You’re ready to take your nonprofit to the next level, scale up its capacity, and make an even bigger impact in your community. It might be time for a capital campaign.
Capital campaigns are among the biggest fundraising undertakings that nonprofit organizations tackle, and they only come around roughly once a decade. They’re major investments of your time and resources with potentially huge payoffs—an increased capacity to drive impact, strengthened relationships with
donors and partners, and
tons
of valuable fundraising experience.
But since they’re such big projects, capital campaigns bring inherent risks and challenges, and they require you to plan like you’ve never planned a fundraising campaign before. Thorough planning safeguards the time and energy you put into the campaign, boosts your chances of success, and creates a more positive experience for everyone involved.
What are the key pitfalls to avoid when
planning a capital campaign, especially if it’s your organization’s first? Let’s take a look at four critical “don’ts” and how to navigate them.
Imagine this scenario:
Your organization has been operating smoothly with tight but consistent resources. You want to take it up a notch and increase your impact and feel like now’s a good time for a major campaign. But you can’t point to a specific project or set of investments that will take you there.
You start planning a campaign to generally grow your nonprofit’s capacity but immediately run into challenges securing your board’s buy-in and
engagement. You start discussing your goals with donors, but they don’t understand why you’re asking for such large gifts. The plan feels pieced together, and your early efforts lose steam fast.
Clearly define your capital campaign’s objectives first—they should be the whole reason and guiding force behind the campaign. The objectives are what you’re seeking to accomplish by conducting a major fundraising campaign. Common examples include:
Capital campaign objectives can come in all shapes and sizes, but what they share is that they increase your ability to make an impact in specific ways. Something less tangible like growing your endowment should be framed in terms of the specific growth and program outcomes it will generate in the coming years.
Your campaign’s objectives create a foundation that sustains the campaign’s energy, shows others what it’s all about, and motivates donors to give. They’ll shape the entire campaign, from the specific fundraising goal you seek to raise, to the case for support you develop and discuss with donors. You
must
be able to speak clearly about what your campaign will accomplish and what the positive impacts will be before you can move forward.
Here’s another problem you may encounter:
Let’s say you can clearly define what you want to do with your campaign and why, so you jump into the planning process, skipping key steps like a feasibility study and prospect research and cultivation. You lay out a series of gifts of different sizes that will get you to your goal. Everyone’s excited to get started.
Unfortunately, your first solicitation falls flat for reasons you couldn’t anticipate. Thankfully, you secure your next gift, although it’s not at the expected amount. Another gift falls flat, you secure one more, and so on, feeling like you’re inching forward. Your board is already asking questions about whether you’ll hit the projected amount you’ll need to break ground. In short, things feel like they’re dragging along much slower than expected. Your board is losing confidence and your team is losing motivation.
Do your research to understand the structure and timeline of a typical capital campaign in advance. They generally last between two and three years, sometimes longer, and consist of these phases:
For a deeper dive into each of these phases, explore
Capital Campaign Pro’s ultimate guide to campaign structure and best practices.
The key takeaway is that successful capital campaigns take time and resources. Understand in advance that you’ll need two or more years to conduct it from start to finish and that you’ll likely need to invest in increased staffing,
consulting or coaching services, new tools, and events along the way. Equipped with this context, you can lay out a more realistic plan, benchmarks, and expectations across your organization.
Consider this pitfall:
Your board loves the idea of ratcheting up your organization’s capacity and impact, and they like the shiny campaign objectives you’ve proposed. Everyone starts getting excited, you move ahead, and the campaign’s earliest stage is underway.
But the board has only generally expressed enthusiasm for the campaign’s big-picture purpose on paper. Once they see the actual details, timelines, and solicitations plan, they’re not so sure a campaign is a good idea.
And what about your lead donors? A major donor was broadly supportive of a campaign when you casually mentioned it last year, but when you reach back out to discuss specifics, they don’t understand why you need to invest so heavily in your particular objectives. Your case for support isn’t landing well.
Capital campaigns need the support of many stakeholders—board members, staff, donors, volunteers, corporate and community partners—to be successful. However, if you wait until the campaign is practically underway to secure their buy-in, you may face resistance, lack of engagement, and all kinds of pushback.
To secure buy-in, follow these tips:
Here’s another critical issue you may encounter:
You’ve established your campaign’s objectives, understand how long it will take and the phases it will require, and have secured buy-in from your organization’s leadership. You’ve also set your most ambitious fundraising goal yet. Great! That’s what capital campaigns are for.
But when the rubber hits the road, the money just isn’t there. Donors whose support you counted on ultimately choose not to give, or they give at lower levels than anticipated. You extend your campaign’s timeline, but it soon becomes clear that you won’t be able to secure the bulk of your funding during the quiet phase and that your goal isn’t achievable.
Setting overly ambitious, untested fundraising goals can set your campaign up for failure. Although a capital campaign will be the most ambitious fundraising project that you undertake, your goals must still be truly achievable or else risk damage to the organization’s reputation and donor relationships.
This is why conducting a feasibility study is such a critical early step in the planning process.
By gathering input and opinions at the start, you can get a clear sense of the effectiveness of your case for support and an indication of who would be willing to support you, and at what levels.
Taken together, this information gives you an idea of the feasibility of your preliminary plan and allows you to adjust course before moving into the active phases of your campaign. This might mean lowering your goal and slightly shrinking your objectives to ensure they can actually be achieved. In some cases, you may discover that a major campaign of any scale isn’t feasible right now. Or you may see that your donors are extremely eager and that you can realistically increase your goal.
In any case, you must learn these things
before
investing your valuable time and money into a campaign plan. Planning and testing beforehand increases the likelihood that your campaign will actually be able to have its intended impact.
It’s also important to remember that you can be flexible. The capital campaign model allows you to flexibly scale your goal as fundraising dollars come in and you get a real sense of the campaign’s performance so far. You can adjust your goal up or down depending on the real circumstances you encounter before you publicly kick off the campaign.
So, although you must thoroughly test and refine your plans early to give your nonprofit a reliable roadmap, avoid feeling that you’re 100% locked into it. You can make adjustments as needed up until the public phase to ensure your campaign’s success.
Capital Campaign Readiness Assessment
Is your organization ready for a capital campaign? This simple assessment tool will help you find out. You’ll assess six key areas of your organization.
Take this free assessment now and find out if you’re truly ready for a campaign.
About the Authors
Andrea Kihlstedt & Amy Eisenstein
Andrea Kihlstedt is CEO & Co-Founder of
Capital Campaign Pro. Andrea is the author of
Capital Campaigns: Strategies that Work, now in its 4th edition, as well as
How to Raise $1 Million (or More) in 10 Bite Sized Steps, in addition to other books. Andrea has been leading successful capital campaigns for more than 30 years. To learn how Capital Campaign Pro can support you through a capital campaign, visit
capitalcampaignpro.com.
Amy Eisenstein, ACFRE is CEO and Co-Founder of
Capital Campaign Pro. Her published books include:
Major Gift Fundraising for Small Shops,
Raising More with Less, and
50 A$ks in 50 Weeks. She became a Certified Fundraising Executive (CFRE) in 2004 and received the ACFRE in 2013. For more information and free resources visit
CapitalCampaignPro.com.
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