumni staff members. Alumni themselves can assist in campaign planning and inspire others to give by donating themselves. (MSE)
Descriptors: Administrator Role, Alumni, Alumni Associations, Cooperation
Schaefer, Kristina Gluck – Currents, 1991
College programs targeting parents as potential donors are discussed. Factors to be considered in program development, such as finding the right constituency, approaching them, program budgeting, and incorporating the program into others, are examined. Benefits of such programs are seen as substantial. (MSE)
Descriptors: Budgeting, Cost Effectiveness, Donors, Fund Raising
O'Shea, Catherine L. – Currents, 1994
This article proposes that a feasibility study should precede a major college fund-raising campaign. Issues to consider include what such a study can accomplish, what makes it credible, who should do it and when, how to determine who should be interviewed, time requirements, costs, consultant role, and expectations. (MSE)
Descriptors: Consultants, Cost Effectiveness, Costs, Donors
Rillera-Martinez, Lyric A. – Currents, 1991
The University of Arizona's experience with a small-scale fund-raising project to establish a memorial scholarship illustrates that the development office's efforts in guiding a motivated group of donors can pay off. Planning elements included establishing a team, delegating tasks, handling mail and telephone calls, generating enthusiasm, and…
Descriptors: Donors, Fund Raising, Higher Education, Program Administration
Henderson, Nancy – Currents, 1997
Provides advice on how to instill the giving habit in recent graduates and how to encourage them to take an active part in alumni issues. Development officers need to keep track of recent alumni, use telephone and electronic mail rather than letters to contact young alumni, and develop special programs to encourage giving by recent graduates. (MDM)
Descriptors: Alumni, College Graduates, Donors, Electronic Mail
Dessoff, Alan L. – Currents, 1997
College and university fund-raising programs should have a written policy to make donor thank-yous part of office routine. Reviewing existing donor files can help codify existing policy and practice. Larger offices may need policies for different gift types and sizes. Innovative ways of recognizing donors, such as special events, gifts, and…
Descriptors: Administrative Policy, College Administration, Donors, Fund Raising
Greene, Karen L. – Currents, 1996
College alumni who are corporate directors have significant fund-raising potential. Charitable award programs allow corporate directors to designate nonprofit organizations to receive gifts when they die or retire; employee stock ownership programs can provide a private stock market for a potential donor seeking philanthropic opportunity and tax…
Descriptors: Alumni, Awards, College Administration, Donors
Kelly, Kathleen S. – Currents, 1998
A public relations model provided the basis for the five-step ROPES college fund-raising model: (1) research on the institution, the funding opportunity, and the publics targeted; (2) objective setting for both office output and program impact; (3) programming to meet those objectives; (4) evaluation of the effectiveness, not just efficiency, of…
Descriptors: Donors, Fund Raising, Goal Orientation, Higher Education
Hardy, Roger – Currents, 1991
Advancement services, the group of functions that support fundraising and alumni relations, has evolved to include donor relations and stewardship, data processing analysis and programing, budget development and analysis, and event management. Centralizing these services under a single manager can lead to greater productivity. (MSE)
Descriptors: Administrator Role, Alumni, Ancillary School Services, Budgeting
Cornforth, Suzanne R. – Currents, 1998
College and university Web site managers are offered advice for creative funding and staffing, including how to determine actual human, equipment, and financial resource needs; six ways to break out of the conventional funding paradigm (using existing resources well, using others' money, advertising, priority shifts, shared resources, and in-kind…
Descriptors: Advertising, Computers, Costs, Donors
Kourofsky, Carolyn E. – Currents, 1997
Colleges and universities are achieving modest results in using the World Wide Web for fund raising. Suggestions for developing/updating Web sites include: providing basic information such as pledge forms and development office contacts; tailoring the site to campus and potential donor interests; using the site to support other efforts; providing…
Descriptors: Access to Information, Audience Awareness, Donors, Electronic Mail