chapter TWENTY‐FIVEWhat All Large Campaigns Have in Common
Capital and endowment campaigns operate from the same fundamentals as any well‐done fundraising campaign: they have financial goals for which a gift range chart and a timeline have been developed to ensure that the organization meets the goal, and they have a committee of volunteer solicitors, a list of qualified prospects, and creative materials that describe the campaign and its benefits. Because of the size of capital and endowment campaigns, some organizations seek further assurance by commissioning a feasibility study that helps determine what the goal of the campaign should reasonably be, whether your donors have the ability and willingness to access assets, and sometimes even whether to commit to the campaign at all (see Chapter Twenty‐Eight for a discussion of feasibility studies).
The difference between a campaign and an ongoing program is simply that a campaign begins and ends. A capital campaign for a building or some other large cost will not be an ongoing need, so it is almost always done in a campaign format. An endowment can simply be opened and you can focus attention on it all year round, or it can be started or expanded by a campaign. Unlike a capital campaign, an endowment effort never ends, although campaigns relating to it will.
In the chapters that follow we discuss further some of the differences between capital and endowment campaigns.
STEP 1: SET A GOAL AND CREATE A GIFT RANGE CHART
Having ...
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