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Course Description

The Certificate in Professional Fundraising Program online covers the following topics:

Foundations of Fundraising

Students will explore the history, philosophy, and ethics of development and its relationship to other organization units, such as financial, external relations, legal, and administrative departments. The values of goal setting, priorities, timelines, leadership, communication, and the creation of strategic and operational plans based on organizational vision are also covered.

Annual Giving

This component covers the role of annual giving, direct mail, and telemarketing campaigns, as well as internet campaigns, gift clubs, matching gifts, membership campaigns, passive appeals, corporate affiliate programs, reporting, and evaluation.

Capital Campaign

Topics covered include setting goals and priorities, creating timelines, leading volunteers, staffing, marketing, creating a case statement, donor constituencies, gift pyramids, capital gift vehicles, and restricted and unrestricted gifts.

Individual Major and Leadership Gifts

Topics covered in this component include the continuum of giving, determining the prospect pools, prospect rating, prospect strategy development, cultivation and marketing, making the ask, closing, acknowledgement, recognition, continuing stewardship, managing a major gifts staff, reporting, and evaluation.

Planned and Estate Gifts

In this component, students will investigate structuring a planned giving program, planned giving timelines, identifying planned giving prospects, gift vehicles such as annuities, trust, and bequests, assets used in planned gifts and marketing strategies and materials.

Prospect Research

This area of development addresses individual, corporate, and foundation research, proactive and reactive research and the effective use of data systems to enhance efficiency and productivity. Also discussed is the selection and use of research tools to optimize efforts and effective information management.

Corporate and Foundation Fundraising

Topics covered in this component of the program include structuring an institutional support program, grant writing, staffing, networking, research, sponsorships, corporate affiliate programs, gifts-in kind/intellectual, and property.

Technology-enabled Fundraising

Social networking, micro-targeting and new online engagement tools with solicitation functions have all changed the face of fundraising. In this component, students explore how to harness the web to enhance and boost current development efforts. Various web-based strategies for fundraising are investigated including what they are, how they can help an organization, and how these strategies are best implemented.

Support Services and Volunteer Leadership

Prospect research, gift processing, and stewardship all play a key role in fundraising. Information management and communications also contribute to an effective development organization. These topics are explored in this component, along with effective volunteer leadership, the lifeblood of non-profit organizations. Internal and external leadership, boards of directors, special events, and volunteer leadership challenges are also explored.

Management and Accountability

This topic addresses how development processes are managed, including gift processing, gift reporting, stewardship and donor relations, and endowment management. Also covered are ethics in fundraising, successful development communications, and managing volunteers, boards, and other key players.

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Enroll Now - Select a section to enroll in
Section Title
TEST - Professional Fundraising
Type
Online, fixed date
Dates
Oct 08, 2024 to Dec 16, 2024
Course Fee(s)
OPFR Tuition non-credit $2,495.00
Available for Credit
9.3 units
Instructors
Reading List / Textbook
All material is available online in the course.  No additional texts are required.
Section Notes

This is an example only

The classes, Orientation and Professional Fundraising, will appear on your Blackboard dashboard on the day that they open.

Orientation opens and will appear in Blackboard on August 27 at 10:00am ET. Orientation is a helpful resource for you to understand how to post assignments, use Discussion Boards, and navigate through Blackboard. Sample a sample syllabus of your class is available in Orientation to review.

NOTE:  Orientation is not program specific. Students in other programs are in Orientation with you, too.

Your class opens and will appear in Blackboard on Tuesday, September 3 at 10:00am ET

Please make sure your Blackboard account is active before these dates.

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