The Almoner The Almoner
  • The Fundraiser’s Playbook
  • The Best Fundraising Books Ever
  • About
  • Ask the Almoner
Author
The Almoner
Nathan Krupa started raising money professionally for Golden Harvest Food Bank in 2011. When…
Categories
  • Annual Campaign (2)
  • Board Fundraising (1)
  • Budgets (1)
  • Capital Campaign (15)
  • Case for Support (5)
  • Charitable Enterprise (8)
  • charity (2)
  • Corporate Giving (5)
  • Direct Mail (6)
  • Disciples and Stewards (13)
  • Donors (11)
  • Email Fundraising (1)
  • Endowment (2)
  • Events (2)
  • Fundraising (47)
  • Grants (11)
  • History (1)
  • Homilies (1)
  • Humility (2)
  • Leadership (8)
  • Letters from the Almoner 2 (3)
  • Major Gifts (18)
  • Matching Gifts (2)
  • Ministry Support Fundraising (10)
  • Offertory (5)
  • Online Giving (11)
  • Personal Support (2)
  • Phone Calls (2)
  • Planned Giving (1)
  • Planning (20)
  • Productivity (1)
  • Prospect Research (2)
  • Recipe for Success (1)
  • Social Teaching (1)
  • Spirituality (6)
  • Stewardship (20)
  • Thank You (6)
  • Theology (20)
  • Time, Talent, Treasure (8)
  • Uncategorized (15)
  • Volunteers (12)
  • Websites (1)
The Almoner The Almoner
  • The Fundraiser’s Playbook
  • The Best Fundraising Books Ever
  • About
  • Ask the Almoner
  • Leadership
  • Ministry Support Fundraising
  • Stewardship

Fundraising First Steps

  • The Almoner
Total
0
Shares
0
0
0

Fundraising first steps are those things that you should always do at the beginning. You just can’t get around them.

The I went to a Knights of Columbus meeting over the weekend. I’m new to the Knights, but I know a lot of outstanding men who have been members for a very long time. My wife’s grandfather, who we buried last week at age 98, was a member for 77 years.

It turns out that this weekend’s meeting focused on planning the fundraisers for the remaining part of the year. A Chili dinner. Egg roll sales. A paid service project. The fundraiser in me got all stirred up, and so I stood up.

“The best way to raise money is to ask for it. Why don’t we just pick a project and ask each of the knights to give $25, $50, or $100 dollars to support it, depending on how much they can afford? We can ask Father what he wants us to support.”

The idea was very warmly received. It had never occurred to anyone to just ask for money with a focus on some critical church need. They had been doing the same kinds of fundraisers for years, and were used to the status quo.

The conversation was kind of funny, because it turns out that the way things had been going were not exactly as they appeared. It came out in the discussion that many of the knights, myself and the grand knight included, always buy all of the tickets that we sell for the Christmas Wheel Barrel of Cheer (a wheel barrow filled with bottles of alcohol). Nobody had time to sell tickets, practically everybody hated selling tickets, but nobody wanted to let the fundraiser be a failure.

So a new way of doing things was appreciated.

Make new friends, keep the old.

I didn’t suggest that we cancel the other fundraisers, and other knights wanted to make sure that I knew that those events weren’t just about raising money. Hosting dinners and making egg rolls is about building relationships and community. I get it. You can’t build a friendship with the person who sits behind you in Church by putting a check in the offertory basket. If you never rub elbows with him, you’ll never get to know him.

But that doesn’t mean that you can’t introduce a new fundraising practice that can change the game in the parish. Last year, the chili supper raised $600. If 6 knights give $100, they have just matched that amount. If all of the knights in our little parish give $100, it will be more than $5,000. This fundraising approach is a practically guaranteed win, and it can’t be matched by selling tickets to a meal. Who buys $100 worth of chili? Nobody!

Baby Steps

As much as I love more advanced fundraising techniques like grant writing, major gifts, and tithing, there’s a lot to be said with baby steps. Good fundraising requires trust and confidence. It’s hard to jump into a difficult kind of fundraising like major gifts, especially if a parish has never done that kind of fundraising before. So do a small thing that is not so intimidating.

When success follows, it will be easier to get more people involved the next time. Momentum begins to build. People who are skeptical at first will decide to jump in when they see their peers participating. No one likes to be the last person standing on the edge of the pool when everybody else is swimming and having a good time.

So pick a project that your parish needs done. Get individuals in your group to agree to give $25, $50, or $100 to the project. Then celebrate how awesome it was to raise so much money with hardly any effort. Share with the other ministries in your parish and repeat once or twice a year. Your parish will be transformed before you know it.


Would you like to learn more about raising money for Church and Ministry? Check out Letters From The Almoner, now available on Amazon.com. Image courtesy of Pixabay.com, via Creative Commons License, no rights reserved.

Author

  • The Almoner
    The Almoner

    Nathan Krupa started raising money professionally for Golden Harvest Food Bank in 2011. When he discovered that fundraising can make wonderful things happen, his profession became his passion and the Almoner was born. His first book on raising money in the Church, Letters from the Almoner, is now available on Amazon.

    View all posts
Total
0
Shares
Share 0
Tweet 0
Pin it 0
Related Topics
  • Fundraising
  • knights of columbus
  • Knights of columbus fundraisers
  • raise money
  • raise money in church
The Almoner

Nathan Krupa started raising money professionally for Golden Harvest Food Bank in 2011. When he discovered that fundraising can make wonderful things happen, his profession became his passion and the Almoner was born. His first book on raising money in the Church, Letters from the Almoner, is now available on Amazon.

Previous Article
A Fountain
  • Fundraising
  • Spirituality
  • Theology

Prayer and the Empty Page

  • The Almoner
View Post
Next Article
Christ gives Peter the keys
  • Uncategorized

Disciples and Stewards – Meditations for Spiritual Growth

  • The Almoner
View Post
You May Also Like
Falls of the Big Sioux River
View Post
  • Annual Campaign
  • Fundraising
  • Stewardship

Excellence in Action

  • The Almoner
  • November 11, 2024
St. Paul was a man on mission.
View Post
  • Ministry Support Fundraising
  • Theology

Mission fundraising – Creating a culture of Catholic missions.

  • The Almoner
  • February 12, 2020
View Post
  • Ministry Support Fundraising
  • Personal Support
  • Theology

Fundraising IS part of your mission.

  • The Almoner
  • January 29, 2020
View Post
  • Fundraising
  • Spirituality
  • Stewardship

Is stewardship the same thing as fundraising?

  • The Almoner
  • March 6, 2019
Harmonic Balancer Puller
View Post
  • Capital Campaign
  • Major Gifts
  • Ministry Support Fundraising

Are you using the right fundraising tools?

  • The Almoner
  • February 13, 2019
The siege of Jasna Gora
View Post
  • Fundraising
  • Stewardship

Planned Parenthood Doesn’t Do Bake Sales.

  • The Almoner
  • January 9, 2019
Christ Calling His Disciples
View Post
  • Capital Campaign
  • Leadership
  • Uncategorized
  • Volunteers

Calling Your “Disciples”

  • The Almoner
  • December 12, 2018
The parable of the Talents
View Post
  • Stewardship

From the Fundraiser’s Playbook – What is Stewardship?

  • The Almoner
  • May 2, 2018
Author
The Almoner
Nathan Krupa started raising money professionally for Golden Harvest Food Bank in 2011. When…
About the Almoner.

The Almoner seeks to provide the best practices, fresh ideas, and encouragement you need to raise more money for your church or ministry.

Amazon Affiliate Disclosure

Nathan Krupa / TheAlmoner.com is a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for sites to earn advertising fees by advertising and linking to Amazon.com.

Letters from the Almoner – Now available on Amazon.com.

Subscribe

Subscribe now to our newsletter

The Almoner The Almoner
  • Terms of Service
  • Privacy Policy
  • Amazon Affiliate Disclosure
  • About
Raising Money to Build God's Kingdom.

Input your search keywords and press Enter.