When it comes to fraternity fundraising, large initiatives like funding academic scholarships, donating to fraternity and/or sorority foundations and philanthropic organizations, and improving or building chapter houses require significant resources. If your organization has large fundraising goals, consider conducting a capital campaign.
If you haven’t run a capital campaign before, it can seem ambitious and downright daunting. In this guide, we’ll give you the tools your organization needs to successfully cultivate donor relationships and raise money.
A capital campaign is a large-scale fundraising drive for major changes and long-term impact. Here are some common focuses for alumni/ae chapter, house corporation, or national headquarters capital campaigns:
Due to the scale of the fundraising goals associated with sorority and fraternity capital campaigns, these initiatives require a significant amount of planning and execution to succeed. A capital campaign is worth the investment of time, money, and effort because:
Before we dive into capital campaign specifics, understand these essential tips for success:
In the planning and execution of sorority and fraternity capital campaigns, three primary phases encompass the entire fundraising process. They are:
As the name suggests, this is the time when you’ll do the bulk of your campaign planning. Account for the following areas in your research:
The first step of the planning phase will be to consult with experts to estimate project expenses. Although this will largely be relevant to chapters with goals to construct/renovate physical assets (a new member house, an expansion, etc.) for large philanthropic goals (e.g. creating a school), it’s important to determine your costs going in.
A feasibility study helps your chapter predict the campaign's success given your current donor prospects and your organization’s resources. Your feasibility study should include the following aspects of your capital campaign:
You can collect this information by conducting stakeholder interviews, a SWOT analysis, and following overarching financial trends in the fundraising world.
Because you’ll be raising significant amounts of money, you’ll also want to perform a good deal of prospect research during this time. Prospect research is simply vetting potential high-value donors that would make the biggest impact on your fundraising efforts. For example, if your goal were to raise one million dollars, your prospect research might include donors who are capable of giving $50,000 or more.
Include as many qualified names on this list as you can find ando segment the names to correspond to each level for which you plan to approach them (i.e. you’ll approach the $100,000 group first, then the $50,000, etc).
Lastly, you need to put together a team to tackle your capital campaign goal. Answer the following questions to find the perfect candidates:
You should also determine how you’ll hold team members accountable for their work. A professional capital campaign manager can provide the support you need to align your team and keep you working towards your goal.
In this phase, your organization has begun fundraising, but you haven’t made your efforts public yet. During this stage, you aim to raise 50-70% of your fundraising goal through major donor gifts.
At this point, you’re unlikely to have any significant marketing resources or social proof, so garnering large donations to kick-start your goal can be challenging. However, you can gain some momentum by following these tips:
Once you’ve raised 70% of your projected funds, the public phase is the home stretch. With most of the work done, there’s a lot of fun to be had encouraging the general public to donate to your cause.
In this phase, every gift counts as you move the needle closer to its endpoint. That’s why keeping the public aware of your progress is critical; the closer they feel you are to meeting your goal, the better they’ll feel about donating toward it.
Here are a few tools to promote public giving:
When your alumni association aims to raise large sums of money, you need a great plan and a lot of dedication from your team. Thankfully, that’s where a solid fraternity capital campaign comes in. By planning for every stage, from ideation to execution, you’ll be setting your sorority or fraternity up for success.