Anonymous wrote:He’s probably doing this on a contingency fee basis—and filling a gap the school can’t afford to staff. This is fairly normal.
Anonymous wrote:He’s probably doing this on a contingency fee basis—and filling a gap the school can’t afford to staff. This is fairly normal.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What is up with all of you so desperately hoping that a nice school like Sandy Spring fails? I don’t get it.
I was the PP and as I said, I hope I'm wrong. I really want Sandy Spring to succeed. That means doing this the hard, proven way. Get a great fundraiser as a head and invest in a solid advancement and communications team stocked with veterans. Get the best CFO to structure your debt, manage your endowment investments, and find new sources of auxiliary income. Build out your alumni program so that graduates will feel pride and be inspired to give back. Any money they gave this consultant would have been better spent on these investments.
A message for Sandy Spring donors: Do you love your school? There are no secret, magical institutional grantmakers out there who will give so that you don't have to. They are busy saving PUBLIC schools. Your school has to depend on your consistent, generous, and growing support. So make a multi-year pledge. Don't wait until the school is desperate again.
Yeah right. You are a nice person and you really want the school to succeed, which is why you posted this on this message board, so that you could still seem important and knowledgeable and trash the school for news that they recently shared which is positive. You are awesome.
Anonymous wrote:In this particular case, I can’t imagine that the two parties (the board/school and the “consultant”) would have come across each other if there hadn’t been some previous connection.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What is up with all of you so desperately hoping that a nice school like Sandy Spring fails? I don’t get it.
I was the PP and as I said, I hope I'm wrong. I really want Sandy Spring to succeed. That means doing this the hard, proven way. Get a great fundraiser as a head and invest in a solid advancement and communications team stocked with veterans. Get the best CFO to structure your debt, manage your endowment investments, and find new sources of auxiliary income. Build out your alumni program so that graduates will feel pride and be inspired to give back. Any money they gave this consultant would have been better spent on these investments.
A message for Sandy Spring donors: Do you love your school? There are no secret, magical institutional grantmakers out there who will give so that you don't have to. They are busy saving PUBLIC schools. Your school has to depend on your consistent, generous, and growing support. So make a multi-year pledge. Don't wait until the school is desperate again.
Yeah right. You are a nice person and you really want the school to succeed, which is why you posted this on this message board, so that you could still seem important and knowledgeable and trash the school for news that they recently shared which is positive. You are awesome.
Entering into a contract is not positive news. Winning a grant is positive news.
I would assume that the guy who runs the firm has some connection to the school - there is literally no way they would have otherwise selected a random, unproven company.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I agree that it’s likely on contingency, but bloviating about a projected yield of $25M is patently absurd and even more discrediting than the obvious fact that this is a guy trying to start a business after parting ways with his family security firm.
Is this the same guy whose family firm provided the “extra security services” on campus? I don’t know if they do anymore but there was a family hired to do that who used to park his car often on the field on the left when you first entered school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What is up with all of you so desperately hoping that a nice school like Sandy Spring fails? I don’t get it.
I was the PP and as I said, I hope I'm wrong. I really want Sandy Spring to succeed. That means doing this the hard, proven way. Get a great fundraiser as a head and invest in a solid advancement and communications team stocked with veterans. Get the best CFO to structure your debt, manage your endowment investments, and find new sources of auxiliary income. Build out your alumni program so that graduates will feel pride and be inspired to give back. Any money they gave this consultant would have been better spent on these investments.
A message for Sandy Spring donors: Do you love your school? There are no secret, magical institutional grantmakers out there who will give so that you don't have to. They are busy saving PUBLIC schools. Your school has to depend on your consistent, generous, and growing support. So make a multi-year pledge. Don't wait until the school is desperate again.
Yeah right. You are a nice person and you really want the school to succeed, which is why you posted this on this message board, so that you could still seem important and knowledgeable and trash the school for news that they recently shared which is positive. You are awesome.
Entering into a contract is not positive news. Winning a grant is positive news.
I would assume that the guy who runs the firm has some connection to the school - there is literally no way they would have otherwise selected a random, unproven company.
Anonymous wrote:I agree that it’s likely on contingency, but bloviating about a projected yield of $25M is patently absurd and even more discrediting than the obvious fact that this is a guy trying to start a business after parting ways with his family security firm.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What is up with all of you so desperately hoping that a nice school like Sandy Spring fails? I don’t get it.
I was the PP and as I said, I hope I'm wrong. I really want Sandy Spring to succeed. That means doing this the hard, proven way. Get a great fundraiser as a head and invest in a solid advancement and communications team stocked with veterans. Get the best CFO to structure your debt, manage your endowment investments, and find new sources of auxiliary income. Build out your alumni program so that graduates will feel pride and be inspired to give back. Any money they gave this consultant would have been better spent on these investments.
A message for Sandy Spring donors: Do you love your school? There are no secret, magical institutional grantmakers out there who will give so that you don't have to. They are busy saving PUBLIC schools. Your school has to depend on your consistent, generous, and growing support. So make a multi-year pledge. Don't wait until the school is desperate again.
Yeah right. You are a nice person and you really want the school to succeed, which is why you posted this on this message board, so that you could still seem important and knowledgeable and trash the school for news that they recently shared which is positive. You are awesome.
Entering into a contract is not positive news. Winning a grant is positive news.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What is up with all of you so desperately hoping that a nice school like Sandy Spring fails? I don’t get it.
I was the PP and as I said, I hope I'm wrong. I really want Sandy Spring to succeed. That means doing this the hard, proven way. Get a great fundraiser as a head and invest in a solid advancement and communications team stocked with veterans. Get the best CFO to structure your debt, manage your endowment investments, and find new sources of auxiliary income. Build out your alumni program so that graduates will feel pride and be inspired to give back. Any money they gave this consultant would have been better spent on these investments.
A message for Sandy Spring donors: Do you love your school? There are no secret, magical institutional grantmakers out there who will give so that you don't have to. They are busy saving PUBLIC schools. Your school has to depend on your consistent, generous, and growing support. So make a multi-year pledge. Don't wait until the school is desperate again.
Yeah right. You are a nice person and you really want the school to succeed, which is why you posted this on this message board, so that you could still seem important and knowledgeable and trash the school for news that they recently shared which is positive. You are awesome.
Anonymous wrote:I agree that it’s likely on contingency, but bloviating about a projected yield of $25M is patently absurd and even more discrediting than the obvious fact that this is a guy trying to start a business after parting ways with his family security firm.
Anonymous wrote:I hope Jeff shuts this down because this is just another attempt to defame this school for doing something totally normal, which is fundraising. These are not even people associated with the school.