Over the weekend Tom sent me a link to an ABC News piece entitled “Secret Donor”.

Diane Sawyer sets forth an absolutely charming and moving story  about a Lake Forest College alumna named Grace Groner who died in January  at age 100 and left the college $7 million.  According to Lake Forest’s president the College never had a clue.

For fundraisers this is also a cautionary tale about over-reliance on traditional methods of screening,  just what information is available and  helpful and what is not.  Had Ms. Groner’s name passed through a traditional wealth screening process the search would have drawn a blank.

  • Because 80% of  most wealth screening depends on real estate values Ms. Groner’s modest home valued at $152, 356 (here’s her property assessment sheet)
  • And certainly there would be no SEC insider shareholder information because Ms. Groner owned 3 shares of Abbott Labs, purchased in 1935 at $60 a share.  Today worth $7 million!

But, as Tom and I have preached over and over, often mega-gifts spring from the well of loyal, year-after year giving regardless of the size of those loyal gifts.

Bingo!

I went into DonorTrends TrueGivers  database and found that indeed Ms. Groner was a loyal donor to a variety of causes in her community. Here’s a slice of the TrueGiver record that may have tipped off a fundraiser or researcher focused on alumnae with loyal giving habits.

The generosity and loyalty of Grace Groner is more than a beautiful and moving story.  It should serve as a reminder to all of us that actual giving, loyal giving, more than artificially induced ‘screening’ using massive databases of unrelated information, can help find the needles in the haystack.

Roger  

This article was posted in: charities, Don't Miss these Posts, DonorTrends, fundraising, legacy marketing, loyalty, major donors, nonprofit management, nonprofits, philanthropy, planned giving, research.
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