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Fundraising for Universities

Fundraising for Universities. Brussels, April 25th 2002. Agenda. University fundraising practices abroad Fundraising mechanisms Do’s and don’ts in academic fundraising Conclusion.

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Fundraising for Universities

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  1. Fundraising for Universities Brussels, April 25th 2002

  2. Agenda • University fundraising practices abroad • Fundraising mechanisms • Do’s and don’ts in academic fundraising • Conclusion

  3. The share of non-public financing in total funds of public universities in the US has increased by 10% in the nineties

  4. 50% of donations to US universities come from individuals

  5. Private contributions per student have grown at over 50% per decade

  6. About 50% of private funding is used to finance current operations

  7. The top 3 fundraising public universities in the US raise as much private money as the total budget for universities in Belgium # Students: 140000 137450

  8. Based on US benchmarks, Belgian universities could significantly enhance their private fundraising KUL ULB

  9. US fundraising is not done exclusively by private universities

  10. 10 out of the top twenty fundraising institutions are public universities = public = private

  11. Even the most prestigious European universities have significantly lower private funds than top US public schools

  12. US universities’ fundraising is facilitated through a large number of tax-optimal donation options Bequests Property gifts Gifts to universities that optimize taxes Outright, tax-deductiblegifts Charitable Lead Trust Constant income producing gift Variable income producing gift • Charitable gift annuity • Charitable remainder annuity trusts • Pooled income funds • Charitable remainder unitrusts

  13. Most universities have a well developed website to explain fiscal issues to potential donors

  14. Top fundraising and quality education are highly linked • “Wealthy” universities can ensure high quality education through: • Best professors • Best research and education facilities

  15. Therefore most universities have set up Boards of Trustees to give an answer to key quality and independence issues • How demanding can a funding company be? • Can it require a class-room to bear its name? • Can it require a university research team to work together with its employees? • Can it have any preemptive rights on the results of the research program that they have helped financing? • Can it have an influence on the university recruitment policy? • Will private funding be specifically invested in selected projects? • Under which conditions can a funding company play an advisory role for a research program?

  16. Research and education quality is guaranteed through independent control: Harvard example President and Fellows of Harvard College (“The Corporation”) • Organise Research and education • Raise funds Board of Overseers • Ensure that the University remains true to its Charter • Give formal consent to major initiatives and to appointments • Provide advice to the Corporation • Elected by alumni

  17. Agenda • University fundraising practices abroad • Fundraising mechanisms • Do’s and don’ts in academic fundraising • Conclusion

  18. External fundraising is only one source of non-public financing for universities Tuition fees External fundraising Entrepreneurial activities • Private sponsors • Alumni donations • Corporate sponsors • Foundations • Revenue from (sale of) spin-offs • Investments • Sponsored research projects

  19. Heritages Large Medium Small Alumni and other individual donations Typical amount 0-2.000 USD 2.000 - 20.000 USD 20.000 – >1M USD 0 - >20M USD Typical sources • Alumni • Parents • Anonymous • Local entrepreneurs and wealthy individuals (often alumni) • Local entrepreneurs and wealthy individuals (often alumni) • Alumni groups (“class of 76 donates USD 1 M)” • Very wealthy families with a history of charitable giving Typical approach • Online forms • Mailings • Invite potential donors to social events • Create “honor” around donation • Research and dare ask “at the right level” • Luck, but often linked to alumni status and/or university reputation • Relationships • Luck, but often linked to alumni status and/or university reputation • Provide professional assistance (eg. set up trust that provides life-long income for donor)

  20. About 5% of alumni contibute yearly • For every alumnus, approx. 50 USD is raised Average alumni donation = 1000 USD • 5% of all alumni contribute yearly

  21. European schools have much lower alumni contribution levels than US schools

  22. Corporate donations are often linked to a « tangible » return Pure welfare Image building “Tangible” return • Toyota donation of USD 1M, without strings attached • Anonymous donations • Tie company name to respected institutions/professors • “Banc of America Dean” • “KBC chair” • Exclusive access to students (eg. exclusive Pepsi sales in return for large donation) • Primary access to research results (Novartis-Berkeley donation) • Set up new research facilities to increase the number of engineers • … Typical approach • Use relationships to get access to corporate leaders • Actively approach them with a well prepared file

  23. US foundations’ most important target is education

  24. Agenda • University fundraising practices abroad • Fundraising mechanisms • Do’s and don’ts in academic fundraising • Conclusion

  25. 5 « Do’s! » in academic fundraising Invest Create structure Build/cherishrelationships Be creative Distribute equally • Invest in a good team and support • Professional fund-raising team • Alumni databases • Facilitate and clarify the giving process • Online payment • Yearly forms • “What do u get in return?” • Provide “tax” optimization advice to donors • 50% of donations come from individuals • Contact wealthy individuals • Make donors feel special, keep them informed • “Social events” for the wealthy • Try to elaborate creative solutions to best suit a possible corporate donor • Most donations go to science and business departments. Distribute them across all departments because they are important for a university (reputation) as well Exam-ples: • - • Chair: 500K-2M+ EUR • Professorship:100000+ EUR • Fellow: 0-1000 EUR • Lectures for donors • Newspaper articles • Buildings named to donors • Pictures/ plates of donors in school • 10 year “no Coke on university” in return for a USD 25M donation from Pepsi • U of T fundraiser gets a daily list of wealthy patients in the university hospital • -

  26. Investing in fundraising clearly pays off • Dartmouth: Fundraising team of 100 FTEs • For every 12c invested, 1USD is raised

  27. European fundraising teams are underdeveloped

  28. 5 « don’ts » in academic fundraising Take it for granted Interfere withacademic independence Use everythingat once Work without clear ethic rules Take any sponsor • Don’t just let donors come, approach them in all possible ways • Dare to ask for money • Fundamental research should remain primary focus • Outsiders should never influence research results • US universities typically put 1/3 of fundraising in endowments for later use (scholarships etc) • Set up a Board of Trustees to ensure proper use of funds • Avoid weapons, tobacco producers etc. because the long term reputation of the university might be at stake Exam-ples: • - • Novartis USD 25M donation to Berkeley in return for first right to negotiate licenses on discoveries was highly criticized • Harvard endowment: USD 19 B • U of Texas (Public): USD 10 B • - • -

  29. Agenda • University fundraising practices abroad • Fundraising mechanisms • Do’s and don’ts in academic fundraising • Conclusion

  30. Conclusion • Fundraising is a, necessary, reality • Fundraising exists in Europe, mostly under the Anglo-Saxon model, but is far underdeveloped • There is no relationship between lower quality of education and increasing fundraising • The foremost important fundraising source are your alumni

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