Fundraising for Technology
First, your reality check: there are no foundations or corporate
giving programs looking to fund software or hardware purchases, in
general, for nonprofit organizations/NGOs.
Foundations and corporate giving
programs are looking to fund program activities/causes, not
equipment, specifically. Grants go to particular kinds of programs -
those to help children, the environment, the arts, women
experiencing domestic violence, a community in need of better
cohesion, etc. So if you are spending time looking through a
database for grants for technology - stop, because there very likely
isn't such.
Will a foundation or corporate giving program fund software or
hardware, including tablets or smart phones, for a nonprofit or
NGO? Yes, if, say, the foundation is focused on
helping children with disabilities, and you can show exactly
how the purchase and use of software or hardware helps/would help
children with disabilities - not just saying "They need these" but
"Here's how these tools will help increase their literacy, their
job prospects, their cognitive abilities, etc." Otherwise, funders
won't be interested, as they will see it as an administrative cost
- and they don't like funding administrative costs.
Technology can help an animal shelter better track their animal
in-take process and get animals ready for adoption more quickly.
Technology can help make a professional theater better track
ticket buyers who might be good prospects for donations.
Technology can help a program supporting homeless teens to better
identify trends and needs. Make your pitch for funding based on
what technology will allow you to do regarding your organization's
clients - not so much about what the technology is.
A corporation doesn't want to fund the purchase of 10 tablets for
your organization - but a corporation would love to fund a
resource that helps, say, homeless families, and if you can show
exactly how the purchase of those 10 tablets will allow that, then
funders will be much more attracted to such.
Fundraising is always about
feelings. What’s the goal today? Not the action yet; the
feelings that could lead to action. This is where you can use
emotional triggers. But take a moment to decide which to use
before you begin...
You want your readers feel
frustrated and itch to solve the problem. Then you can show them
how they can solve it...
Find stories of the people you
help, instead. Pull the audience in by making that character
human. It’s the little touches that make it work. Since you’re
using words, paint a picture – her shy smile, his rough hands.
Aim for empathy, not pity.
(Because you want this to be personal – something the reader
can’t push away.) This is probably my favorite part of writing
for fundraising – the chance to connect donors to beneficiaries.
To bring everyone to a level human place, where empathy and
caring reign. Give your donors the gift of a story, not
statistics. Make your request in human terms and you’ll be more
likely to succeed.
Develop your strategy to get software and/or hardware purchased
by first, in writing, answer these questions:
- why the software or hardware (laptops, tablets, smartphones,
whatever) is absolutely essential
to your organization - not just nice, but absolutely necessary. For
instance: "We have to have this particular security software
because we must make protecting the information about our
clients confidential and an absolute priority in everything we
do. Without this software, we cannot protect this data as we
should, exposing our clients to risks regarding..."
- exactly how the software or hardware will help your
organization meet its mission. For instance: "In the course of
helping teens who are homeless, we gather information about each
of our client's health, legal issues, risk factors, etc. Being
able to accurately track this information, in a secure computer
environment, helps us to be able to serve our clients more
quickly and efficiently. For instance..."
- exactly how the software or hardware will help your
organization be cost-effective (could you show how not having
this software would cost your organization, say, $35,000 in
terms of lost time/inefficiencies?)
- your plan to train whomever will use these tech tools, your
plan on how to support the tech (what if a tablet breaks? what
if the software has a bug? what if a new staff person comes on
board and doesn't know how to use this tool already), and how
you will keep the tools safe from theft. If these activities
will incur costs, build it into your funding proposal.
- exactly how must the software or hardware is going to cost,
both in terms of purchase price, costs for installation and
costs for training.
Once you have this information in writing, you can use this
information in any fundraising proposals to foundations or corporate
giving programs, and on your web site or, say, a crowd-funding
campaign, to attract gifts from individual givers for a
specific piece of equipment.
Your best bet for funding technology (and most any other kinds
of funding) is local businesses and institutes. Your fundraising
staff and board should participate in this fundraising process as
well. They, along with staff, should identify the largest
businesses in the community in terms of profits and the largest
for-profit companies in terms of number of employees. If there are
other companies in the area that are experiencing record profits
or companies that are trying to address not-so-great public
relations, they should be approached as well. Board and staff must
research the key contacts at these businesses regarding community
relations and philanthropy and then think about the best way to
make the first, and personal, approach. Staff may need to organize
an open house at your organization, so that these and other
potential funders can come onsite and see your work first hand. In
all of these interactions, the answers to those bullet points need
to be readily available, both as talking points by staff and the
board and in written material on your web site and in a
ready-to-share written proposal.
Also, get the costs of the hardware and/or software into your
official yearly budget. This makes the costs an official part of
your organization's overall proposed cost of doing business - and,
therefore, a beneficiary of your organization's overall, regular
fundraising.
Remember: funders want to invest in success, not answer pleas
of desperation. Show the difference your organization makes in the
community or towards its mission. Have your expenses in writing
and ready for review, so that you can demonstrate transparency. Be
able to justify any expenses, not just those you are fundraising
for.
There is a possibility that a company may be willing to donate
their product to you outright - tablets, for instance, or smart
phones - but you need to make sure its a product you can actually
use AND that the company will provide you with customer support -
and they may want you to pay for that support annually. Ask
questions clearly - and don't be afraid to say no to a product
donation if it truly won't meet your needs.
Before you go looking for the magical database of grants, invest
time and energy identifying the largest employers in your area and
getting to know the staff that make decisions about corporate
philanthropy. Invite them to your events and don't ask for
anything - just let them witness your organization's great work.
Invite their employees to volunteer. Cultivate a relationship.
Money comes from relationships as much, if not more, than a
funding proposal. Also, make sure your volunteers know how your
organizations uses tech and how lack of tech holds back your
organization - you may have a volunteer that has a connection with
a company that would love to fund your immediate tech needs.
Also see:
- Basic Fund-Raising for
Small NGOs in the Developing World
A free guide on how to raise money for small non-governmental
organizations working in the developing world. This is NOT a
guide for nonprofits in the USA, Canada, Western Europe, or
other "developed" countries; it's a guide with information
specifically for NGOs that are in Africa, parts of Asia,
Eastern Europe, and parts of Central and South America.
- Nonprofits
& NGOs: you MUST give people a way to donate online
You are losing money if people cannot donate to you via your
web site.
- 14
simple things to do to your web site to attract more donors
And I mean it - these are SIMPLE things.
- Don’t
Just Ask for Money!
If you want more donations, you have to do more than ask for
donations.
- Mission-Based
Groups Need Use the Web to Show Accountability
And to show credibility!
- Crowdfunding
for Nonprofits, NGOs, Schools, Etc.: How To Do It
Successfully
You aren't going to get a financial windfall, but it is
possible to crowdfund successfully.
- Stages of Maturity in
Nonprofit Orgs Using Online Services
What does a networking technology-savvy nonprofit organization
look like? To help nonprofits think about networking tech
standards they should pursue, and possible goals for the
future, I've created this assessment of the states of maturity
for a nonprofit organization's use of networking/online
technologies.
Return to Nonprofit Tech &
Tech4Good / Tech4Impact Resources
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