Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:These development office practices turn people off from donating. We have gotten requests for specific numbers and we always reduce our donation in response. As long as you donate something as a current parent they should leave you alone for the remainder of the year.
Believe it or not, there’s an art and a social science to fundraising. If you don’t ask, you don’t get. Many of us still feel crunched in the middle class, and one bad turn of events from being unemployed. But people who are fabulously wealthy and can make big donations know that they are fabulously wealthy, and they actually like being asked.
We are wealthy and we don’t like people claiming our money. It feels like both entitlement and transactional. We are more than just extremely wealthy but have to deal with asks all the time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:These development office practices turn people off from donating. We have gotten requests for specific numbers and we always reduce our donation in response. As long as you donate something as a current parent they should leave you alone for the remainder of the year.
Believe it or not, there’s an art and a social science to fundraising. If you don’t ask, you don’t get. Many of us still feel crunched in the middle class, and one bad turn of events from being unemployed. But people who are fabulously wealthy and can make big donations know that they are fabulously wealthy, and they actually like being asked.
We are wealthy and we don’t like people claiming our money. It feels like both entitlement and transactional. We are more than just extremely wealthy but have to deal with asks all the time.
Anonymous wrote:What I find more worrisome is the annual list of donors that is published. While recognizing donors is nice, the reverse of shaming families for not donating or not donating enough is bizarre. Welcome to private school.
Anonymous wrote:What I find more worrisome is the annual list of donors that is published. While recognizing donors is nice, the reverse of shaming families for not donating or not donating enough is bizarre. Welcome to private school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:These development office practices turn people off from donating. We have gotten requests for specific numbers and we always reduce our donation in response. As long as you donate something as a current parent they should leave you alone for the remainder of the year.
Believe it or not, there’s an art and a social science to fundraising. If you don’t ask, you don’t get. Many of us still feel crunched in the middle class, and one bad turn of events from being unemployed. But people who are fabulously wealthy and can make big donations know that they are fabulously wealthy, and they actually like being asked.
Anonymous wrote:These development office practices turn people off from donating. We have gotten requests for specific numbers and we always reduce our donation in response. As long as you donate something as a current parent they should leave you alone for the remainder of the year.
Anonymous wrote:They also look at what you donated last time and double that amount. Did you donate 2500 last time?
Anonymous wrote:Ours is a Christian K-8.
We never get requests for suggested donation amounts. I volunteer my time at the school and don’t send extra funds on top of the tuition.