Fundraising Is a Noble EndeavorI want to begin with a statement that may feel simple, but it carries more weight than most boards realize: Fundraising is a noble endeavor. If you are a nonprofit CEO or Board Chair, your internal reaction to that sentence matters. It shapes how you speak about fundraising. It influences how your board experiences it. It quietly determines whether your culture approaches fundraising with confidence or hesitation. Belief comes first. Always. You Either Believe in the Mission or You Don’tThis is where we must be honest with ourselves. You either believe deeply in your mission, or you don’t. If you believe your organization changes lives, strengthens families, advances justice, expands education, heals, protects, or restores something that matters, then you already know the work deserves resources. You know it deserves to grow. You know it deserves to be sustained for the long term. If that belief is strong, you can work through discomfort around money. You can practice the language of invitation. You can sit in a donor meeting and speak clearly about funding needs. If that belief is shaky, fundraising will always feel heavy. You will delay conversations. You will hedge language. You will hope someone else handles the “hard part.” If leadership belief wavers, board engagement follows, donor conversations shrink, and revenue eventually reflects that hesitation. Belief is not emotional fluff. It is operational fuel. What Shifted My ThinkingEarly in my career, I worked in political fundraising. I was taught that fear and guilt were powerful motivators. Create urgency. Highlight threats. Push emotional buttons. And it worked, at least in the short term. Later, when I returned to my alma mater, I began raising money for education. Our beloved president emeritus who led the university through decades of growth, Aubrey K. Lucas, met with the new development officers. He shared something that stayed with me. Negative fundraising is rarely truly successful. We were raising money for education. Education is a universal good. It is something to be proud of. That effort should not be rooted in pressure or fear. It should be rooted in conviction. That conversation reframed my entire understanding of fundraising. If education is good, then raising resources for education is good. If your mission serves a real human need, then securing funding for that mission is honorable work. That realization has guided my work ever since. Giving Is Not About MoneyWhen board members hesitate, the hesitation is rarely about the mission. It is about money. Money carries history. It carries stories. It carries personal experiences that shape how we feel when we talk about it. But giving is not really about money. Giving is about shared vision and shared values. When a donor gives, they are not simply transferring dollars. They are aligning themselves with a cause they believe matters. They are choosing to participate in change. They are saying, “I see this work, and I want to be part of it.” Money is simply the mechanism that allows that alignment to take tangible form. When you internalize this truth, something shifts in your posture. You stop speaking about fundraising as if it is separate from the mission. You recognize that it is the engine that fuels the mission. And that changes your tone. Leadership Tone Shapes Board CultureCulture does not begin in the development office. It begins in the boardroom. If you speak about fundraising as an obligation, your board will experience it as a burden. If you treat fundraising as something uncomfortable that must be endured, your board will mirror that discomfort. But if you speak about fundraising as mission work, as advocacy, as an opportunity to invite others into meaningful impact, your board will feel that shift. You do not have to eliminate all discomfort. Most of us were not raised discussing money openly. That hesitation is normal, but how you frame the work matters. When you believe fundraising is noble, you approach it with clarity. You talk about funding needs without apology. You connect dollars to outcomes without shrinking your language. You model confidence. Boards take their cues from leadership. If you approach fundraising with pride and purpose, your board has permission to do the same. The Cultural ResetIf your board is reluctant, start here. When was the last time your board discussed fundraising as shared leadership responsibility rather than an agenda item? Have an honest conversation about why your mission matters. Revisit the lives changed. Revisit the transformation you are pursuing. Revisit the gap between where you are and where you need to be. Then ask this question: If this work truly matters, why would we hesitate to invite others to fund it? When that belief becomes shared, fundraising stops feeling transactional. It begins to feel aligned. And alignment is powerful. Ready to Strengthen Your Board’s Fundraising Culture?If any of this sounds familiar:
It’s time to take a serious look at whether your board’s leadership tone and fundraising expectations are truly aligned. If fundraising feels like a source of stress rather than shared responsibility, this is the work that shifts it. I’m opening three complimentary Board Fundraising Alignment Calls this month. You can reserve a time here. Fundraising is not separate from your mission. Fundraising fuels your mission. And when you truly believe that, you become a stronger advocate, a clearer leader, and a far more confident fundraiser. Cheers! P.S. This post is the first part of an ongoing series for nonprofit CEOs and Board Chairs who want to build confident, fundraising-positive boards. If this conversation is resonating, I invite you to subscribe so you don’t miss the next installment. Each piece builds on the last, and together they form a practical roadmap for strengthening fundraising culture at the leadership level. If you liked this…
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Jessica Cloud, CFREI've been called the Tasmanian Devil of fundraising and I'm here to talk shop with you. Archives
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