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HomeMy WebLinkAbout03/03/22 (Joint Agn) Lib Fnd Board & Comm Fnd JOINT SPECIAL MEETING OF THE COMMUNITY FOUNDATION and o LIBRARY FOUNDATION AGENDA CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA March 22, 2003 8:30 a.m. Civic Center Tri-Communities Conference Room 10500 Civic Center Drive Rancho Cucamonga, CA 91730 Community Foundation Members Tony Mizd, Chair Jo Dutton, Ph.D., Member Harvey Cohen, M.D., Vice Chair Sandra Metel, Member Ann D. Punter, Secretaiy/Treasurer David Parker, Member Michael Arreguin, Member Stan Phelps, Member Bruce Bowne, Member Timothy Younger, Member Charles Buquet, Member Library Foundation Members Paul Williams, President Ruth Leal, Member Rebecca Davies, Secretary Wanda Mitchell, Member Teresa A. Akahoshi, Member Paula Pachon, Member Stefani D. Carrasco, Member Anne L. Viricel, Member Laurie Cotter, Member Ravenel Wimberly, Member Gino L. Filippi, Member City Offices: (909)477-2760 SPECIAL JOINT MEETING OF THE e COMMUNITY FOUNDATION AND 7 LIBRARY FOUNDATION March 22, 2003 A. CALL TO ORDER 1. Pledge of Allegiance 2. Roll Call: Community Foundation Michael Arreguin _ Tony Mize Bruce Bowne David Parker Chuck Buquet Stan Phelps Harvey Cohen Ann Punter Jo Dutton Timothy Younger _ Sandra Metel _ Library Foundation Teresa Akahoshi Wanda Mitchell _ Stefani Carrasco Paula Pachon Laurie Cotter Anne Viricel _ Rebecca Davies Paul Williams Gino Filippi Ravenel Wimberly _ Ruth Leal B. COMMUNICATIONS FROM THE PUBLIC This is the time and place for the general public to address the Community and Library Foundations. State law prohibits the Foundations from addressing any issue not previously included on the Agenda. The Foundations may receive testimony and set the matter for a subsequent meeting. Comments are to be limited to five minutes per individual. C. FOUNDATION BUSINESS 1. Fund Development Training and Campaign Workshop. Pages 1-11 D. ADJOURNMENT I, Melissa Morales, Senior Administrative Secretary, hereby certify a true, accurate copy of the foregoing Community Foundation and Library Foundation agenda was posted on March 18,2003,seventy- two (72) hours prior to the meeting per A.B. 2674 at 10500 Civic Center Drive, Rancho Cucamonga, California. R A N C H O C U CA M O N G A COMMUNITY SERVICE & Staff Report DATE March 22, 2003 M. Rancho Cucamonga Community Foundation Rancho Cucamonga Library Foundation FROf1k Kevin McArdle, Community Services Director Deborah Clark, Library Director BY: Paula Pachon, Management Analyst III SUBJECT: FUND DEVELOPMENT TRAINING AND CAMPAIGN WORKSHOP To facilitate both fund development training of the Foundations' Boardmembers and to begin discussion regarding the fund development plan for the joint campaign for the Cultural Arts Center, a workshop has been scheduled with both Foundation Boards for Saturday, March 22nd. The attached materials, prepared by our meeting facilitator/trainer, Gene House, provide Boardmembers with a note from Gene describing the goal for Saturday's workshop, a general timeline for the development of the fund development plan, an agenda of the topics to be covered during Saturday's workshop meeting and some reading material. Additional items such a list of preliminary fundraising ideas and an initial solicitation information packet will be distributed at the workshop for Board review. Respectfully submitted, KevinMcArdle Deborah Clark Community Services Director Library Director Attachments I:ICOMMSERVICouncil&BoardslCommunityFoundationIStaN Reports12003UointWorkshop3.22.03.doc 1 Dear Foundation Board Members, I designed the enclosed agenda and materials for the March 22 session in response to the somewhat different needs of the two foundations. I was able to do this by focusing on those key plan elements that are common to both foundations and to any successful major campaign. The fund development plan elements we will be discussing must be done by both foundations and will be woven together into one master plan before we are done next month. Saturday, we will learn how to do the plan elements we are discussing as we become acquainted with what to do. In subsequent sessions with the two foundations separately,I will cover those fund development plan elements unique to each foundation, and finalize each foundation's plans. After these individual plans are approved at the foundation board level, we will merge them for review and approval at the joint foundation meeting on April 24. If any of you have questions before Saturday,call me at 760.408.9761. I look forward to seeing you on the 22°d. It should be an interesting experience. Gene House March 18, 2003 2 RANCHO CUCAMONGA LIBRARY AND COMMUNITY FOUNDATIONS FUND DEVELOPMENT TRAINING AND CAMPAIGN WORKSHOP SATURDAY,MARCH 22,2003 8:30 AM— 12:30 PM Meeting Facilitator/Trainer—Gene L House 1. Overview of what will be covered today and what will be covered in subsequent separate meetings of each foundation board. 2. Campaign Staffing. 3. Campaign Budget. 4. Prospective Donor Identification and Evaluation. 5. Gift Chart. 6. Discussion of why people give. 7. Tax Advantages of Giving. 8. Techniques for solicitation: 9. Role Playing "Me Ask". 10. Review/Distribution of Solicitation Information Packets. 11. Review of Draft Donor Recognition Categories. 12. Discussion of topics to cover at the next campaign meetings with each foundation. 13. Identification of other next steps. 14. Other items. 15 Adjournment. gene house 3.16.3 3 CAMPAIGN PERSONNELIVOLUNTEER LEADERSHIP RANCHO CUCAMONGA I understand there has been no decision to hire campaign staff.The thinking being that city staff can divide up and handle the tasks that need to be done,much as they have done so far, although fund development, marketing and grantsmanship consultants are already involved. Phase One of this campaign is being confined to a very short period of time to satisfy the desire that the November 1 gala be used as the Phase Two kick off event. If you hold to this plan, then it is all the more critical that appropriate staff leadership be put in place as soon as possible in order to expedite a successful Phase One. You must not go public until you have at least 25% of your goal firmly pledged. Think about it. CAMPAIGN MANAGER Duties Work effectively with library and community foundations and staffs. Overall management and knowledge of the campaign. It needs to be someone's primary job responsibility. For you I suggest 20 hrs/wk.. Provides the single focus for the campaign. Volunteers look to them for guidance and information. Liaison to city staff. Maintain progress figures and report. Coordinate volunteer meetings and agendas. Structure volunteer training and orientation. Accompany nervous volunteers on initial solicitations. Oversees work of the grant writer. Qualifications. Leadership experience in volunteer recruitment/training. Expertise in fund development. Ability to work effectively with diverse individuaWgroups/organizations. Proven track record of campaign successes. Bachelor's Degree Compensation. If an independent contractor without benefits, you might pay $60 - $75/hr. gene house 3.16.3 1 4 CAMPAIGN OFFICE MANAGER Duties. Reports to the campaign manager. Daily running of campaign office. Typing memos, keeping the minutes, logging the gifts, organizing the meetings. All clerical and support tasks necessary to manage the campaign. This could be 20 to 40 hrs/wk. Qualifications. Three years secretarial/light bookkeeping experience at a responsible level. Competence with Word,Excel, Access,etc. Knowledge of modern office equipment and practices. Highly personable with excellent phone skills. Compensation. This person might come as a package with the campaign manager. If not, I would think they would be worth approximately$17/hr plus benes, or$20/hr without. CITY STAFF City staff has plenty to do without doing the actual running of the campaign. VOLUNTEER LEADERSHIIP Campaign Chair. The Campaign Chair is someone who will make one of the very largest gifts and then serve as an active leader. This person must be seen and respected as a true community leader who will aggressively recruit other top volunteer leaders and their major gifts. It is usually best to avoid co-chairs since it tends to blur lines of responsibility. Since you have two distinct divisions of the campaign (library and theatre), one scenario would be to have a campaign chair with someone from each foundation (perhaps the foundation chairs) serving as the division chair and the members of the foundation board serving as that person's division committee. However, keep in mind that leaders who make major gifts are much more desirable than leaders who only solicit. So you might want to look outside the membership of the foundation boards for some of the volunteer leadership, if they are not going to join one of the foundation boards. gene house 3.16.3 2 5 SAMPLE CAMPAIGN BUDGET OUTLINE Campaign Director $ Office Manager $ Grant Writer It Consultants (if any) $ Brochures Letterhead/envelopes Audio/visuals Telephone Supplies Equipment Postage . Duplicating Travel Hospitality Other 6 DONOR PROSPECT'IDENTIFICATION A computerized data base of donor prospects needs to be developed, using your existing information and the new information that will be created. Next the donor prospects are evaluated or rated as to what they are capable of giving and possibly willing to give. First we look at how to build the prospect list. 1. Current donors. 2. The organizational family(community foundation members, library foundation members, library board of trustees,city council members,planning commissioners, other boards and commissions. 3. Community services, library and other city staff. 4. Those benefiting financially from the project (investors, builder;, developers, subcontractors, architects, engineers, landscapers, consultants, mall business owners.etc.) 5. Other major donor prospects known to the campaign team. 6. Extended family members such as FOTL members, Ambassadors, library volunteers, others. 7.Former organizational family members (former city council members, commission or foundation members, etc.). 8.Donor lists from other organizations. DONOR PROSPECT'EVALUATION Once a list of prospective donors has been compiled (at least a starter list of the biggest prospect), the prospects on the list need to be rated. A good way to do this is to have an evaluation committee. The committee might be made up of eight or so people who are most knowledgeable of top prospects. Members should include some top players from the organizational family and a couple of outside leaders who know big donors. The group discusses each name and decides what their collective wisdom suggests in terms of an amount to ask for. In the case, of this particular campaign, it can be decided whether there should be two separate prospective donor lists and two separate evaluation committees, depending how t he library/community foundation collaboration is structured. 7 GIFT CHART I have prepared a sample gift chart for you based on a total goal of$2 million. Goal - $2 million. Gift Gifts % of Prospects Prospects Prospects Level Required Goal Required Identified Still Needed $300,000 1. 15 4 150,000 2 30 8 100,000 2 40 8 50,000 5 52.5 20 20,000 10 62.5 40 15,000 13 72.3 52 10,000 17 80.8 68 5,000 25 87 100 2,000 50 92 200 1,000 100 97 300 Under 1,000* Many 100 Many 225 + 800+ * In this scenario, $60,000 would be needed from this group. g ROLE PLAYING EXERCISE 1.The consultant will discuss the vignettes and the bullet points with the group. 2. The board members will form groups of four in different parts of the room. Two people will serve as the solicitation team, one as the prospect, and one as the observer/recorder/reporter. _ 3. After Vignette# 1. is done and reported on. we will do Vignette#2. This time the solicitation team will trade roles with the prospect and the recorder. 4. After Vignette#2. is reported on the consultant will discuss some of the "curves"that the prospect might throw and how to overcome them.Time permitting; we will repeat one of the vignettes, but with "curves"this time. VIGNETTE# 1. An individual or couple who is known for making significant gifts to charitable causes is being called upon in their home by appointment. The prospect knows this is going to be a request for help or money for the campaign. One of the solicitors is an acquaintance of the prospect. The amount that is going to be asked for is$25,000. VIGNETTE#2. A local business leader with a corporation that is known for making significant charitable contributions is being called upon in her office by appointment.The prospect knows this is going to be a request for help or money for the campaign. One of the solicitors is an acquaintance of the prospect. The amount that is going to be asked for is $10,000. gene house 3.16.3 ' 9 SOLICITOR BULLET POINTS 1. INTRODUCE YOURSELF. 2. EXPLAIN PURPOSE OF YOUR VISIT. 3. FIND OUT WHAT THE PROSPECT ALREADY KNOWS ABOUT THE PROJECT. 4. MAKE THE CASE. 5. EXPLORE THE PROSPECT'S FUNDING INTERESTS IN THE PROJECT. 6. ASK FOR THE GIFT. 7.DEFINE THE MECHANICS OF THE GIFT. 8. PLAN ADDITIONAL CULTIVATION. 9.THANK YOU,ETC. gene house 3.16.3 2 10 PROSPECT BULLET POINTS 1. INTRODUCTIONS 2. LISTEN 3.EXPLAIN WHAT YOU KNOW ABOUT TH E PROJECT. 4. REACT AND QUESTION. How do we know that we need another library? How do we know we need a children's theatre? 5.DISCUSS FUNDING INTERESTS Talk about what you heard that might interest you. Ask questions. 6. RESPOND TO THE REQUEST I'm not sure we could give that much. 7. DISCUSS WHAT YOUR GIVING SCHEDULE OR PROCEDURE USUALLY IS. 8. RESPOND TO THE INVITATION. 9. CLOSING COMMENTS. gene house 3.16.3 3 11