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Yours for the Asking: An Indispensable Guide to Fundraising and Management

Yours for the Asking: An Indispensable Guide to Fundraising and Management

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Author: Reynold Levy
Publisher: Wiley
Category: Book

List Price: $29.95
Buy New: $19.77
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New (36) Used (10) from $16.73


Media: Hardcover
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 210
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1
Dimensions (in): 9.1 x 6.2 x 0.9

ISBN: 0470243422
Dewey Decimal Number: 658.15224
EAN: 9780470243428
ASIN: 0470243422

Publication Date: September 9, 2008
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours

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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
iYours For the Asking/i is a how-to guide for anyone with an instinct to raise funds who has fears, qualms, or hesitancies to do so. It explains in easy to understand language how to reach wealthy people face to face, in writing, in large groups, at special events, and over the Internet. And#8212;once their attention has been gained#8212;how to bring home the bacon. It solves the mystery of fundraising from foundations, those notoriously elusive entities that seem to house experts in closing doors, ignoring solicitations, and, when pressed for an answer, saying no. It also demonstrates how many ways there are to tap the resources of donors#8212;large and small#8212;for the institution that commands your respect, affect, and attention. p bAs President of Lincoln Center, Reynold Levy has led the effort to raise over one billion dollars in five years#8212;among many other notable fundraising distinctions#8212;and he is uniquely qualified to write this book./b


Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Great Book! Levy levels on how to leverage!   November 19, 2008
 1 out of 2 found this review helpful

I am a governance and leadership consultant. I train and speak to literally hundreds of trustees, CEOs, Directors, and other nonprofit professionals every year - this will be on the required reading book list!br /br /I purchased the book after hearing Reynold's keynote speech "Recession! What Recession? Raising Money in Tough Economic Times in Washington D.C. a couple of weeks ago. br /br /It was a great speech - Levy's charm, positive nature, and sense of humor won a very suspicious, cynical, and bail-out beaten nonprofit audience over. Who would have thought he could carry that keynote title off among a group of the nation's highest fundraising professionals? br /br /He was a cross between Woody Allen and Hugh Jackman with a little Sting and Coltrane thrown in.br /br /So - I bought the book. What woman wouldn't buy a book by a guy made up of Sting, Coltrane, Jackman, and Allen?br /br /I read it on the plane on the way home and have marked it, sticky noted it, and read it again. When my secretary saw it - she said, "Boy that one must be good!"br /br /I have read more than 200 titles on fund development, what I love about this one are the stories and the conversational style Levy brings to a tough topic - How to inspire regular people to ask regular people for money?br /br /Oh, and by the way, how to inspire not regular people (wealthy)to ask other not regular people (wealthy) for money is covered too. br /br /If you think having a wealthy board means they are an automatic friend-raiser - then you haven't been around enough leaders in the nonprofit sector. Many people of wealth would rather write 2 checks than ask anyone for money!br /br /I appreciated Levy's personal attention to and beliefs about the role of the Board of Trustees/Directors in a nonprofit organization's fund development strategy. It is clear he views the goal of ensuring adequate resources for the advancement of the mission as an equal partnership between the board and staff. br /br /And he has actually done it. br /br /Other books say the same - but many Executive Directors tell me the books read more like good theory than the reality they experience with their boards in many small nonprofit organizations.br /br /Many organizations at the level of Lincoln Center have small boards (7-9 or under 20) of very influential and affluent individuals. Not Levy. As you read the book it is clear he has mastered the "art" (pardon the pun) of developing a strong board network - utilizing a very large number of individual board members through careful recruitment, committee, and leadership assignments.br /br /That requires a leader who is not threatened by size and who either has a phenomenal assistant - or phenomenal time management - or both. In the book he claims he returns calls within a short time every time. I had a friend in Birmingham test him last week - he did!br /br /As I read the book I could imagine these smart committee leadership structures and Levy having a Board Chair who is like a "General" to a huge army of cultural soldier ants - - hundreds of ambassadors telling the story of the Lincoln Center and the various organizations within it - - convincing their friends, their neighbors, their vendors, probably even their kids and dogs... to do the same and so on. br /br /Reading Levy's stories, I pictured him as more of the guy next to the General (Chair of the Board )in the front of the Jeep - pointing out good paths and possible obstacles and encouraging unsure leaders and staff with a good joke and a good laugh when things get a little bumpy. Acting as supportive coach and mentor and being coached and mentored - unifying folks around common goals. A leader who has figured out how to lead up, across, and down. br /br /Levy turns ordinary people into donors, donors into heroes, and extraordinary heroes into cultural philanthropists.br /br /Levy tells stories about how he played a part in helping people help him raise funds at many organizations and his belief that giving money and how you do it and how you feel about it - - separates the drive-by donor from the passionate social capitalists - the investment minded philanthropists. br /br /Great fund development professionals should be judged not by the funds they raise -but by the number of people they raise who raise.br /br /Can they inspire others to help them raise funds on behalf of the organization? True institutional advancement.br /br /To have a guy write about how he actually got this done among a very large group of high-level volunteers is not good reading, its great reading!br /br /Allison, Birmingham.br /br /br /


5 out of 5 stars great service - quick and in mint condition   November 10, 2008
 0 out of 3 found this review helpful

This seller delivers great service! Delivery was prompt and the book was in mint condition. Thanks


5 out of 5 stars Timely advice for fundraisers   October 19, 2008
 2 out of 3 found this review helpful

There couldn't be a worst time to raise money for worthy causes and, for that reason, I can't think of a better book for anyone concerned about a non-profit's mission and financial viability. Levy has committed decades of experience into a compact and lively book that will be instructive for the professional staffs, board members and committed volunteers of almost any non-profit organization. The book balances sound practical advice with engaging and often humorous anecdotes from the author's own careers in business, philanthropy, and global public affairs. In the end, Levy demonstrates how fulfilling a professional life at the intersection of those three spheres can be.


4 out of 5 stars Don't believe the title. You won't be getting a "Guide to Fundraising and Management."   October 19, 2008
 4 out of 4 found this review helpful

br /This book was OK. Not bad, but nothing special. It was kind of two books in one, and neither was done particularly well. One book involved chapters 1-6 and 8-10. And the second book was Chapter 7. I think the first book could have been better if it had a good beginning, sound middle, and eloquent ending. But the way it was put together it felt like a mere bulletin board with notes haphazardly tacked here and there. Where was the chapter on annual giving fundraising programs? Wow, what a hole!br /br /And the second book, i.e., Chapter 7, was quite a list of topics that could have been made into a wonderful treatise. But none of these topics were developed much. And each could have been made into their own chapter.br /br /The author heads up a very impressive nonprofit organization. And he boasts that he raised over $1 billion in six years for that organization. I wish he had not made that boast because I hear way too many professional fundraisers and fundraising consultants boast about raising tremendous sums of money. The truth of the matter is that it's the organization that raises the money. The fundraiser is just the clerk that helps the organization do its thing. If you were to put the author in a rinky-dink nonprofit I can guarantee you that he wouldn't be raising $1 billion in 6, 10 or 20 years.br /br /But if you are interested in nonprofit fundraising and want to read one person's "legacy book" on his life's work, then consider getting a copy of this book. It has some good content and may be a fun read for you. However, don't expect to be getting a "Guide to Fundraising and Management" as the title suggests. 3.8 stars!br /br /PS. Take a look at the Search Insider material offered by Amazon. It includes a Table of Contents that will provide you with exactly what is covered in this book.

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