Pictures: Keira Burton on Pexels and (insert) Dylan Gillis on Unsplash
This webpage was written for trust fundraisers with three or more years’ experience.
Pictures: Keira Burton on Pexels and (insert) Dylan Gillis on Unsplash
This webpage was written for trust fundraisers with three or more years’ experience.
The main things you need to do are:
o Yourself
o Whoever’s down as project managing the project.
o Whoever developed the project (sometimes a more junior member of staff)
o Sometimes there are other questions that participants can’t answer (e.g., on finances or the trustees). So it is useful to have the relevant people at least prepped and on standby so that you can fetch them into the room.
Without a good pre-meeting meeting, the most senior person in the room may be tempted to wing it and the rest of the bid team won’t know enough what’s going on. On the other hand, a good pre-meeting meeting will not only notably improve your chances of a grant. It will enable the rest of the group to realize that you really do know what you’re doing, there’s more to this fundraising than meets the eye, and you must have a lot of skills – which is a genuine help long term, sometimes.
This is a checklist of these points (it’s hard to ensure you’ve covered everything in the meeting, otherwise):
Sometimes you can mostly lurk in the background in a meeting and you don’t need to be projecting a particular impression, that much. (That can be a good thing: you’re listening hard,ready to troubleshoot and to action points after the meeting.) In this context, the funder often wants to hear things “from the horse’s mouth” – it’s kind of why they’re there.
However, sometimes you’ll have a bigger part – because you’re filling in for other key players who aren’t in the room, say, or the meeting will be a lot about the written bid, or the precise budget you constructed. Then you’ll need to project a certain way and the “ABC” formulation of your personal brand from Ross and Segal’s Making the Ask is worth considering:
Attitude What emotional attitudes should you be conveying to align with the charity and the situation? If it’s an arts project, donors may be in it for excitement and fun, so conveying a bit of enthusiasm and a sense of adventure/fun in the work may be worth considering. On the other hand, when I worked in a children’s hospice the issues were potentially very serious and the assessors could be a little overwhelmed just walking in the door. A more congruent attitude was compassionate, but working to put people at ease and to get them to appreciate the preciousness of the time and opportunities the children had.
Beliefs Bill Bruty, like good rhetoricians, highlights the value of bringing out values shared by the donor and the project. Again, is the focus on fun (as above) or being entrepreneurial but risk-aware for an innovative project, or committed to excellence and rigorously evidence-based for a basic science project, or what?
Competences You’ll need to know the detail of the bid, but do you need to be “good enough to pass” on other areas that you’re overing in? After you’ve been fundraising for something for a decent while, you can probably get by in it, with the odd point that you’ll have to come back to the assessor on. Quite often the Services staff will know enough to bail you out. However, you may want to swot up a bit on it.
Anyone who’s worked with me will know I tend to pop off to the look shortly before a big meeting, if there’s time. Some of that is nerves and a tendency to drink too much tea during the day. However, I do something else, too. Watch Amy Cuddy’s TED talk on power poses. By physically standing (in private) in a power pose for a short time, head up, chest out, arms up or on my hips, legs a bit wider, it increases the confidence for a bit and I can breeze into the meeting ready to make a better impression.
However, in Making the Ask Ross and Segal suggest a more flexible approach to triggering the right mental states bang on cue, without having to work yourself up to it. It relies on a behavioural science technique called “anchoring”: