These were words spoken to me by the Senior Pastor at my church when he was convincing me to take a major role in the upcoming capital campaign. He was right. You know yourself in today’s competitive fundraising environment that it takes more than a staff with a love for your cause to secure a major gift from an individual or a corporation. It takes talent to be a successful development officer.
Talent is different than skills. Skills can be learned. Talent is innate. So if you are facing a big increase in your fundraising budget this year or next, the most important thing you can do is employ fundraising professionals with the innate behaviors that will allow them to ask for and receive major gifts from a wide variety of donors.
But what talents, what innate behaviors, should you look for? Based on research with thousands of professionals whose role is to seek commitment, we suggest strongly that you look for these eight key talents:
Getting in front of key donors is hard work and uncovering their underlying needs and goals for giving requires effort as does fashioning a tailored solution. The best fundraising professionals love to work and go about their work in a very focused manner. They work hard, they work smart, and they work long.
The very best have standards for excellence and produce quality work. They can manage details easily and spin multiple plates, rarely dropping a single one.
They have a certain command about them that allows them to persuade and convince naturally. They are very comfortable with the notion that they must bring others around to their way of thinking.
They gather more information, they ask better questions, and they devise more creative solutions.
For these people, the glass is always half full, they deal with change well, and they have a wide circle of people who like them.
This genius-level empathy allows them to know how and when to proceed. Donors feel a real sense of being cared about—because they are.
Top people see themselves as significant, worthy of sitting with high-net-worth individuals and top corporate officers. They can make a “big ask” because it lines up with their self-image.
Top performers are constantly striving to best last year’s, last month’s, and even yesterday’s performance. They think in terms of winning, and when they are winning for your cause, everyone wins.
And we look for these additional indicators in people we would consider for a role that involves asking for a big commitment:
If you are still reading, you have realized by now that none of the behaviors above can be trained. My company does training in cause selling, but I will tell you that you must begin with talent. Those on your development staff with a natural problem solver behavior are far more curious than the average bear and will respond far better to training on how to uncover needs.
So, what should you do? Here are some recommendations:
Remember, you can give someone experience and you can teach them skills. But you cannot give them talent. It takes more than a good heart.
Jim Hopes is the CEO of The Center for Sales Strategy, a consulting and training firm that works with firms in the non-profit space.