While legacy income is vital for the third sector, traditional fundraising remains a staple revenue source for charities. To help support telephone campaigns, the Institute of Legacy Management has recently issued guidance on the subject.
Telephone campaigns represent an opportunity to, not only find and reach new supporters, but also provide a key and human way to say “thank you” to donors for their continued support. However, they also represent potential pitfalls for charities if information and data is not properly captured or protected. Given the stringent rules regarding data protection and unsolicited marketing calls, the flowcharts within the guidance provide useful and practical resources to fundraising professionals.
The Fundraising Regulator has recently demonstrated that it will exercise its full power where it establishes a breach of the fundraising code. For example, on 7 February 2019, due to serious concerns raised that departed from established convention, the Fundraising Regulator published and named a charity it investigated: the International Liberty Association (ILA) who assists the victims of human rights abuses and promotes the respect of human rights in the Middle East.
Complaints had been made by members of the public about the ILA’s volunteers’ methods: examples included volunteers, acting in pairs, placing undue pressure on people they visited, seeking large sums of money (up to £11,000) and even suggested that they take out a loan if they could not afford the donation. While the ILA’s “highly emotive” cause instilled passion in its volunteers, the ILA’s fundraising model relied on volunteer fundraisers for a large proportion of its income: it lacked professional input. It meant the charity trustees were directly accountable for its fundraising, to include ensuring that its volunteers understood the fundraising standards. Recommendations were therefore made to the ILA, with the Fundraising Regulator monitoring their compliance.
Given the need to maintain trust in fundraising, and in in a further sign of the strength, the Fundraising Regulator, from 1 March 2019, will name organisations in all investigations it undertakes, whether or not the complaint is upheld.
Update as of 5 July 2019
Roman Kubiak and Vlad Macdonald-Munteanu recently recorded a charities podcast on the update about the bequest notification service from Smee & Ford. Tune in to the podcast to find out more.