Baron Christopher Hanson

Baron Christopher Hanson

It is no secret that associations, member-based organizations and nonprofit boards are facing fundraising challenges. Direct and indirect competition in the publicly financed marketplace is considerable.

What is being lost in the modern scramble for fiscal sustenance is improving the experience and recognition that guests and sponsors deserve for their patronage going forward.

There are four pillars to envisioning, funding and achieving any organization’s agenda:

  1. Loyal, paying members.
  2. Devout, content-reading constituents.
  3. Eager butts in seats.
  4. Cascading revenue or donations.

My firm is an expert in turnaround management and strategic communications value. In my 20 years of experience, there are five recurring failures as to the reason some associations, nonprofits and even political organizations lose fiscal steam in a highly resource-divided economy:

  1. Failure to recognize members, sponsors and donors well enough.
  2. Failure to provide approved inducement that warms hearts, minds and souls of diverse constituents well enough.
  3. Failure to prove that your “financial house” is in solid, ethical order.
  4. Failure to earn national editorial coverage among direct and indirect competitors.
  5. Failure to translate, transmit and train full understanding of your organization’s mission to multiple tiers of potential members and donors well enough.

A private-sector client came to us, enraged. The nonprofit it had sponsored for years routinely failed to include its logo on all event material, pronounce key executives’ names correctly and deliver a critical announcement before a client-sponsored keynote. The executive director casually apologized, cited short staff and enjoyed another cocktail whilst earning a $250,000 annual salary. Unhelpful.

How can these four pillars and five failures be tackled once and for all? Four steps:

  1. Engage these pillars and failures simultaneously –– as a committed team. This approach might seem overwhelming at first, yet it’s extremely effective on day one if exhausted fully.
  2. Map out a custom workflow, and assign new levels of staff responsibility, especially during crunch time. When pressure mounts, critical details begin to suffer, and sponsors become underwhelmed. Detailed, living, breathing action is essential.
  3. Measure results and improve constituent benefit, qualitatively. Utilizing an outside moderator, engage a focus group after each event to install improved results using a round-table format.
  4. Earn national, well-respected editorial coverage for your organization. Informative national news earns your organization interested constituents by explaining your mission and accomplishments. National publicity also skyrockets your organization’s search engine optimization results.

Quick case study: Over three years, our firm persuaded hundreds of South Carolina for-profit companies, business leaders and community organizations to reach out nationally, earning tangible journalistic exposure beyond state borders. One such public relations project urged privately held South Carolina companies to apply to Inc. magazine’s annual fastest-growing 500 and 5,000 list. Three years ago, zero South Carolina companies made the list. Last year, more than 40 did. In an entrepreneurial yet “marketing-stubborn” region, results of proactively reaching out nationally have been vibrant and progressive for the state’s public- and private-sector economies.

Developing media content that editors are interested in publishing nationally requires working smarter and thinking outside every old box. The end goal is to improve strategic DNA and technical media DNA and to communicate your overall brand integrity to all constituents more carefully.

Fundraising prowess amid direct and indirect competition requires a more segmented strategy. At the end of the day, members and donors expect to know that your organization cares about them and their contribution.

How will your team huddle up, plan levels of constituent value, avoid costly pitfalls and ultimately rise above direct competitors?

Baron Christopher Hanson, a Harvard University graduate, is the principal of RedBaron Strategy Consulting and Goal Line PR in Charleston, S.C., and Washington, D.C. Hanson can be reached at (843) 641-0331 or on Twitter @RedBaronUSA and @GoalLinePR.

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4 Responses to “Where associations are failing and how they can succeed”

  1. CEO NonProfit says:

    Sorry, I don't like to be negative – this is not all nonesense but is largely PR "puffery" – the author has clearly never actually run a non-profit / Association. As someone who does run one I logged in to read some wise words….mistake.

  2. Cindy says:

    I would agree this piece is a bit more self-promoting than I would like to see. However, having run NFP's for almost 20 years now, he does make some very good points. And as leaders of non-profit organizations, we should pay attention to the subtle things we do that offend or upset those who are writting the cheques that essentially keep us employed. My 2 cents….

  3. Baron Hanson says:

    Cindy, thank you for your experienced comments. As author, I have served on numerous non-profit/association boards and have submitted this evolving framework to many dozens of legitimate exec directors, staff managers, and their governance boards over the years. This "tough-love line in sand" does make "fluff" NFP leaders a bit uncomfortable, especially those in wildly highly-paid, cushy NFP positions with zero oversight.
    We are not compensated in any way to write for SmartBrief, so including credentials and a legitimate plug for our company's authority and/or experience is part of the work. Sharing our conservative, capitalist brainpower is not free : ) Admittedly, this article is a particularly tough pill to swallow for some, especially for those who are over-employed and secretly living off their NFP's dole. Thank you for taking the time to critically read it, and implement this framework's proven validity on day one. Your members and constituents will see an effective difference in due time.
    Baron Christopher Hanson
    Charleston, SC / Washington, DC

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