institute of fundraising corporate fundraising special interest group 6 december 2011

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Institute of Fundraising Corporate Fundraising Special Interest Group 6 December 2011

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Page 1: Institute of Fundraising Corporate Fundraising Special Interest Group 6 December 2011

Institute of FundraisingCorporate Fundraising Special Interest Group

6 December 2011

Page 2: Institute of Fundraising Corporate Fundraising Special Interest Group 6 December 2011

Paul GillespieGood Values

Peter BullHSBC in the Community

Page 3: Institute of Fundraising Corporate Fundraising Special Interest Group 6 December 2011

Today’s presentation:

1. Corporate giving – the climate and key trends

2. HSBC in the Community - an insider’s perspective

3. Five top tips – how to be ‘CR friendly’

Page 4: Institute of Fundraising Corporate Fundraising Special Interest Group 6 December 2011

Corporate givingClimate and trends

Page 5: Institute of Fundraising Corporate Fundraising Special Interest Group 6 December 2011

About Good Values

A leading Corporate Responsibility agency working with companies to:

•Develop and advise on CR and sustainability strategies

•Create and deliver award-winning Community Investment (CI) programmes

•Manage NGO selection process for flagship CI programmes

•Deliver social impacts and a bottom line business return

Using our understanding of the corporate world to help charities:

•Maximise return on investment from fundraising strategies

•Deliver a step change in high value fundraising e.g. Corporate, Major Donors, Development Boards

•Develop a compelling brand and case for support

Page 6: Institute of Fundraising Corporate Fundraising Special Interest Group 6 December 2011

Key market insights: P.E.S.T. influencers

P Social

Growth in NGO & consumer power

-better co-ordinated & global

reach via web.

Technology

Media age. Ease and speed of global communication

reach/influence all

Questions asked about role of business in society with increasing scrutiny & pressure from myriad of stakeholders (NGO, consumers, government)

Political

“Fall of government, rise of

corporations”. Diverting pressure onto companies.

Economic

Gained greater power & influence via globalisation &

technology revolution.

CSR is now an inescapable priority for business leaders

Challenge is HOW to respond and proactively achieve long term COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGE

Page 7: Institute of Fundraising Corporate Fundraising Special Interest Group 6 December 2011

• Public trust for companies at an all-time low (41% in the UK and just 16% for financial services)

• Transparency, trust, community and employee welfare is more important to consumers than ever before

• 75% of Chief Executives report that corporate social responsibility is an essential issue to their business (BiTC, 2010)

• 90% of employees whose co’s have a CI programme feel proud of their co’s values v’s 56% of those co’s who don’t

• Companies that consistently manage & measure their corporate responsibility outperformed their FTSE 350 peers in seven out of the last eight years (BiTC, 2010)

What this means for companies...

Corporate Social Responsibility continues to remain a core

issue at boardroom level even in the current economic climate

Page 8: Institute of Fundraising Corporate Fundraising Special Interest Group 6 December 2011

• Compliance to Corporate Social Leadership to differentiate

• Brands/companies need to win hearts and minds

• Breakthrough CR clutter - creativity, innovation, investment needed

• More Alliances

: confrontation to collaboration

: industry partners –tackling social issues

: corporate/NGO partnerships

• Increased Return on Social Investment (ROSI) expectations from CR and CI programmes

• More £1m+ long term strategic ‘flagship’ CI programmes being created that work nationally and locally

What this means for companies...

Page 9: Institute of Fundraising Corporate Fundraising Special Interest Group 6 December 2011

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What this means for you...

Corporate giving trends (2010):

• The top 600 companies in the UK ‘invested’ £800 million in the community, including over £500 million cash

• Cash invested stayed on par with previous year with significant increases in TIK/GIK (corporate volunteering increased 150% between 2008-2010)

• Usual suspects continue to dominate all areas of giving and CSR market (top 25 contribute in excess of £300m = 32% of overall market)

• Between 60-70 companies ‘give’ consistently in excess of £1m pa

• Top giving sectors (by total contribution) continue to be: • Banks and financial services • Supermarkets • Utilities • Pharmaceuticals

Page 10: Institute of Fundraising Corporate Fundraising Special Interest Group 6 December 2011

Corporate fundraising (now & the future):

• Still viewed as ‘real’ growth area and increasing resources allocated

• Six charities have sustained in excess of £5m corporate income across the past five years (strong brands, highly emotive causes)

• Five out of the top six involve ‘leadership’ – e.g. Corporate Development Group to deliver sustainable income

• Increasingly compelling commercial ‘cases for support’ that deliver greater measurable value (social impact, business return)

• For smaller charities – half of Fundraising Directors report a reduction in corporate income, whilst a third report an increase (Good Values survey 2011)

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What this means for you...

The most successful charities understand market changes and respond appropriately with a sound

strategy

Page 11: Institute of Fundraising Corporate Fundraising Special Interest Group 6 December 2011

What this means for you...

Successful NGO’s are demonstrating to companies that:

Their ‘cause heartland’ has a strong strategic business fit

They can offer ‘real’ differentiation and standout

They provide marketing & PR support across all channels including social media

They can measure the long term impact of their programmes and create a ‘legacy’

They have a track record of professional business partnerships – with outstanding stewardship

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Page 12: Institute of Fundraising Corporate Fundraising Special Interest Group 6 December 2011

HSBC in the CommunityAn insider’s perspective

Page 13: Institute of Fundraising Corporate Fundraising Special Interest Group 6 December 2011

• Counter public negative opinion and reinforce company values

• Influence the public and key opinion formers

• Positively contribute to brand image, marketing & communications

• Business benefits – employee engagement and skills development

• Make our employees proud

Why we do community programmes

Page 14: Institute of Fundraising Corporate Fundraising Special Interest Group 6 December 2011

What we were looking for in a flagship partner

Page 15: Institute of Fundraising Corporate Fundraising Special Interest Group 6 December 2011

• Well-known charity? Or one where corporate can really make a difference

• Operations that mirror company’s geographical coverage

• Programme more important than the partner’s name?

• Focus of cause area must fit corporate aspirations

It’s all in the name... or is it?

Page 16: Institute of Fundraising Corporate Fundraising Special Interest Group 6 December 2011

• Not too big... not too small... but just right

• Big enough investment to make a real difference

• But not so big that the charity is over dependent

The Goldilocks theory

Page 17: Institute of Fundraising Corporate Fundraising Special Interest Group 6 December 2011

Show me the numbers!

• Easily communicated outputs and impacts

• Breadth (large numbers) and depth (best in class models for a multiplier effect)

Page 18: Institute of Fundraising Corporate Fundraising Special Interest Group 6 December 2011

It’s all about people

• Contacts that exist before the deal

• The ‘pitch’ team

• Who will be working together?

• Keen, knowledgeable, passionate, professional, personable, responsive

Page 19: Institute of Fundraising Corporate Fundraising Special Interest Group 6 December 2011

• How can the work outlive the partnership?

• Leverage – and legacy

• How can the partnership itself enhance the NGO’s longer-term future?

All good things come to an end

Page 20: Institute of Fundraising Corporate Fundraising Special Interest Group 6 December 2011

The process

Page 21: Institute of Fundraising Corporate Fundraising Special Interest Group 6 December 2011
Page 22: Institute of Fundraising Corporate Fundraising Special Interest Group 6 December 2011

Return on Social Investment (ROSI) Model TM

Page 23: Institute of Fundraising Corporate Fundraising Special Interest Group 6 December 2011
Page 24: Institute of Fundraising Corporate Fundraising Special Interest Group 6 December 2011

© 2010 good values

Identifying the BIG cause idea

Fits with brand, organisation and objectives

Societal impact - meets a clear societal need

Relevant and emotive to

stakeholders

BIG CAUS

EIDEA

Page 25: Institute of Fundraising Corporate Fundraising Special Interest Group 6 December 2011
Page 26: Institute of Fundraising Corporate Fundraising Special Interest Group 6 December 2011

Scoring matrix

Good Values robust selection criteria included:

A total of 39 categories

Five mandatory elements

Strategic direction, scale, experience, reputation

Programme assessment

Account management/ability to work with

Page 27: Institute of Fundraising Corporate Fundraising Special Interest Group 6 December 2011
Page 28: Institute of Fundraising Corporate Fundraising Special Interest Group 6 December 2011

Five top tips for being ‘CR friendly’

Page 29: Institute of Fundraising Corporate Fundraising Special Interest Group 6 December 2011

1. Think ‘stand out’

•The 26,000 factor - truly differentiate yourself

•Be brave and innovative

•Utilise all media channels including social media

Page 30: Institute of Fundraising Corporate Fundraising Special Interest Group 6 December 2011

2. Put yourself in the company’s shoes

•Strategic and values relevance

•Think win-win

•Sector exclusivity

•How will this deliver ROSI?

Page 31: Institute of Fundraising Corporate Fundraising Special Interest Group 6 December 2011

3. Ensure your proposition is truly compelling

•Make the corporate feel ‘special’

•How will a CI investment change society?

•New vs. ongoing work - positioning

Page 32: Institute of Fundraising Corporate Fundraising Special Interest Group 6 December 2011

4. Get the chemistry right

•Show you will be a great partner

•First impressions count, but play for long term

•People give to people

Page 33: Institute of Fundraising Corporate Fundraising Special Interest Group 6 December 2011

5. Pay attention to the basics...

•Win over the agency as well as the company

•Answer the brief

•Deliver on time