Job Title: Chief Advancement Officer Reports to (Title): President Department(s): Communications and Development Employment Classification: Full-Time FLSA Status: Exempt Base Annual Compensation Range: The full-time salary range for this role is between $175,000 - $263,000 with exact salary depending on experience, and new staff rarely start at the top of the range. Location: Remote
About Borealis Philanthropy
From Black-led movement-building, to queer and trans liberation, to disability justice and inclusion, community organizers are working every day to bring about transformational change. Borealis Philanthropy exists to listen to, invest in, and support them. Our staff of experts come from the communities we serve, and bring their lived experiences, values, and visions to the work of supporting community-driven change through grantee and funder collaboration.
As a philanthropic intermediary, Borealis Philanthropy builds bridges between funders and organizers by creating opportunities for impact-driven investments. We team with funders to conceive, develop, and implement grantmaking initiatives that resource the many innovative organizations within each of our respective grantmaking funds. In partnering with philanthropy, we remove barriers to funding for grassroots organizations and invest in intersectional movements, building a future that serves all of us.
Where We Are
While Borealis Philanthropy has been quite public about what we believe it takes to fund transformational change as a social justice intermediary, we know the reality that it is rare for intermediaries like ours to consistently be set up for long term success and sustainability.
As Borealis Philanthropy enters our tenth year of partnering with funders and movement leaders and organizers to build the liberatory future we believe possible, we are leaning more deeply into our theory of change , and intentionally investing in the next decade of resourcing justice movements by building an infrastructure to actualize our organizational potential.
Our Values
Alchemy + Healing, Atrevida + Audacity, Accountability + Integrity, Ubuntu + Interconnectedness
JOB OVERVIEW:
The Borealis Philanthropy Chief Advancement Officer (CAO) will be charged with overseeing the development and implementation of an organization-wide fundraising and communications strategy that is grounded in our organizational vision and values. This individual will be responsible for ensuring that the organization not only meets its revenue targets, but is actively working to bring on new donors, with priorities to:
Grow our individual donors and family foundation relationships,
Strengthen and expand our institutional philanthropy portfolio, and
Explore opportunities for corporate giving strategies.
This person will also be responsible for helping to implement strategic campaigns that amplify the work of Borealis and the intersections across our funds, collaborating with colleagues across the organization to leverage existing organizational relationships and identify new potential sources of financial support for Borealis’ funds.
A key member of Borealis’ Senior Leadership Team, the CAO will work closely with colleagues, including the President, Chief of Programs and Chief Financial Officer to facilitate the design of a comprehensive development and communications strategy for the organization that supports the cultivation, solicitation, and stewardship of both individual and institutional donors, as well as partners, grantees, and community aligned with our mission and vision. They will lead a growing team of communications and development staff in operationalizing the organization’s fundraising and communications strategy.
The CAO will play a critical role in cultivating a culture of community-centric philanthropy across the organization – among staff, the Board of Directors, and with funding partners. They will partner with the President to identify opportunities to meaningfully engage staff and Board members in fundraising and communications activity and dialogue in service of increasing awareness of the organization and gifts. They will provide comprehensive support to the President, the Senior Leadership team and the development and communications team in service of building a community of donor organizers. This includes ensuring necessary coaching and guidance is available org-wide to increase individual confidence and impact in philanthropic conversations with prospects and donors. They will build relationships with supporters that value the work of Borealis and our funds while cultivating connections across communities and amplifying movement partners.
KEY RESPONSIBILITIES:
The CAO will oversee the development and communications staffing of the following functional areas over time. To begin, priority will be given to the solidification of fundraising and communications strategy across the organization, effective operations, and the development of engagement strategies that support general operating and fund-specific fundraising.
The vision for this growing portfolio will ultimately include 15-16 staff across the Development and Communications departments. The CAO will have approximately four direct reports.
Fundraising Strategy & Operations
Partner with the President and Executive Team to define Borealis’ fundraising priorities as related to the organization’s strategic priorities.
Develop and implement a multi-year organization-wide fundraising strategy that is reflective and inclusive of diverse revenue streams – including foundations, corporations, and high net wealth individuals. As part of this strategy, set, monitor, and report on measurable goals for revenue sustainability and growth.
Work closely with the Finance team to forecast annual revenue goals, perform monthly revenue reconciliation, and manage donor reports to maintain accuracy and financial accountability.
Supervise internal systems that increase transparency and integration of data across the organization. This includes the evaluation of existing technology and tools and our new Salesforce database.
Recruit, hire, coach, and supervise a team of 5 development staff members and manage budgets related to the fundraising team.
Live and foster a culture of philanthropy that follows the principles of Community-Centric Fundraising , including that:
Fundraising must be grounded in race, equity, and social justice.
Donors are partners, and this means that we are transparent, and occasionally have difficult conversations.
Everyone (donors, staff, funders, board members, volunteers) personally benefits from engaging in the work of social justice – it’s not just charity and compassion.
Individual Major Gifts
Identify and prioritize individual major gift prospects, leveraging existing relationships and Borealis staff and Board member networks.
With Senior Philanthropic Advisor, create and manage cultivation and solicitation strategies for the most promising individual major gift prospects, partnering with Borealis leadership and/or key staff members as relevant.
Partner with the development team to build the organization’s major gifts infrastructure to bring on and steward individual and family foundation giving.
In partnership with the President and Senior Philanthropic Advisor, manage a portfolio of the organization’s highest capacity major gift donors (current and prospective).
Support and advise the President, the Board of Directors, and other senior staff on the cultivation and solicitation of major gift donors and prospects.
Foundation Relations + Corporate Giving
Collaborate with colleagues across the organization to research and identify philanthropic potential within existing organizational relationships, and to identify new prospective corporate and foundation funders, with an emphasis on major national and international foundations.
Supervise a Development Director, Associate, and Fund Directors in cultivation, solicitation, and stewardship strategies for the most promising foundation prospects.
Explore possibilities to grow the organization's corporate fundraising opportunities and the resources required to invest in building the required strategy.
In partnership with the President and key staff, manage a portfolio of the organization’s highest capacity corporate and foundation funders (current and prospective).
Communications & Marketing
Oversee the communications staff in the development and implementation of an organization-wide communications strategy that is culturally responsive and justice focused.
Integrate fundraising and communications strategy to relay the importance internally and externally of a ‘One Borealis’ funding and communications strategy.
Partner with fund leadership and communications staff to create case statements for fundraising priorities. Ensure staff and Board members have the necessary tools to communicate information consistently and effectively to external audiences.
Stay up to date on communications trends, the best ways to communicate to our audiences.
Board Management
Partner with the President in managing fundraising-related activities of the Board of Directors, including the creation of annual engagement plans for each Board member and managing additional vehicles for board engagement (i.e. development committee, etc.).
Identify opportunities to enhance Board confidence and impact in fundraising conversations.
These key responsibilities are not meant to be all-inclusive and may be subject to change at any time.
QUALIFICATIONS & SKILLS:
Bachelor’s degree and ten years of related work experience preferred.
7 years supervisory experience leading staff
A proven track record of developing and implementing values-aligned organizational development plans that include communications and fundraising strategies with clear and measurable outcomes and an ability to monitor success.
Experience soliciting and receiving 8+ figure gifts, multi-year grants and managing complex sets of grant deliverables with excellent outcomes.
Proven track record in fundraising from diverse sources, including experience applying moves management and facilitating leadership gift conversations with individual, foundation donors and/ or corporate giving.
Experience launching and managing strategic fundraising campaigns, capital campaigns, new lines of business or other strategic initiatives.
Demonstrated ability to effectively manage complex processes and projects for multiple priorities in a fast-paced environment in collaboration with others.
Demonstrated experience with and knowledge of the grant-seeking process, including grant writing, submission and reporting. A record of successful grant awards from major national and/or international foundations preferred.
Expertise in the practice and teachings of Community Centric Fundraising and Trust Based Philanthropy.
Salesforce CRM experience or similar CRM use.
Experience in a grantmaking organization is preferred.
Proven track record of leading people and processes within complex organizations, including managing teams to successfully reach and/or exceed fundraising goals.
Demonstrated success in remote and diverse work environments.
Demonstrated ability to work collaboratively, iteratively, and creatively with a diverse set of stakeholders, to co-create processes and solutions that meet the needs of the organization as well as donors and funders.
Excellent interpersonal communication skills, energy, and enthusiasm with the ability to build long-term relationships and represent the organization to external audiences.
Outstanding verbal and written communications skills, including the ability to write and present fundraising materials to a diverse set of audiences.
Ability to engage and support leadership with their efforts in fundraising, consultation, and advocacy.
Demonstrated flexibility, self-awareness, professional integrity, and cultural competence – including commitment to Borealis’ values, and diversity, equity, and inclusion.
ESSENTIAL PHYSICAL REQUIREMENTS:
Ability to travel independently to attend meetings.
Ability to converse verbally and in writing with donors, prospects, and other business partners.
Ability to maintain a full-time position with some extended hours required to travel and attend donor events.
Commitment to Disability, Diversity, Equity & Inclusion
Borealis is committed to the full inclusion of all qualified individuals. As part of this commitment, we will ensure that persons with disabilities are provided reasonable accommodations. If reasonable accommodation is needed to participate in the job application or interview process, please contact hr@borealisphilanthropy.org. Borealis is an equal opportunity employer and does not discriminate on the basis of race, sex, religion, national origin, gender identity or expression, sexual orientation, disability, age, or any other category protected by local, state, or federal laws. We are committed to building a diverse, equitable, and inclusive staff team. We strongly encourage applicants who are people of color, LGBTQ, women, trans and gender non-conforming people, people with disabilities, and/or formerly incarcerated people.
Application Instructions:
Whitney Herrington and McKenzie Midock of Ascend People are supporting this search. Please apply through the below link. Applications should include a resume and cover letter, as well as the required information as described in the application link. Priority will be given to applications submitted by April 19, 2024, though applications will be reviewed on an ongoing basis until the position is filled.
Full Time
Job Title: Chief Advancement Officer Reports to (Title): President Department(s): Communications and Development Employment Classification: Full-Time FLSA Status: Exempt Base Annual Compensation Range: The full-time salary range for this role is between $175,000 - $263,000 with exact salary depending on experience, and new staff rarely start at the top of the range. Location: Remote
About Borealis Philanthropy
From Black-led movement-building, to queer and trans liberation, to disability justice and inclusion, community organizers are working every day to bring about transformational change. Borealis Philanthropy exists to listen to, invest in, and support them. Our staff of experts come from the communities we serve, and bring their lived experiences, values, and visions to the work of supporting community-driven change through grantee and funder collaboration.
As a philanthropic intermediary, Borealis Philanthropy builds bridges between funders and organizers by creating opportunities for impact-driven investments. We team with funders to conceive, develop, and implement grantmaking initiatives that resource the many innovative organizations within each of our respective grantmaking funds. In partnering with philanthropy, we remove barriers to funding for grassroots organizations and invest in intersectional movements, building a future that serves all of us.
Where We Are
While Borealis Philanthropy has been quite public about what we believe it takes to fund transformational change as a social justice intermediary, we know the reality that it is rare for intermediaries like ours to consistently be set up for long term success and sustainability.
As Borealis Philanthropy enters our tenth year of partnering with funders and movement leaders and organizers to build the liberatory future we believe possible, we are leaning more deeply into our theory of change , and intentionally investing in the next decade of resourcing justice movements by building an infrastructure to actualize our organizational potential.
Our Values
Alchemy + Healing, Atrevida + Audacity, Accountability + Integrity, Ubuntu + Interconnectedness
JOB OVERVIEW:
The Borealis Philanthropy Chief Advancement Officer (CAO) will be charged with overseeing the development and implementation of an organization-wide fundraising and communications strategy that is grounded in our organizational vision and values. This individual will be responsible for ensuring that the organization not only meets its revenue targets, but is actively working to bring on new donors, with priorities to:
Grow our individual donors and family foundation relationships,
Strengthen and expand our institutional philanthropy portfolio, and
Explore opportunities for corporate giving strategies.
This person will also be responsible for helping to implement strategic campaigns that amplify the work of Borealis and the intersections across our funds, collaborating with colleagues across the organization to leverage existing organizational relationships and identify new potential sources of financial support for Borealis’ funds.
A key member of Borealis’ Senior Leadership Team, the CAO will work closely with colleagues, including the President, Chief of Programs and Chief Financial Officer to facilitate the design of a comprehensive development and communications strategy for the organization that supports the cultivation, solicitation, and stewardship of both individual and institutional donors, as well as partners, grantees, and community aligned with our mission and vision. They will lead a growing team of communications and development staff in operationalizing the organization’s fundraising and communications strategy.
The CAO will play a critical role in cultivating a culture of community-centric philanthropy across the organization – among staff, the Board of Directors, and with funding partners. They will partner with the President to identify opportunities to meaningfully engage staff and Board members in fundraising and communications activity and dialogue in service of increasing awareness of the organization and gifts. They will provide comprehensive support to the President, the Senior Leadership team and the development and communications team in service of building a community of donor organizers. This includes ensuring necessary coaching and guidance is available org-wide to increase individual confidence and impact in philanthropic conversations with prospects and donors. They will build relationships with supporters that value the work of Borealis and our funds while cultivating connections across communities and amplifying movement partners.
KEY RESPONSIBILITIES:
The CAO will oversee the development and communications staffing of the following functional areas over time. To begin, priority will be given to the solidification of fundraising and communications strategy across the organization, effective operations, and the development of engagement strategies that support general operating and fund-specific fundraising.
The vision for this growing portfolio will ultimately include 15-16 staff across the Development and Communications departments. The CAO will have approximately four direct reports.
Fundraising Strategy & Operations
Partner with the President and Executive Team to define Borealis’ fundraising priorities as related to the organization’s strategic priorities.
Develop and implement a multi-year organization-wide fundraising strategy that is reflective and inclusive of diverse revenue streams – including foundations, corporations, and high net wealth individuals. As part of this strategy, set, monitor, and report on measurable goals for revenue sustainability and growth.
Work closely with the Finance team to forecast annual revenue goals, perform monthly revenue reconciliation, and manage donor reports to maintain accuracy and financial accountability.
Supervise internal systems that increase transparency and integration of data across the organization. This includes the evaluation of existing technology and tools and our new Salesforce database.
Recruit, hire, coach, and supervise a team of 5 development staff members and manage budgets related to the fundraising team.
Live and foster a culture of philanthropy that follows the principles of Community-Centric Fundraising , including that:
Fundraising must be grounded in race, equity, and social justice.
Donors are partners, and this means that we are transparent, and occasionally have difficult conversations.
Everyone (donors, staff, funders, board members, volunteers) personally benefits from engaging in the work of social justice – it’s not just charity and compassion.
Individual Major Gifts
Identify and prioritize individual major gift prospects, leveraging existing relationships and Borealis staff and Board member networks.
With Senior Philanthropic Advisor, create and manage cultivation and solicitation strategies for the most promising individual major gift prospects, partnering with Borealis leadership and/or key staff members as relevant.
Partner with the development team to build the organization’s major gifts infrastructure to bring on and steward individual and family foundation giving.
In partnership with the President and Senior Philanthropic Advisor, manage a portfolio of the organization’s highest capacity major gift donors (current and prospective).
Support and advise the President, the Board of Directors, and other senior staff on the cultivation and solicitation of major gift donors and prospects.
Foundation Relations + Corporate Giving
Collaborate with colleagues across the organization to research and identify philanthropic potential within existing organizational relationships, and to identify new prospective corporate and foundation funders, with an emphasis on major national and international foundations.
Supervise a Development Director, Associate, and Fund Directors in cultivation, solicitation, and stewardship strategies for the most promising foundation prospects.
Explore possibilities to grow the organization's corporate fundraising opportunities and the resources required to invest in building the required strategy.
In partnership with the President and key staff, manage a portfolio of the organization’s highest capacity corporate and foundation funders (current and prospective).
Communications & Marketing
Oversee the communications staff in the development and implementation of an organization-wide communications strategy that is culturally responsive and justice focused.
Integrate fundraising and communications strategy to relay the importance internally and externally of a ‘One Borealis’ funding and communications strategy.
Partner with fund leadership and communications staff to create case statements for fundraising priorities. Ensure staff and Board members have the necessary tools to communicate information consistently and effectively to external audiences.
Stay up to date on communications trends, the best ways to communicate to our audiences.
Board Management
Partner with the President in managing fundraising-related activities of the Board of Directors, including the creation of annual engagement plans for each Board member and managing additional vehicles for board engagement (i.e. development committee, etc.).
Identify opportunities to enhance Board confidence and impact in fundraising conversations.
These key responsibilities are not meant to be all-inclusive and may be subject to change at any time.
QUALIFICATIONS & SKILLS:
Bachelor’s degree and ten years of related work experience preferred.
7 years supervisory experience leading staff
A proven track record of developing and implementing values-aligned organizational development plans that include communications and fundraising strategies with clear and measurable outcomes and an ability to monitor success.
Experience soliciting and receiving 8+ figure gifts, multi-year grants and managing complex sets of grant deliverables with excellent outcomes.
Proven track record in fundraising from diverse sources, including experience applying moves management and facilitating leadership gift conversations with individual, foundation donors and/ or corporate giving.
Experience launching and managing strategic fundraising campaigns, capital campaigns, new lines of business or other strategic initiatives.
Demonstrated ability to effectively manage complex processes and projects for multiple priorities in a fast-paced environment in collaboration with others.
Demonstrated experience with and knowledge of the grant-seeking process, including grant writing, submission and reporting. A record of successful grant awards from major national and/or international foundations preferred.
Expertise in the practice and teachings of Community Centric Fundraising and Trust Based Philanthropy.
Salesforce CRM experience or similar CRM use.
Experience in a grantmaking organization is preferred.
Proven track record of leading people and processes within complex organizations, including managing teams to successfully reach and/or exceed fundraising goals.
Demonstrated success in remote and diverse work environments.
Demonstrated ability to work collaboratively, iteratively, and creatively with a diverse set of stakeholders, to co-create processes and solutions that meet the needs of the organization as well as donors and funders.
Excellent interpersonal communication skills, energy, and enthusiasm with the ability to build long-term relationships and represent the organization to external audiences.
Outstanding verbal and written communications skills, including the ability to write and present fundraising materials to a diverse set of audiences.
Ability to engage and support leadership with their efforts in fundraising, consultation, and advocacy.
Demonstrated flexibility, self-awareness, professional integrity, and cultural competence – including commitment to Borealis’ values, and diversity, equity, and inclusion.
ESSENTIAL PHYSICAL REQUIREMENTS:
Ability to travel independently to attend meetings.
Ability to converse verbally and in writing with donors, prospects, and other business partners.
Ability to maintain a full-time position with some extended hours required to travel and attend donor events.
Commitment to Disability, Diversity, Equity & Inclusion
Borealis is committed to the full inclusion of all qualified individuals. As part of this commitment, we will ensure that persons with disabilities are provided reasonable accommodations. If reasonable accommodation is needed to participate in the job application or interview process, please contact hr@borealisphilanthropy.org. Borealis is an equal opportunity employer and does not discriminate on the basis of race, sex, religion, national origin, gender identity or expression, sexual orientation, disability, age, or any other category protected by local, state, or federal laws. We are committed to building a diverse, equitable, and inclusive staff team. We strongly encourage applicants who are people of color, LGBTQ, women, trans and gender non-conforming people, people with disabilities, and/or formerly incarcerated people.
Application Instructions:
Whitney Herrington and McKenzie Midock of Ascend People are supporting this search. Please apply through the below link. Applications should include a resume and cover letter, as well as the required information as described in the application link. Priority will be given to applications submitted by April 19, 2024, though applications will be reviewed on an ongoing basis until the position is filled.
Mind Share Partners (MSP) is a national nonprofit that is changing the culture of workplace mental health so that both employees and organizations can thrive. It does this for two reasons: to normalize what it looks like to have a mental health challenge at work--which is everyone at some point in their lives--and to address the workplace factors that can cause poor mental health for all employees/workers. MSP believes that if workplaces commit to reducing stigma, supporting their employees with mental health challenges, and addressing related workplace factors, they can drastically improve individual lives, company cultures, and workplace productivity.
MSP has been at the start of a growing movement to support mentally healthy workplaces and is poised to grow its impact with offerings that meet the increasingly complex needs of employers with customized workplace training, strategic advising, and implementation as well as its advocacy work. Over 50% of MSP’s revenue is from client services earned income, with the remainder from a range of philanthropic sources. As one of the only nonprofits exclusively focused on workplace mental health in an increasingly competitive space, MSP brings a unique mission and value proposition to this important work as both a trusted service provider and a movement builder. In close concert with the Board of Directors and the team, the CEO will guide the development of a newly refreshed vision to drive revenue growth and increased impact.
The next CEO will be an authentic storyteller, entrepreneurial visionary, exceptional fundraiser, and sales strategist who will drive the co-creation of MSP’s next iteration of a vision and strategic plan. They will demonstrate the ability to set clear priorities and goals, formulate and execute new revenue generation strategies, and stay agile to pivot in response to external conditions and impact data. The CEO will bring a nuanced, asset-based understanding of mental health as a spectrum, including an understanding of the intersectionality with DEIBJ concepts and the experiences of people with marginalized identities. They will be able to speak personally and openly about their own mental health experience and inspire others to support the organization and the movement. They will bring exceptional communications skills, sales and fundraising expertise, team management and leadership, and an entrepreneurial mindset to the work of elevating MSP’s mission and nurturing connectivity and culture among the team and stakeholders.
HISTORY AND VALUES
Mind Share Partners grew out of the idea that both employees and organizations should and could thrive in working relationships. Founder Kelly Greenwood knew that mental health is integral to the future of work as well as to diversity, equity, and inclusion. Old systems, practices, and styles that were negatively impacting employee mental health needed to be reevaluated in an effort to improve the future of work and DEIBJ in our country. Since 2020, workplace mental health has moved from a nice-to-have to a must-have, but few workplaces know how to execute well in this area. The pandemic’s lasting effects, racial reckoning, the political divide, and other factors created an unprecedented awareness of the mental health challenges and has normalized the conversation. MSP seeks to eliminate stigma and create more mentally healthy workplaces. MSP tripled its impact during 2020 and is seeking significant growth this year and beyond.
OPPORTUNITIES AND EXPECTATIONS FOR THE CEO
The CEO will be a seasoned executive leader (10+ years in a senior leadership role) who can passionately and authentically speak to current challenges in workplace mental health, the demands that C-Suite leadership and employees are facing to create and sustain supportive environments, and advocate for practical solutions. In collaboration with the Board and team, the CEO will create a 3–5-year strategic plan to grow and position MSP in an increasingly competitive client services landscape of well-resourced for-profit market players. Essential to success will be: (1) networks and relationships to drive business opportunity in client services and with new major donors, (2) examination and evolution of the client services portfolio to drive growth and maximize earned revenue, and (3) capacity and skill to drive thought leadership, movement building, and communications activities to support strategic growth and impact.
Revenue Generation: Fundraising & Sales The CEO will demonstrate skill in fundraising and resource development, including securing major gifts from high-net-worth individuals, foundation grants, corporate sponsorships, and the like to fuel growth. A core responsibility of the CEO will also be to drive sales and effective market positioning for the client services work. In addition to bringing networks and relationships for potential new work, they will build on a unique mission identity as a nonprofit and support development of new offerings that meet the moment for companies looking for tailored, flexible tools and strategies to measurably improve workplace mental health.
Movement Building The CEO will be an impactful spokesperson who can speak personally to the importance of mentally healthy workplaces across a range of external stakeholders including historically underrepresented communities, cross-sector thought leaders, advocates, and other strategic partners and influencers such as national press/media, nonprofits, companies, and coalitions – to share and build support for MSP’s vision and mission. In close partnership with the marketing and communications team the CEO will support strategic communications and movement building activities including building a social media presence focused on workplace mental health that will engage and grow an audience of followers, bylined articles, and other published contributions.
People Management & Culture Development MSP’s passionate team is the heart of the organization. Throughout the COVID pandemic, racial reckoning, national and global challenges, and internal organizational change, the team has tirelessly pushed to think differently about the changing and increased needs of MSP and its offerings. Aligned with MSP’s mission and vision, the CEO will build and nurture honest, authentic, and accountable relationships. They will embody and actualize an organization-wide commitment to listening to, working with, and learning from internal and external partners. The CEO will be a people-centered leader and strong manager with experience in hiring, coaching, and resourcing managers in a values-driven environment as well as implementing effective performance management practices to facilitate the team’s growth and success.
The CEO will support the development and growth of the team and a healthy organizational culture. Specifically, continued development and measurable progress on DEIBJ integration is critical, such that both MSP’s culture and its programmatic work reflects the organization’s collective understanding of intersectionality and centers the experiences and needs of people with marginalized identities. They will work to foster a culture that values equity, transparency, trust, clear communication, and collaboration across MSP while maintaining a healthy, flexible, and caring culture.
Financial Management & Stewardship In partnership with the senior leadership team, the CEO will lead and nurture a deeply committed team of 14 and bring strong business and financial acumen to manage an operating budget of $2 million and will advance effective business operations. This includes aligning growth with mission, planning for sustainability, and advancing internal policies and practices that reflect the organization’s core values.
Board Relations & Governance The CEO will partner with the Board to ensure transparency and accountability in organizational governance, financial health, and compliance, and identify current and future leadership needs. The CEO will also leverage the experience, relationships, and wisdom of the board to mobilize and motivate champions for the movement.
DESIRED EXPERIENCE AND QUALIFICATIONS
While no one candidate will embody all the qualifications enumerated below, the ideal candidate will possess many of the following professional and personal abilities, attributes, and experiences:
Personal Connection to Mental Health
A personal mental health story that can be told from the “I-voice”/personal lived experience (rather than from a friend or family perspective) and made broadly relevant and engaging, as well as shared in an authentic and vulnerable way.
Understanding of mental health as a broad spectrum of experiences in a strengths-based frame, both inextricable and intersectional to personal identity and lived experiences. Demonstrated depth of understanding of relevant fields and spaces, such as workplace mental health, human resources, learning and development, and diversity, equity, inclusion, belonging, and justice (DEIBJ).
Revenue Generator
Experience and orientation toward other types of revenue generation. Background in client services, sales, and/or earned income revenue strategies, including market positioning, services business development, and connecting with senior leaders around MSP’s unique value proposition.
Strategic fundraising orientation to effectively nurture, build, and sustain relationships with mission aligned donors as well as experience raising significant investments from public and private sources, including high net worth individuals, companies, corporate sponsorships, and foundations.
Inspiring Thought Leader
Experience with thought leadership, advocacy, and external relations via writing and speaking, building strategic partnerships, and establishing effective messaging and organizational voice.
Powerful communicator in writing, one on one, in small group settings, and with large audiences. Ability to authentically share the mission of MSP that draws in others. A natural brand-builder, connector, and networker to help expand the MSP network and motivate others. Models humility, vulnerability (especially around mental health) and authenticity.
Strategist and Scaler
Entrepreneurial and audacious spirit with demonstrated organizational, financial, and operational management expertise of a similarly sized or larger organization. Experience with scaling organizations is highly desirable.
Proven experience developing strategic plans, operationalizing effective planning processes, and implementing action steps that align programs and resources with mission and values.
Capacity to take multiple pieces of data, identify trends, risks and opportunities and make strategic recommendations for a path forward.
Team Culture Builder
Collaborative and compassionate leadership mindset, an openness to shared leadership with the Board and team, as well as an effective internal management style with both individuals and teams that breaks down silos and fosters mutual learning and cross team collaboration. A record of bringing a holistic lens to leadership regarding race, socioeconomic status, gender, sexuality, religion, nationality, and other identities impacted by equity barriers.
Strong relationship-building skills and a genuine interest in listening to and learning from others. Ability to establish trust, engage partners, as well as act with intentionality and accountability.
Empathy, emotional intelligence, and expertise in change management to guide and further cultivate a values-centered, positive, supportive, and transparent work environment.
The Basics
Ability and willingness to travel as needed for MSP meetings, fundraising events, conferences, and speaking engagements.
Combination of educational, professional, and lived experience aligned with MSP’s mission and values.
This full-time, exempt role can be based anywhere in the United States; MSP has a nationally distributed and fully remote team.
COMPENSATION, BENEFITS, AND LOCATION
MSP seeks to live its vision of a mentally healthy and inclusive workplace and below are just some examples of what that looks like in practice:
PTO (Paid Time Off) : Four weeks of PTO and 12 paid holidays plus an office shutdown the week prior to New Year’s—more importantly, MSP encourages team members to completely sign off from work when they are on vacation and at the end of their workdays.
Flexibility : MSP has always been a nationally distributed team that puts employees first with flexible work practices. Team members connect often and convene in person for two in-person retreats each year and when necessary.
Benefits : MSP has strong medical (including mental health), dental, and vision benefits, life insurance, a 401k with 2% matching, professional development funds, and a stipend to set up a home office.
Culture : The MSP team is made up of good humans who strive for excellence with balance—they recognize the whole person at work.
The location of this role is flexible within the United States as it is a remote position. The salary for this role will be $220,000.
TO APPLY
More information about Mind Share Partners may be found at: www.mindsharepartners.org
This search is being led with support from the national executive search firm NPAG . We invite interested candidates to submit a cover letter that includes: (1) what draws you personally to care about the mission of Mind Share Partners, and (2) a brief outline of your qualifications and relevant professional and lived experiences, along with a resume or CV via NPAG’s website .
Mind Share Partners’ Hiring Values We look at the whole picture : We recognize that neither job descriptions nor people are perfect. If you think you can be successful in this role but don’t meet every listed qualification, we encourage you to apply—we’d love to get to know you and see what you have to offer. We look for “culture adds” not “culture fits.” We want people who push our thinking and who bring a unique perspective to our work.
We seek to build an inclusive team : Mental health is a new frontier of DEIBJ and an intersectional issue that affects groups differently. At Mind Share Partners, we seek to reflect this in our team. We are an equal opportunity employer deeply committed to building an inclusive team with diverse perspectives and experiences from a range of backgrounds and cultures. We actively seek out identities, experiences, and perspectives that we don’t have represented on our team and do not discriminate based on race, religion, color, national origin, gender identity, sexual orientation, age, marital status, veteran status, or disability. We strongly encourage people from underrepresented communities within the workplace mental health space to apply.
Full Time
Mind Share Partners (MSP) is a national nonprofit that is changing the culture of workplace mental health so that both employees and organizations can thrive. It does this for two reasons: to normalize what it looks like to have a mental health challenge at work--which is everyone at some point in their lives--and to address the workplace factors that can cause poor mental health for all employees/workers. MSP believes that if workplaces commit to reducing stigma, supporting their employees with mental health challenges, and addressing related workplace factors, they can drastically improve individual lives, company cultures, and workplace productivity.
MSP has been at the start of a growing movement to support mentally healthy workplaces and is poised to grow its impact with offerings that meet the increasingly complex needs of employers with customized workplace training, strategic advising, and implementation as well as its advocacy work. Over 50% of MSP’s revenue is from client services earned income, with the remainder from a range of philanthropic sources. As one of the only nonprofits exclusively focused on workplace mental health in an increasingly competitive space, MSP brings a unique mission and value proposition to this important work as both a trusted service provider and a movement builder. In close concert with the Board of Directors and the team, the CEO will guide the development of a newly refreshed vision to drive revenue growth and increased impact.
The next CEO will be an authentic storyteller, entrepreneurial visionary, exceptional fundraiser, and sales strategist who will drive the co-creation of MSP’s next iteration of a vision and strategic plan. They will demonstrate the ability to set clear priorities and goals, formulate and execute new revenue generation strategies, and stay agile to pivot in response to external conditions and impact data. The CEO will bring a nuanced, asset-based understanding of mental health as a spectrum, including an understanding of the intersectionality with DEIBJ concepts and the experiences of people with marginalized identities. They will be able to speak personally and openly about their own mental health experience and inspire others to support the organization and the movement. They will bring exceptional communications skills, sales and fundraising expertise, team management and leadership, and an entrepreneurial mindset to the work of elevating MSP’s mission and nurturing connectivity and culture among the team and stakeholders.
HISTORY AND VALUES
Mind Share Partners grew out of the idea that both employees and organizations should and could thrive in working relationships. Founder Kelly Greenwood knew that mental health is integral to the future of work as well as to diversity, equity, and inclusion. Old systems, practices, and styles that were negatively impacting employee mental health needed to be reevaluated in an effort to improve the future of work and DEIBJ in our country. Since 2020, workplace mental health has moved from a nice-to-have to a must-have, but few workplaces know how to execute well in this area. The pandemic’s lasting effects, racial reckoning, the political divide, and other factors created an unprecedented awareness of the mental health challenges and has normalized the conversation. MSP seeks to eliminate stigma and create more mentally healthy workplaces. MSP tripled its impact during 2020 and is seeking significant growth this year and beyond.
OPPORTUNITIES AND EXPECTATIONS FOR THE CEO
The CEO will be a seasoned executive leader (10+ years in a senior leadership role) who can passionately and authentically speak to current challenges in workplace mental health, the demands that C-Suite leadership and employees are facing to create and sustain supportive environments, and advocate for practical solutions. In collaboration with the Board and team, the CEO will create a 3–5-year strategic plan to grow and position MSP in an increasingly competitive client services landscape of well-resourced for-profit market players. Essential to success will be: (1) networks and relationships to drive business opportunity in client services and with new major donors, (2) examination and evolution of the client services portfolio to drive growth and maximize earned revenue, and (3) capacity and skill to drive thought leadership, movement building, and communications activities to support strategic growth and impact.
Revenue Generation: Fundraising & Sales The CEO will demonstrate skill in fundraising and resource development, including securing major gifts from high-net-worth individuals, foundation grants, corporate sponsorships, and the like to fuel growth. A core responsibility of the CEO will also be to drive sales and effective market positioning for the client services work. In addition to bringing networks and relationships for potential new work, they will build on a unique mission identity as a nonprofit and support development of new offerings that meet the moment for companies looking for tailored, flexible tools and strategies to measurably improve workplace mental health.
Movement Building The CEO will be an impactful spokesperson who can speak personally to the importance of mentally healthy workplaces across a range of external stakeholders including historically underrepresented communities, cross-sector thought leaders, advocates, and other strategic partners and influencers such as national press/media, nonprofits, companies, and coalitions – to share and build support for MSP’s vision and mission. In close partnership with the marketing and communications team the CEO will support strategic communications and movement building activities including building a social media presence focused on workplace mental health that will engage and grow an audience of followers, bylined articles, and other published contributions.
People Management & Culture Development MSP’s passionate team is the heart of the organization. Throughout the COVID pandemic, racial reckoning, national and global challenges, and internal organizational change, the team has tirelessly pushed to think differently about the changing and increased needs of MSP and its offerings. Aligned with MSP’s mission and vision, the CEO will build and nurture honest, authentic, and accountable relationships. They will embody and actualize an organization-wide commitment to listening to, working with, and learning from internal and external partners. The CEO will be a people-centered leader and strong manager with experience in hiring, coaching, and resourcing managers in a values-driven environment as well as implementing effective performance management practices to facilitate the team’s growth and success.
The CEO will support the development and growth of the team and a healthy organizational culture. Specifically, continued development and measurable progress on DEIBJ integration is critical, such that both MSP’s culture and its programmatic work reflects the organization’s collective understanding of intersectionality and centers the experiences and needs of people with marginalized identities. They will work to foster a culture that values equity, transparency, trust, clear communication, and collaboration across MSP while maintaining a healthy, flexible, and caring culture.
Financial Management & Stewardship In partnership with the senior leadership team, the CEO will lead and nurture a deeply committed team of 14 and bring strong business and financial acumen to manage an operating budget of $2 million and will advance effective business operations. This includes aligning growth with mission, planning for sustainability, and advancing internal policies and practices that reflect the organization’s core values.
Board Relations & Governance The CEO will partner with the Board to ensure transparency and accountability in organizational governance, financial health, and compliance, and identify current and future leadership needs. The CEO will also leverage the experience, relationships, and wisdom of the board to mobilize and motivate champions for the movement.
DESIRED EXPERIENCE AND QUALIFICATIONS
While no one candidate will embody all the qualifications enumerated below, the ideal candidate will possess many of the following professional and personal abilities, attributes, and experiences:
Personal Connection to Mental Health
A personal mental health story that can be told from the “I-voice”/personal lived experience (rather than from a friend or family perspective) and made broadly relevant and engaging, as well as shared in an authentic and vulnerable way.
Understanding of mental health as a broad spectrum of experiences in a strengths-based frame, both inextricable and intersectional to personal identity and lived experiences. Demonstrated depth of understanding of relevant fields and spaces, such as workplace mental health, human resources, learning and development, and diversity, equity, inclusion, belonging, and justice (DEIBJ).
Revenue Generator
Experience and orientation toward other types of revenue generation. Background in client services, sales, and/or earned income revenue strategies, including market positioning, services business development, and connecting with senior leaders around MSP’s unique value proposition.
Strategic fundraising orientation to effectively nurture, build, and sustain relationships with mission aligned donors as well as experience raising significant investments from public and private sources, including high net worth individuals, companies, corporate sponsorships, and foundations.
Inspiring Thought Leader
Experience with thought leadership, advocacy, and external relations via writing and speaking, building strategic partnerships, and establishing effective messaging and organizational voice.
Powerful communicator in writing, one on one, in small group settings, and with large audiences. Ability to authentically share the mission of MSP that draws in others. A natural brand-builder, connector, and networker to help expand the MSP network and motivate others. Models humility, vulnerability (especially around mental health) and authenticity.
Strategist and Scaler
Entrepreneurial and audacious spirit with demonstrated organizational, financial, and operational management expertise of a similarly sized or larger organization. Experience with scaling organizations is highly desirable.
Proven experience developing strategic plans, operationalizing effective planning processes, and implementing action steps that align programs and resources with mission and values.
Capacity to take multiple pieces of data, identify trends, risks and opportunities and make strategic recommendations for a path forward.
Team Culture Builder
Collaborative and compassionate leadership mindset, an openness to shared leadership with the Board and team, as well as an effective internal management style with both individuals and teams that breaks down silos and fosters mutual learning and cross team collaboration. A record of bringing a holistic lens to leadership regarding race, socioeconomic status, gender, sexuality, religion, nationality, and other identities impacted by equity barriers.
Strong relationship-building skills and a genuine interest in listening to and learning from others. Ability to establish trust, engage partners, as well as act with intentionality and accountability.
Empathy, emotional intelligence, and expertise in change management to guide and further cultivate a values-centered, positive, supportive, and transparent work environment.
The Basics
Ability and willingness to travel as needed for MSP meetings, fundraising events, conferences, and speaking engagements.
Combination of educational, professional, and lived experience aligned with MSP’s mission and values.
This full-time, exempt role can be based anywhere in the United States; MSP has a nationally distributed and fully remote team.
COMPENSATION, BENEFITS, AND LOCATION
MSP seeks to live its vision of a mentally healthy and inclusive workplace and below are just some examples of what that looks like in practice:
PTO (Paid Time Off) : Four weeks of PTO and 12 paid holidays plus an office shutdown the week prior to New Year’s—more importantly, MSP encourages team members to completely sign off from work when they are on vacation and at the end of their workdays.
Flexibility : MSP has always been a nationally distributed team that puts employees first with flexible work practices. Team members connect often and convene in person for two in-person retreats each year and when necessary.
Benefits : MSP has strong medical (including mental health), dental, and vision benefits, life insurance, a 401k with 2% matching, professional development funds, and a stipend to set up a home office.
Culture : The MSP team is made up of good humans who strive for excellence with balance—they recognize the whole person at work.
The location of this role is flexible within the United States as it is a remote position. The salary for this role will be $220,000.
TO APPLY
More information about Mind Share Partners may be found at: www.mindsharepartners.org
This search is being led with support from the national executive search firm NPAG . We invite interested candidates to submit a cover letter that includes: (1) what draws you personally to care about the mission of Mind Share Partners, and (2) a brief outline of your qualifications and relevant professional and lived experiences, along with a resume or CV via NPAG’s website .
Mind Share Partners’ Hiring Values We look at the whole picture : We recognize that neither job descriptions nor people are perfect. If you think you can be successful in this role but don’t meet every listed qualification, we encourage you to apply—we’d love to get to know you and see what you have to offer. We look for “culture adds” not “culture fits.” We want people who push our thinking and who bring a unique perspective to our work.
We seek to build an inclusive team : Mental health is a new frontier of DEIBJ and an intersectional issue that affects groups differently. At Mind Share Partners, we seek to reflect this in our team. We are an equal opportunity employer deeply committed to building an inclusive team with diverse perspectives and experiences from a range of backgrounds and cultures. We actively seek out identities, experiences, and perspectives that we don’t have represented on our team and do not discriminate based on race, religion, color, national origin, gender identity, sexual orientation, age, marital status, veteran status, or disability. We strongly encourage people from underrepresented communities within the workplace mental health space to apply.
Tri States Public Radio Development Director
Category:
Administrative, Professional & Staff Positions
Department: WIUM RADIO
Locations: Macomb, IL
Posted: Mar 11, 2024
Closes: Open Until Filled
Type: FT - Continuous
About Western Illinois University:
Recognized as a "Best Midwestern College" by the Princeton Review. Western Illinois University, accredited by the Higher Learning Commission, serves nearly 7,600 students at its traditional, residential four-year campus in Macomb, IL and its metropolitan, non-residential branch campus in Moline, IL.
Job Description:
APPOINTMENT: May 1, 2024
RESPONSIBILITIES: The Development Director will report to the TSPR General Manager. Provides overall leadership for the station's fundraising program, develops corporate and individual support for TSPR; sets annual fundraising goals and meets those goals, solicits program underwriting and other corporate support, plan and direct individual giving, including semi-annual fundraising drives, planned gifts and capital campaigns. Development Director will also promote TSPR programs and activities and plan and execute fundraising/outreach events, coordinates production of external communication to listeners and members, writes press releases, feature articles, ads and on-air promos. Development Director is responsible for donor stewardship and appreciation.
RANK & SALARY: Salary Competitive. Western Illinois University offers a competitive benefits package including domestic partner benefits. For full benefit information visit: http://www.wiu.edu/vpas/human_resources/benefits/.
Requirements:
REQUIRED QUALIFICATIONS:
• Bachelor's Degree required • Demonstrated success in non-profit fundraising • Exceptionally strong oral and written communication skills • An understanding of and belief in the mission of public broadcasting • A passion for relationship building • The ability to coordinate with and motivate staff to reach fundraising goals • Willingness to explore and develop digital communication with donors and potential donors • Extensive regional travel is necessary, valid driver's license is required • The ability to keep abreast of the latest trends in public media fundraising and industry • Evening and weekend work is required • Demonstrated organizational and time management skills, including department planning and goal setting • Computer proficiency applicable to the position is required
PREFERRED QUALIFICATIONS:
• Experience using donor databases and prospect management software. • Previous public media fundraising experience • Knowledge and skills pertaining to gift planning, mid and major donor-giving programs • Marketing or outside sales experience, including copywriting experience
For a degree to be considered, it must be conferred from a regionally accredited degree-granting institution of higher education (or equivalent from an international accrediting body). Unless otherwise stated, the degree must be conferred at the time of appointment.
Additional Information:
THE DEPARTMENT: Tri States Public Radio is an outreach service of the College of Fine Arts and Communication at Western Illinois University. TSPR provides information and entertainment of the highest possible caliber to enrich and engage the public, enhance quality of life, and meet the diverse needs of people in west central Illinois, southeast Iowa and northeast Missouri. Tri States Public Radio endorses and is guided by the Public Media Code of Integrity. Tri States Public Radio is the region's voice for award-winning National Public Radio news and locally produced programming. Listeners enjoy classical music, as well as the uniquely American sounds of jazz and folk music. TSPR is the area's premier public radio service, catering to a growing group of discriminating listeners.
THE UNIVERSITY:
http://wiu.edu/about/
Since 1899, Western Illinois University has provided outstanding educational opportunities to individuals in west central Illinois and well beyond our region and state. WIU's traditional residential campus in Macomb, Illinois, is the educational, cultural and athletic center of the region, while the WIU-Quad Cities non-residential branch campus in Moline, Illinois, is the only public university in the immediate Quad Cities region.
WIU-Macomb, IL:
Western's traditional, residential main campus offers a comprehensive slate of undergraduate and graduate programs, including a doctorate in education, and post-baccalaureate certificates. A diverse community in west central Illinois, Macomb features a unique blend of agriculture, industry, service, retail, education, and culture. Macomb serves as the county seat, with connections across the state with Amtrak providing twice-daily service from Macomb to Chicago (and point in-between). Macomb is located approximately 75 miles from the Quad Cities International Airport (Moline, IL) and 70 miles from the Greater Peoria Regional Airport (Peoria, IL).
WIU-Quad Cities:
Located on the banks of the Mississippi River in Moline, Illinois, the WIU-Quad Cities campus is the only public four-year regional university that serves the Quad Cities region. Designed as a metropolitan commuter campus, WIU-Quad Cities offers select undergraduate, graduate, and doctoral programs. Moline is located just 80 miles north of the Macomb campus and is centered within a diverse, bi-state community of 383,000 that offers a broad range of cultural, social, and entertainment amenities and experiences, as well as varied businesses and industries.
http://wiu.edu/dei
Western Illinois University fosters respect, equity, and inclusion for all students, faculty, and staff. WIU is committed to anti-racism, anti-oppression, equity, social justice, and diversity. We value inclusion as a core value and as an essential element of Western's public service mission. WIU embraces individual uniqueness and a culture of inclusion that supports broad and specific diversity initiatives. Western believes in the educational and institutional benefits of diversity in society as integral to the success of all individuals.
At WIU, we will:
• Maintain a safe and secure environment for all members of our University communities. Educate and empower students, staff, and faculty to be social justice advocates. • Provide curricula, programs, training, resources, and environments that reflect and strengthen the diversity of our communities, and to elevate cultural awareness and understanding. • Ensure fair, equitable, and inclusive access to University facilities, programs, resources, and services. • Create inclusive and equitable policies and practices. • Diversify the University's workforce by assessing hiring practices to attract, retain, and develop talented staff and faculty from diverse backgrounds. • Address intergroup disparities through areas as representation, retention, learning outcomes, and graduation rates. • Create a Universitywide diversity plan to ensure a continued commitment to anti-racism, anti-oppression, equity, social justice, and diversity.
http://wiu.edu/academics
More than 61 undergraduate degree programs, 41 graduate programs, two doctoral programs and 16 post-baccaulaureate certificate programs prepare students for a successful career after graduation.
Student Resources
More than 200 student organizations at Western provide social, academic, recreation, athletics, service, academic, and many other opportunities for students to grow and learn, develop leadership skills, and much more. Numerous concerts, lectures, films, dance performances, cultural events and more are presented and performed each year, along with numerous major theatrical and dance productions and studio shows, and a variety of service-oriented projects and activities, all in a diverse and inclusive campus environment. The Multicultural Center is home to four cultural and resource centers: The Gwendolyn Brooks, Casa Latina, the Women's Center, and the LGBT*QA Resource Center. These cultural and resource centers promote WIU's goal of enhancing justice, diversity, equity, and inclusion through educational programming and advocacy.
http://wiu.edu/athletics The University's athletics program, based on the Macomb campus, sponsors 17 NCAA Division I intercollegiate men's and women's varsity sports. All varsity sports compete at the Division I level through The Ohio Valley Conference.
Application Instructions:
Complete applications include:
1) a letter of application
2) current curriculum vita or resume
3) copies of unofficial or official academic transcripts; official copies will be requested of selected candidate
4) the names, telephone numbers, and e-mail addresses of three current professional references
Please upload the requested documents by clicking APPLY NOW or by navigating to the WIU Employment page at the following URL http://www.wiu.edu/employment/
**Note** In order to upload Individual documents must be under 2 MB in size.
Screening will begin on [Enter screening begin date here].
Western Illinois University endeavors to provide a safe environment for its employees and students and requires candidates to submit to a background investigation upon offer of employment. Employment is contingent upon compliance with University policies and procedures relating to the receipt and evaluation of information contained in the background investigation.
Western Illinois University is an Affirmative Action and Equal Opportunity employer with a strong commitment to diversity. In that spirit, we are particularly interested in receiving applications from a broad spectrum of people, including, but not limited to, minorities, veterans, women and individuals with disabilities. WIU has a non-discrimination policy that includes discrimination based on an individual's membership in the following classes: sex, race, color, sexual orientation, gender identity, gender expression, religion, age, marital status, national origin, disability, genetic information, veteran status, and any other classes protected by state or federal law.
Questions regarding the search may be directed to: Heather Norman, search chair at hl-norman@wiu.edu
For assistance with the online application system contact the Office of Human Resources at (309) 298-1971 or via email at hr-recruitment@wiu.edu.
To apply, visit https://apptrkr.com/5120157
Full Time
Tri States Public Radio Development Director
Category:
Administrative, Professional & Staff Positions
Department: WIUM RADIO
Locations: Macomb, IL
Posted: Mar 11, 2024
Closes: Open Until Filled
Type: FT - Continuous
About Western Illinois University:
Recognized as a "Best Midwestern College" by the Princeton Review. Western Illinois University, accredited by the Higher Learning Commission, serves nearly 7,600 students at its traditional, residential four-year campus in Macomb, IL and its metropolitan, non-residential branch campus in Moline, IL.
Job Description:
APPOINTMENT: May 1, 2024
RESPONSIBILITIES: The Development Director will report to the TSPR General Manager. Provides overall leadership for the station's fundraising program, develops corporate and individual support for TSPR; sets annual fundraising goals and meets those goals, solicits program underwriting and other corporate support, plan and direct individual giving, including semi-annual fundraising drives, planned gifts and capital campaigns. Development Director will also promote TSPR programs and activities and plan and execute fundraising/outreach events, coordinates production of external communication to listeners and members, writes press releases, feature articles, ads and on-air promos. Development Director is responsible for donor stewardship and appreciation.
RANK & SALARY: Salary Competitive. Western Illinois University offers a competitive benefits package including domestic partner benefits. For full benefit information visit: http://www.wiu.edu/vpas/human_resources/benefits/.
Requirements:
REQUIRED QUALIFICATIONS:
• Bachelor's Degree required • Demonstrated success in non-profit fundraising • Exceptionally strong oral and written communication skills • An understanding of and belief in the mission of public broadcasting • A passion for relationship building • The ability to coordinate with and motivate staff to reach fundraising goals • Willingness to explore and develop digital communication with donors and potential donors • Extensive regional travel is necessary, valid driver's license is required • The ability to keep abreast of the latest trends in public media fundraising and industry • Evening and weekend work is required • Demonstrated organizational and time management skills, including department planning and goal setting • Computer proficiency applicable to the position is required
PREFERRED QUALIFICATIONS:
• Experience using donor databases and prospect management software. • Previous public media fundraising experience • Knowledge and skills pertaining to gift planning, mid and major donor-giving programs • Marketing or outside sales experience, including copywriting experience
For a degree to be considered, it must be conferred from a regionally accredited degree-granting institution of higher education (or equivalent from an international accrediting body). Unless otherwise stated, the degree must be conferred at the time of appointment.
Additional Information:
THE DEPARTMENT: Tri States Public Radio is an outreach service of the College of Fine Arts and Communication at Western Illinois University. TSPR provides information and entertainment of the highest possible caliber to enrich and engage the public, enhance quality of life, and meet the diverse needs of people in west central Illinois, southeast Iowa and northeast Missouri. Tri States Public Radio endorses and is guided by the Public Media Code of Integrity. Tri States Public Radio is the region's voice for award-winning National Public Radio news and locally produced programming. Listeners enjoy classical music, as well as the uniquely American sounds of jazz and folk music. TSPR is the area's premier public radio service, catering to a growing group of discriminating listeners.
THE UNIVERSITY:
http://wiu.edu/about/
Since 1899, Western Illinois University has provided outstanding educational opportunities to individuals in west central Illinois and well beyond our region and state. WIU's traditional residential campus in Macomb, Illinois, is the educational, cultural and athletic center of the region, while the WIU-Quad Cities non-residential branch campus in Moline, Illinois, is the only public university in the immediate Quad Cities region.
WIU-Macomb, IL:
Western's traditional, residential main campus offers a comprehensive slate of undergraduate and graduate programs, including a doctorate in education, and post-baccalaureate certificates. A diverse community in west central Illinois, Macomb features a unique blend of agriculture, industry, service, retail, education, and culture. Macomb serves as the county seat, with connections across the state with Amtrak providing twice-daily service from Macomb to Chicago (and point in-between). Macomb is located approximately 75 miles from the Quad Cities International Airport (Moline, IL) and 70 miles from the Greater Peoria Regional Airport (Peoria, IL).
WIU-Quad Cities:
Located on the banks of the Mississippi River in Moline, Illinois, the WIU-Quad Cities campus is the only public four-year regional university that serves the Quad Cities region. Designed as a metropolitan commuter campus, WIU-Quad Cities offers select undergraduate, graduate, and doctoral programs. Moline is located just 80 miles north of the Macomb campus and is centered within a diverse, bi-state community of 383,000 that offers a broad range of cultural, social, and entertainment amenities and experiences, as well as varied businesses and industries.
http://wiu.edu/dei
Western Illinois University fosters respect, equity, and inclusion for all students, faculty, and staff. WIU is committed to anti-racism, anti-oppression, equity, social justice, and diversity. We value inclusion as a core value and as an essential element of Western's public service mission. WIU embraces individual uniqueness and a culture of inclusion that supports broad and specific diversity initiatives. Western believes in the educational and institutional benefits of diversity in society as integral to the success of all individuals.
At WIU, we will:
• Maintain a safe and secure environment for all members of our University communities. Educate and empower students, staff, and faculty to be social justice advocates. • Provide curricula, programs, training, resources, and environments that reflect and strengthen the diversity of our communities, and to elevate cultural awareness and understanding. • Ensure fair, equitable, and inclusive access to University facilities, programs, resources, and services. • Create inclusive and equitable policies and practices. • Diversify the University's workforce by assessing hiring practices to attract, retain, and develop talented staff and faculty from diverse backgrounds. • Address intergroup disparities through areas as representation, retention, learning outcomes, and graduation rates. • Create a Universitywide diversity plan to ensure a continued commitment to anti-racism, anti-oppression, equity, social justice, and diversity.
http://wiu.edu/academics
More than 61 undergraduate degree programs, 41 graduate programs, two doctoral programs and 16 post-baccaulaureate certificate programs prepare students for a successful career after graduation.
Student Resources
More than 200 student organizations at Western provide social, academic, recreation, athletics, service, academic, and many other opportunities for students to grow and learn, develop leadership skills, and much more. Numerous concerts, lectures, films, dance performances, cultural events and more are presented and performed each year, along with numerous major theatrical and dance productions and studio shows, and a variety of service-oriented projects and activities, all in a diverse and inclusive campus environment. The Multicultural Center is home to four cultural and resource centers: The Gwendolyn Brooks, Casa Latina, the Women's Center, and the LGBT*QA Resource Center. These cultural and resource centers promote WIU's goal of enhancing justice, diversity, equity, and inclusion through educational programming and advocacy.
http://wiu.edu/athletics The University's athletics program, based on the Macomb campus, sponsors 17 NCAA Division I intercollegiate men's and women's varsity sports. All varsity sports compete at the Division I level through The Ohio Valley Conference.
Application Instructions:
Complete applications include:
1) a letter of application
2) current curriculum vita or resume
3) copies of unofficial or official academic transcripts; official copies will be requested of selected candidate
4) the names, telephone numbers, and e-mail addresses of three current professional references
Please upload the requested documents by clicking APPLY NOW or by navigating to the WIU Employment page at the following URL http://www.wiu.edu/employment/
**Note** In order to upload Individual documents must be under 2 MB in size.
Screening will begin on [Enter screening begin date here].
Western Illinois University endeavors to provide a safe environment for its employees and students and requires candidates to submit to a background investigation upon offer of employment. Employment is contingent upon compliance with University policies and procedures relating to the receipt and evaluation of information contained in the background investigation.
Western Illinois University is an Affirmative Action and Equal Opportunity employer with a strong commitment to diversity. In that spirit, we are particularly interested in receiving applications from a broad spectrum of people, including, but not limited to, minorities, veterans, women and individuals with disabilities. WIU has a non-discrimination policy that includes discrimination based on an individual's membership in the following classes: sex, race, color, sexual orientation, gender identity, gender expression, religion, age, marital status, national origin, disability, genetic information, veteran status, and any other classes protected by state or federal law.
Questions regarding the search may be directed to: Heather Norman, search chair at hl-norman@wiu.edu
For assistance with the online application system contact the Office of Human Resources at (309) 298-1971 or via email at hr-recruitment@wiu.edu.
To apply, visit https://apptrkr.com/5120157
The John F. Kennedy Center for Performing Arts
Washington DC
***Please submit a cover letter for consideration*** About The Kennedy Center “I am certain that after the dust of centuries has passed over our cities, we, too, will be remembered not for victories or defeats in battle or in politics, but for our contribution to the human spirit.” – President John F. Kennedy The Kennedy Center is the nation’s cultural center and living memorial to President John F. Kennedy. Located on the banks of the Potomac River in Washington, D.C., the Center presents performances across all genres, and is also home to artistic affiliates Washington National Opera and National Symphony Orchestra. At the Kennedy Center, we strive to foster belonging and empowerment at work. We are able to advance our mission because of our committed and passionate employees. We are fortunate to be able to leverage their diverse perspectives, life experiences and skills to inform how our workplace can be a safe, transparent, and replenishing community. The Kennedy Center is an equal opportunity employer and does not discriminate against any employee or applicant based on race, religion, gender identity, sexual orientation, disability, veteran status, marital status, pregnancy or related condition, or any other basis protected by law. Mission Statement: As the nation's performing arts center, and a living memorial to President John F. Kennedy, we are a leader for the arts across America and around the world, reaching and connecting with artists, inspiring and educating communities. We welcome all to create, experience, learn about, and engage with the arts. Why Join Us We offer a comprehensive range of benefits to all full-time employees including: Staff offers for discount tickets Retirement plan with organization matching (after 1 year of employment) Qualifying employer for the Public Student Loan Forgiveness Program (PSLF) Commuter programs including pre-tax options for discounted parking and SmartBenefits (WMATA) Annual Leave, Sick Leave, and Personal Days available immediately upon hire 11 paid holidays per year Medical, Dental, and Vision benefits with FSA and HSA options, and paid FMLA Flexible work arrangements We like to have fun! Check out the Kennedy Center National Dance Day 2023 staff video! Job Description The Major Gifts Assistant is a key member of the Major & Leadership Gifts team, a group of dynamic fundraisers working with the Kennedy Center’s most generous and philanthropic individual donors. Reporting to the Manager of Major Gifts, the Assistant provides support for the execution of personalized fundraising and stewardship strategies for a portfolio of 100+ current and prospective major donors (undesignated and designated gifts of $50,000+). The incumbent also provides administrative support to the Manager of Leadership Gifts in the stewardship of approx. 85 members of the National Committee for the Performing Arts (designated gifts to education programming of $15,000+) and preparations for Committee meetings. Primary responsibilities include: developing written donor communications; tracking campaign progress and preparing documentation of all contributions; maintaining accurate donor records in database; and logistical support for donor meetings, special events, committee meetings, and major galas. This position works in tandem with an Assistant Manager of Major Gifts. Key Responsibilities Provide support to the Manager of Major Gifts, Manager of Leadership Gifts, and Director of Major & Leadership Gifts for implementation of strategies for donors contributing to annual funds, endowments, and fundraising galas: Drafting and coordinating all types of personalized, written materials on behalf of Development and Kennedy Center leadership (solicitations, acknowledgments, notes, briefings, newsletters, event itineraries, pledge reminders, tax receipts, etc.) of varying length and complexity; Preparing and tracking proper documentation for all contributions, including updating necessary systems and database records to ensure correct gift processing; Accurately tracking fundraising progress through Tessitura database and project management tools and reporting regular campaign updates to Managers and Director; Assisting in the development of materials for Committee meetings and events throughout the year, and maintaining accurate and up-to-date membership listings and contact information for committees and boards; Tracking and coordinating contributions, guest details, and attendee logistics for major fundraising galas such as the Kennedy Center Honors and Mark Twain Prize, including stewardship support for major event sponsorship packages and Event Chairs; Planning, preparing, and coordinating creative and personalized gifts for donors as they relate to Kennedy Center milestones or personal donor milestones (birthdays, anniversaries, life events, etc.); Providing excellent, proactive customer service to donors and their respective teams through direct contact via phone, email, mail, and in-person; Ensure the fulfillment of donor benefits and stewardship activities, including proper recognition and gift crediting in digital and print materials, processing performance ticket requests and event RSVPs, and regular greeting of donors at performances or onsite activities; Onsite customer service and logistical support for special events including cultivation and benefit events, committee and board meetings, galas, etc.; Oversee office resources and collateral materials; Other duties as assigned. Key Qualifications Experience in a front-facing, customer service-oriented role is required Bachelor’s degree is preferred Development/fundraising, writing, and event logistics (or related experience) is preferred Working knowledge of the performing arts is preferred Experience with Tessitura or similar CRM tools is preferred Candidate must be local or willing to relocate to the DMV area. Additional Information The noise level in the work environment is minimal, however attendance at major fundraising events and performances is required. In those conditions, the noise level is very loud. This position requires occasional evening or weekend hours at fundraising events and performances, and typically with advance notice. This position is eligible for hybrid work arrangements, with a minimum of three days on-site per week. This position is not eligible for full-time remote work. Travel up to 5% may be required, predominantly local to offsite fundraising events or meetings
Full Time Regular
***Please submit a cover letter for consideration*** About The Kennedy Center “I am certain that after the dust of centuries has passed over our cities, we, too, will be remembered not for victories or defeats in battle or in politics, but for our contribution to the human spirit.” – President John F. Kennedy The Kennedy Center is the nation’s cultural center and living memorial to President John F. Kennedy. Located on the banks of the Potomac River in Washington, D.C., the Center presents performances across all genres, and is also home to artistic affiliates Washington National Opera and National Symphony Orchestra. At the Kennedy Center, we strive to foster belonging and empowerment at work. We are able to advance our mission because of our committed and passionate employees. We are fortunate to be able to leverage their diverse perspectives, life experiences and skills to inform how our workplace can be a safe, transparent, and replenishing community. The Kennedy Center is an equal opportunity employer and does not discriminate against any employee or applicant based on race, religion, gender identity, sexual orientation, disability, veteran status, marital status, pregnancy or related condition, or any other basis protected by law. Mission Statement: As the nation's performing arts center, and a living memorial to President John F. Kennedy, we are a leader for the arts across America and around the world, reaching and connecting with artists, inspiring and educating communities. We welcome all to create, experience, learn about, and engage with the arts. Why Join Us We offer a comprehensive range of benefits to all full-time employees including: Staff offers for discount tickets Retirement plan with organization matching (after 1 year of employment) Qualifying employer for the Public Student Loan Forgiveness Program (PSLF) Commuter programs including pre-tax options for discounted parking and SmartBenefits (WMATA) Annual Leave, Sick Leave, and Personal Days available immediately upon hire 11 paid holidays per year Medical, Dental, and Vision benefits with FSA and HSA options, and paid FMLA Flexible work arrangements We like to have fun! Check out the Kennedy Center National Dance Day 2023 staff video! Job Description The Major Gifts Assistant is a key member of the Major & Leadership Gifts team, a group of dynamic fundraisers working with the Kennedy Center’s most generous and philanthropic individual donors. Reporting to the Manager of Major Gifts, the Assistant provides support for the execution of personalized fundraising and stewardship strategies for a portfolio of 100+ current and prospective major donors (undesignated and designated gifts of $50,000+). The incumbent also provides administrative support to the Manager of Leadership Gifts in the stewardship of approx. 85 members of the National Committee for the Performing Arts (designated gifts to education programming of $15,000+) and preparations for Committee meetings. Primary responsibilities include: developing written donor communications; tracking campaign progress and preparing documentation of all contributions; maintaining accurate donor records in database; and logistical support for donor meetings, special events, committee meetings, and major galas. This position works in tandem with an Assistant Manager of Major Gifts. Key Responsibilities Provide support to the Manager of Major Gifts, Manager of Leadership Gifts, and Director of Major & Leadership Gifts for implementation of strategies for donors contributing to annual funds, endowments, and fundraising galas: Drafting and coordinating all types of personalized, written materials on behalf of Development and Kennedy Center leadership (solicitations, acknowledgments, notes, briefings, newsletters, event itineraries, pledge reminders, tax receipts, etc.) of varying length and complexity; Preparing and tracking proper documentation for all contributions, including updating necessary systems and database records to ensure correct gift processing; Accurately tracking fundraising progress through Tessitura database and project management tools and reporting regular campaign updates to Managers and Director; Assisting in the development of materials for Committee meetings and events throughout the year, and maintaining accurate and up-to-date membership listings and contact information for committees and boards; Tracking and coordinating contributions, guest details, and attendee logistics for major fundraising galas such as the Kennedy Center Honors and Mark Twain Prize, including stewardship support for major event sponsorship packages and Event Chairs; Planning, preparing, and coordinating creative and personalized gifts for donors as they relate to Kennedy Center milestones or personal donor milestones (birthdays, anniversaries, life events, etc.); Providing excellent, proactive customer service to donors and their respective teams through direct contact via phone, email, mail, and in-person; Ensure the fulfillment of donor benefits and stewardship activities, including proper recognition and gift crediting in digital and print materials, processing performance ticket requests and event RSVPs, and regular greeting of donors at performances or onsite activities; Onsite customer service and logistical support for special events including cultivation and benefit events, committee and board meetings, galas, etc.; Oversee office resources and collateral materials; Other duties as assigned. Key Qualifications Experience in a front-facing, customer service-oriented role is required Bachelor’s degree is preferred Development/fundraising, writing, and event logistics (or related experience) is preferred Working knowledge of the performing arts is preferred Experience with Tessitura or similar CRM tools is preferred Candidate must be local or willing to relocate to the DMV area. Additional Information The noise level in the work environment is minimal, however attendance at major fundraising events and performances is required. In those conditions, the noise level is very loud. This position requires occasional evening or weekend hours at fundraising events and performances, and typically with advance notice. This position is eligible for hybrid work arrangements, with a minimum of three days on-site per week. This position is not eligible for full-time remote work. Travel up to 5% may be required, predominantly local to offsite fundraising events or meetings
Post-Graduate Fellow / Multicultural Focus
Amherst Campus
Full Time
JR4672
Amherst has taken a leadership role among highly selective liberal arts colleges and universities in successfully diversifying the racial, socio-economic, and geographic profile of its student body. The College is similarly committed to enriching its educational experience and its culture through the diversity of its faculty, administration and staff.
Job Description:
Amherst College invites applications for the Post-Graduate Fellowship/Multicultural Focus position. The Post-Graduate Fellowship/Multicultural Focus is a full-time, one-year term position, starting at $40,000 per year. Given Amherst's distinction as one of the most diverse liberal arts colleges in the country, the successful candidate will demonstrate the ways in which they bring value to and will work towards supporting a broadly diverse community.
The Post-Graduate Fellowship/Multicultural Focus is a 1 year (August 1 to July 31) Fellowship appointment that reports to the Assistant Director of Diversity, Education, and Training. The program emphasizes learning through participation in various multidimensional roles and functions of college mental health practitioners. Fellows will work alongside psychologists, social workers, mental health clinicians, and psychiatric staff to provide a full range of clinical and outreach services to the Amherst College community. An essential role for the Post-Graduate Fellow will be to support diverse student communities by providing clinical, preventative, and educational services to help students address the mental health and developmental challenges they face in their personal and academic lives.
The Center for Counseling and Mental Health (CCMH) provides a variety of services including individual and group counseling, psychiatry services, case management, mental health promotion and preventative services, consultation, and teaching. These services are designed to help students overcome mental illnesses or learn how to cope effectively with them, improve their academic performance and cognitive functioning, develop a deeper understanding of themselves and the intersections of their identities, create and maintain satisfying relationships, foster a sense of meaning and purpose, and make healthy life and career choices. The Center for Counseling and Mental Health operates within a developmental philosophy and a brief therapy model, and fellowship candidates must demonstrate an ability to work with a diverse student body within these two frames.
In light of the CCMH's deep commitment to diversity, equity, and inclusion, this fellowship position will facilitate a unique opportunity for the Fellow to develop and further hone their multicultural clinical and consultation skills, and to contribute to campus outreach programs which support Amherst's student diversity. Amherst College is a highly selective, small liberal arts college with a very diverse student body — 45% of our students are students of color from the US; 10% are international; 40% come from low-income families; 18% identify as LBGTQ+; and 25% have registered disabilities with 2 out of 3 being mental health or learning disabilities. Consequently, the Post-Graduate Fellow will work to provide culturally appropriate clinical, consultation, and outreach interventions which address identity development and intersectionality, the impact of systemic oppression (both historical and acute), trauma related to marginalized identity membership, and its impact on mental health and student success.
Our training program complies with the requisites for APPIC membership, and we host three post-graduate fellows per year. Fellows will receive 2 hours of individual supervision and 1 hour of group supervision per week. Fellows will also participate in weekly staff meetings, weekly clinical team case conference meetings, and training seminars. In accordance with APPIC standards, Fellows will receive formal evaluation, generally twice a year. Mid-year evaluations are written and discussed formally with Fellows, but mutual feedback is encouraged in an informal ongoing manner throughout the year. Year-end evaluations are also written and geared toward supporting Fellows in their transition toward employment. The training program has a due-process procedure in the event Fellows encounter difficulties during their training experience.
Responsibilities
Responsibilities will include conducting evidenced-based, culturally appropriate intakes and clinical assessments, individual and group counseling, urgent care, on-call services 1 to 2 weeks a semester, and coordinating care with our psychiatric staff and case manager. The Fellow will need clinical skills as a generalist, and will have opportunities to develop specialty skills in working with adolescents and young adults. Fellows will work with students who present with mental illnesses that often emerge in this stage of development (e.g. bipolar disorder, psychotic disorders, personality disorders, and other major mental illnesses) and with students presenting with normative developmental concerns typically experienced during this period (e.g. identity, relationships, individuation from family). Because more than half the students we serve are BIPOC, international, queer, first-generation, and/or low-income, the Fellow must be interested in, and have some skill in working with identity development and intersectionality, and understand the ways in which systems of oppression affect students' mental health. In addition to clinical services, the Fellow will also engage in and contribute to preventative and educational outreach initiatives. This fellowship position will work to engage historically marginalized communities and communities that typically under-utilize mental health care, with an emphasis on working with BIPOC students. This will include work/connection with our program directors for Mental Health Promotion, Health Education, and identity-based Resource Centers, as well as working collaboratively with a number of other departments across campus. We value wrap-around care, and Fellows must be comfortable working across disciplines.
The fellowship position, along with all the CCMH staff, works toward building and sustaining a center that meets the needs of both individual students and the College community as a whole. We recognize that all of our practitioners bring different gifts and try to assign work from a strengths-based perspective, thus allowing people to grow professionally in ways that best fit their talents and skills. Strong commitments to (1) holistic approaches to student development, (2) understanding current issues facing students of color in historically white institutions (3) interdisciplinary treatment models, (4) the development of on-going, personal and professional multicultural competence, (5) collaboration across the College community and (6) a strong work ethic, are all crucial to succeed in the Fellowship.
Summary of Responsibilities:
Counseling and Consultation
• Provide culturally appropriate individual, group, and couples counseling/psychotherapy to students including assessment, diagnosis, and brief treatment; provide urgent care and crisis intervention; provide consultation to the Amherst College campus community (including students, faculty, administration, staff, and parents-regarding the mental health needs of Amherst students), and also consultation with on-and off-campus health care providers, including Health Services, hospitals, community mental health agencies, and private practitioners, Office of Student Affairs' Student Care, etc. to aid in coordination of care for Amherst College students; maintain up-to-date files, written reports and related data commensurate with current standards of the profession. Will provide on-call services approximately 1 to 2 weeks per semester.
Administrative
• Participation in weekly individual and group supervision, training seminars, clinical case conferences, and team staff meetings.
Qualifications:
Required
• All degree requirements for a Doctorate in Counseling Psychology or Clinical Psychology (PhD, PsyD, EdD), or related field from an APA-accredited program OR Masters in Social Work, Counseling, or related field from an accredited program is required and must be completed by August 15, 2024. Receipt of the degree must be verified no later than August 31, 2024.
• Minimum of two years of related professional experience.
• Able to work in a brief treatment model in a fast-paced environment.
• Demonstrated knowledge of, and skill in addressing race and racism in a clinical context.
• Outstanding communication, collaboration, interpersonal, and relationship skills.
• Strong organizational and time-management skills.
• Occasional work on weekends and evenings.
Preferred
• Specific training and experience working with diverse populations including, but not limited to: students of color, LGBTQIA students, students of different ethnicities and International status, first generation, low-income, disability, and/or intersectionalities.
• Clinical experience in college or university mental health settings and/or in community mental health.
Amherst College offers many opportunities for professional growth and development, continued learning, and career advancement.
Amherst College is pleased to provide a comprehensive, highly competitive benefits package that meets the needs of staff and faculty and their families. Benefits are an important part of our overall compensation, so it is critical that you review all of the options to ensure it meets your total compensation requirements. Click here for https://www.amherst.edu/offices/human_resources/benefits.
Interested candidates are asked to submit a resume and cover letter online at https://amherst.wd5.myworkdayjobs.com/Amherst_Jobs. Please be sure to upload all requested documents prior to clicking Submit. Applications cannot be revised once submitted.(Current employees and students should apply by clicking on the Career icon from their Workday home screen) Review of applications will begin immediately and will continue until the position is filled.
To apply, visit https://apptrkr.com/4938341
Full Time
Post-Graduate Fellow / Multicultural Focus
Amherst Campus
Full Time
JR4672
Amherst has taken a leadership role among highly selective liberal arts colleges and universities in successfully diversifying the racial, socio-economic, and geographic profile of its student body. The College is similarly committed to enriching its educational experience and its culture through the diversity of its faculty, administration and staff.
Job Description:
Amherst College invites applications for the Post-Graduate Fellowship/Multicultural Focus position. The Post-Graduate Fellowship/Multicultural Focus is a full-time, one-year term position, starting at $40,000 per year. Given Amherst's distinction as one of the most diverse liberal arts colleges in the country, the successful candidate will demonstrate the ways in which they bring value to and will work towards supporting a broadly diverse community.
The Post-Graduate Fellowship/Multicultural Focus is a 1 year (August 1 to July 31) Fellowship appointment that reports to the Assistant Director of Diversity, Education, and Training. The program emphasizes learning through participation in various multidimensional roles and functions of college mental health practitioners. Fellows will work alongside psychologists, social workers, mental health clinicians, and psychiatric staff to provide a full range of clinical and outreach services to the Amherst College community. An essential role for the Post-Graduate Fellow will be to support diverse student communities by providing clinical, preventative, and educational services to help students address the mental health and developmental challenges they face in their personal and academic lives.
The Center for Counseling and Mental Health (CCMH) provides a variety of services including individual and group counseling, psychiatry services, case management, mental health promotion and preventative services, consultation, and teaching. These services are designed to help students overcome mental illnesses or learn how to cope effectively with them, improve their academic performance and cognitive functioning, develop a deeper understanding of themselves and the intersections of their identities, create and maintain satisfying relationships, foster a sense of meaning and purpose, and make healthy life and career choices. The Center for Counseling and Mental Health operates within a developmental philosophy and a brief therapy model, and fellowship candidates must demonstrate an ability to work with a diverse student body within these two frames.
In light of the CCMH's deep commitment to diversity, equity, and inclusion, this fellowship position will facilitate a unique opportunity for the Fellow to develop and further hone their multicultural clinical and consultation skills, and to contribute to campus outreach programs which support Amherst's student diversity. Amherst College is a highly selective, small liberal arts college with a very diverse student body — 45% of our students are students of color from the US; 10% are international; 40% come from low-income families; 18% identify as LBGTQ+; and 25% have registered disabilities with 2 out of 3 being mental health or learning disabilities. Consequently, the Post-Graduate Fellow will work to provide culturally appropriate clinical, consultation, and outreach interventions which address identity development and intersectionality, the impact of systemic oppression (both historical and acute), trauma related to marginalized identity membership, and its impact on mental health and student success.
Our training program complies with the requisites for APPIC membership, and we host three post-graduate fellows per year. Fellows will receive 2 hours of individual supervision and 1 hour of group supervision per week. Fellows will also participate in weekly staff meetings, weekly clinical team case conference meetings, and training seminars. In accordance with APPIC standards, Fellows will receive formal evaluation, generally twice a year. Mid-year evaluations are written and discussed formally with Fellows, but mutual feedback is encouraged in an informal ongoing manner throughout the year. Year-end evaluations are also written and geared toward supporting Fellows in their transition toward employment. The training program has a due-process procedure in the event Fellows encounter difficulties during their training experience.
Responsibilities
Responsibilities will include conducting evidenced-based, culturally appropriate intakes and clinical assessments, individual and group counseling, urgent care, on-call services 1 to 2 weeks a semester, and coordinating care with our psychiatric staff and case manager. The Fellow will need clinical skills as a generalist, and will have opportunities to develop specialty skills in working with adolescents and young adults. Fellows will work with students who present with mental illnesses that often emerge in this stage of development (e.g. bipolar disorder, psychotic disorders, personality disorders, and other major mental illnesses) and with students presenting with normative developmental concerns typically experienced during this period (e.g. identity, relationships, individuation from family). Because more than half the students we serve are BIPOC, international, queer, first-generation, and/or low-income, the Fellow must be interested in, and have some skill in working with identity development and intersectionality, and understand the ways in which systems of oppression affect students' mental health. In addition to clinical services, the Fellow will also engage in and contribute to preventative and educational outreach initiatives. This fellowship position will work to engage historically marginalized communities and communities that typically under-utilize mental health care, with an emphasis on working with BIPOC students. This will include work/connection with our program directors for Mental Health Promotion, Health Education, and identity-based Resource Centers, as well as working collaboratively with a number of other departments across campus. We value wrap-around care, and Fellows must be comfortable working across disciplines.
The fellowship position, along with all the CCMH staff, works toward building and sustaining a center that meets the needs of both individual students and the College community as a whole. We recognize that all of our practitioners bring different gifts and try to assign work from a strengths-based perspective, thus allowing people to grow professionally in ways that best fit their talents and skills. Strong commitments to (1) holistic approaches to student development, (2) understanding current issues facing students of color in historically white institutions (3) interdisciplinary treatment models, (4) the development of on-going, personal and professional multicultural competence, (5) collaboration across the College community and (6) a strong work ethic, are all crucial to succeed in the Fellowship.
Summary of Responsibilities:
Counseling and Consultation
• Provide culturally appropriate individual, group, and couples counseling/psychotherapy to students including assessment, diagnosis, and brief treatment; provide urgent care and crisis intervention; provide consultation to the Amherst College campus community (including students, faculty, administration, staff, and parents-regarding the mental health needs of Amherst students), and also consultation with on-and off-campus health care providers, including Health Services, hospitals, community mental health agencies, and private practitioners, Office of Student Affairs' Student Care, etc. to aid in coordination of care for Amherst College students; maintain up-to-date files, written reports and related data commensurate with current standards of the profession. Will provide on-call services approximately 1 to 2 weeks per semester.
Administrative
• Participation in weekly individual and group supervision, training seminars, clinical case conferences, and team staff meetings.
Qualifications:
Required
• All degree requirements for a Doctorate in Counseling Psychology or Clinical Psychology (PhD, PsyD, EdD), or related field from an APA-accredited program OR Masters in Social Work, Counseling, or related field from an accredited program is required and must be completed by August 15, 2024. Receipt of the degree must be verified no later than August 31, 2024.
• Minimum of two years of related professional experience.
• Able to work in a brief treatment model in a fast-paced environment.
• Demonstrated knowledge of, and skill in addressing race and racism in a clinical context.
• Outstanding communication, collaboration, interpersonal, and relationship skills.
• Strong organizational and time-management skills.
• Occasional work on weekends and evenings.
Preferred
• Specific training and experience working with diverse populations including, but not limited to: students of color, LGBTQIA students, students of different ethnicities and International status, first generation, low-income, disability, and/or intersectionalities.
• Clinical experience in college or university mental health settings and/or in community mental health.
Amherst College offers many opportunities for professional growth and development, continued learning, and career advancement.
Amherst College is pleased to provide a comprehensive, highly competitive benefits package that meets the needs of staff and faculty and their families. Benefits are an important part of our overall compensation, so it is critical that you review all of the options to ensure it meets your total compensation requirements. Click here for https://www.amherst.edu/offices/human_resources/benefits.
Interested candidates are asked to submit a resume and cover letter online at https://amherst.wd5.myworkdayjobs.com/Amherst_Jobs. Please be sure to upload all requested documents prior to clicking Submit. Applications cannot be revised once submitted.(Current employees and students should apply by clicking on the Career icon from their Workday home screen) Review of applications will begin immediately and will continue until the position is filled.
To apply, visit https://apptrkr.com/4938341
The John F. Kennedy Center for Performing Arts
Washington DC
***Please submit a cover letter for consideration.* ** About the National Symphony Orchestra Founded in 1931, the Orchestra has always been committed to artistic excellence and music education. In 1986, the National Symphony became an artistic affiliate of the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, where it has performed a full season of subscription concerts since the Center opened in 1971. Located on the banks of the Potomac River in Washington, D.C., the Kennedy Center is the nation’s cultural center and living memorial to President John F. Kennedy. At the Kennedy Center, we strive to foster belonging and empowerment at work. We are able to advance our mission because of our committed and passionate employees. We are fortunate to be able to leverage their diverse perspectives, life experiences and skills to inform how our workplace can be a safe, transparent, and replenishing community. The Kennedy Center is an equal opportunity employer and does not discriminate against any employee or applicant based on race, religion, gender identity, sexual orientation, disability, veteran status, marital status, pregnancy or related condition, or any other basis protected by law. Mission Statement: As the nation's performing arts center, and a living memorial to President John F. Kennedy, we are a leader for the arts across America and around the world, reaching and connecting with artists, inspiring and educating communities. We welcome all to create, experience, learn about, and engage with the arts. Why Join Us We offer a comprehensive range of benefits to all full-time employees including: Staff offers for discount tickets Retirement plan with organization matching (after 1 year of employment) Qualifying employer for the Public Student Loan Forgiveness Program (PSLF) Commuter programs including pre-tax options for discounted parking and SmartBenefits (WMATA) Annual Leave, Sick Leave, and Personal Days available immediately upon hire 11 paid holidays per year Medical, Dental, and Vision benefits with FSA and HSA options, and paid FMLA Flexible work arrangements We like to have fun! Check out the Kennedy Center National Dance Day 2023 staff video! Job Description The NSO Development team seeks a detail-oriented and customer-focused fundraiser to provide foundational support for all areas of NSO fundraising, with a focus on NSO Circles, Major Gifts, and NSO National Trustees annual fund campaigns. This position, reporting to the Director of NSO Operations and Stewardship, includes tasks in the areas of research; database management; meeting and stewardship activity planning; professional and creative writing such as acknowledgments, briefings, formal written communications, and informal correspondence; event staffing; donor stewardship such as ticket processing, contribution processing, and gift documentation; and support of projects led by the Director of NSO Operations and Stewardship or the Chief Development Officer. The incumbent serves as a development liaison with multiple departments and teams throughout the institution. The Assistant must exhibit an exceptional level of attention to detail, the ability to prioritize their time for both short- and long-term projects, accurately maintain records in a variety of formats, and engage in-person, over the phone, and via video conference with supporters and staff members from a variety of backgrounds and leadership levels. An aptitude for organization and clear communication is essential . Key Responsibilities NSO Circles, Major Gifts, and NSO National Trustees Assist in the management and implementation of the Circles, Major Gifts, and National Trustees annual fund campaigns: Review data and ensure accuracy of renewal materials Generate and manage solicitations, acknowledgments, tax receipts, and acquisition appeals Assist in the preparation of revenue reports and projections Manage office resources and collateral materials Assist with requisite benefit, cultivation, and committee activities: Assist in the implementation of National Trustee committee meetings and trips; track event attendance and associated payments Work closely with Special Events and other NSO Development staff to support donor cultivation and stewardship events Generate invitation lists, draft printed materials, and assist with internal approvals Contribute to event briefings for institutional and organizational leaders Complete appropriate follow-up after each event Donor Stewardship Draft and coordinate multiple types of correspondence, such as acknowledgments, solicitations, and communications on behalf of NSO leadership Complete gift-related processes with accuracy and expediency: Complete, secure approval, and ensure correct entry for gift documentation Update necessary systems and database records to ensure correct recognition, benefit fulfillment, and gift processing Assign tasks as appropriate to other team members for completion Notify appropriate team members of gift-related details and updates Maintain a modest portfolio of donors and complete assigned cultivation and stewardship tasks such as in-person visits at concerts and events, phone calls, and email outreach Provide excellent, proactive customer service: Solicit and renew donors over the phone and via email Respond promptly and with accuracy to all incoming inquiries via phone, email, and mail, and assist the Assistant Manager and Manager with similar needs Manage ticketing and/or reservation needs Fulfill requests for information pertaining to contributions, such as tax letters and invoices Staff on- and off-site events in support of donor stewardship and cultivation Support for NSO Development Team and Director of NSO Operations and Stewardship Support team strategies and projects, such as preparing and distributing a weekly contribution report, a weekly report to the NSO Executive Director, and managing the performance greeting process and schedule Provide support to enable the Director of NSO Operations and Stewardship and other NSO Development Team members to effectively carry out moves management steps for their donor portfolios Provide direct support to the Director of NSO Operations and Stewardship for special projects and donor requests, travel logistics, and financial processes Other duties as assigned. Key Qualifications Experience in a front-facing, customer service-oriented role is required. Development/fundraising, writing, and event logistics (or related experience) is preferred. Working knowledge of the performing arts, specifically classical music, is preferred. Bachelor’s degree is beneficial. Experience with Tessitura or similar CRM is beneficial.
Full Time Regular
***Please submit a cover letter for consideration.* ** About the National Symphony Orchestra Founded in 1931, the Orchestra has always been committed to artistic excellence and music education. In 1986, the National Symphony became an artistic affiliate of the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, where it has performed a full season of subscription concerts since the Center opened in 1971. Located on the banks of the Potomac River in Washington, D.C., the Kennedy Center is the nation’s cultural center and living memorial to President John F. Kennedy. At the Kennedy Center, we strive to foster belonging and empowerment at work. We are able to advance our mission because of our committed and passionate employees. We are fortunate to be able to leverage their diverse perspectives, life experiences and skills to inform how our workplace can be a safe, transparent, and replenishing community. The Kennedy Center is an equal opportunity employer and does not discriminate against any employee or applicant based on race, religion, gender identity, sexual orientation, disability, veteran status, marital status, pregnancy or related condition, or any other basis protected by law. Mission Statement: As the nation's performing arts center, and a living memorial to President John F. Kennedy, we are a leader for the arts across America and around the world, reaching and connecting with artists, inspiring and educating communities. We welcome all to create, experience, learn about, and engage with the arts. Why Join Us We offer a comprehensive range of benefits to all full-time employees including: Staff offers for discount tickets Retirement plan with organization matching (after 1 year of employment) Qualifying employer for the Public Student Loan Forgiveness Program (PSLF) Commuter programs including pre-tax options for discounted parking and SmartBenefits (WMATA) Annual Leave, Sick Leave, and Personal Days available immediately upon hire 11 paid holidays per year Medical, Dental, and Vision benefits with FSA and HSA options, and paid FMLA Flexible work arrangements We like to have fun! Check out the Kennedy Center National Dance Day 2023 staff video! Job Description The NSO Development team seeks a detail-oriented and customer-focused fundraiser to provide foundational support for all areas of NSO fundraising, with a focus on NSO Circles, Major Gifts, and NSO National Trustees annual fund campaigns. This position, reporting to the Director of NSO Operations and Stewardship, includes tasks in the areas of research; database management; meeting and stewardship activity planning; professional and creative writing such as acknowledgments, briefings, formal written communications, and informal correspondence; event staffing; donor stewardship such as ticket processing, contribution processing, and gift documentation; and support of projects led by the Director of NSO Operations and Stewardship or the Chief Development Officer. The incumbent serves as a development liaison with multiple departments and teams throughout the institution. The Assistant must exhibit an exceptional level of attention to detail, the ability to prioritize their time for both short- and long-term projects, accurately maintain records in a variety of formats, and engage in-person, over the phone, and via video conference with supporters and staff members from a variety of backgrounds and leadership levels. An aptitude for organization and clear communication is essential . Key Responsibilities NSO Circles, Major Gifts, and NSO National Trustees Assist in the management and implementation of the Circles, Major Gifts, and National Trustees annual fund campaigns: Review data and ensure accuracy of renewal materials Generate and manage solicitations, acknowledgments, tax receipts, and acquisition appeals Assist in the preparation of revenue reports and projections Manage office resources and collateral materials Assist with requisite benefit, cultivation, and committee activities: Assist in the implementation of National Trustee committee meetings and trips; track event attendance and associated payments Work closely with Special Events and other NSO Development staff to support donor cultivation and stewardship events Generate invitation lists, draft printed materials, and assist with internal approvals Contribute to event briefings for institutional and organizational leaders Complete appropriate follow-up after each event Donor Stewardship Draft and coordinate multiple types of correspondence, such as acknowledgments, solicitations, and communications on behalf of NSO leadership Complete gift-related processes with accuracy and expediency: Complete, secure approval, and ensure correct entry for gift documentation Update necessary systems and database records to ensure correct recognition, benefit fulfillment, and gift processing Assign tasks as appropriate to other team members for completion Notify appropriate team members of gift-related details and updates Maintain a modest portfolio of donors and complete assigned cultivation and stewardship tasks such as in-person visits at concerts and events, phone calls, and email outreach Provide excellent, proactive customer service: Solicit and renew donors over the phone and via email Respond promptly and with accuracy to all incoming inquiries via phone, email, and mail, and assist the Assistant Manager and Manager with similar needs Manage ticketing and/or reservation needs Fulfill requests for information pertaining to contributions, such as tax letters and invoices Staff on- and off-site events in support of donor stewardship and cultivation Support for NSO Development Team and Director of NSO Operations and Stewardship Support team strategies and projects, such as preparing and distributing a weekly contribution report, a weekly report to the NSO Executive Director, and managing the performance greeting process and schedule Provide support to enable the Director of NSO Operations and Stewardship and other NSO Development Team members to effectively carry out moves management steps for their donor portfolios Provide direct support to the Director of NSO Operations and Stewardship for special projects and donor requests, travel logistics, and financial processes Other duties as assigned. Key Qualifications Experience in a front-facing, customer service-oriented role is required. Development/fundraising, writing, and event logistics (or related experience) is preferred. Working knowledge of the performing arts, specifically classical music, is preferred. Bachelor’s degree is beneficial. Experience with Tessitura or similar CRM is beneficial.
The John F. Kennedy Center for Performing Arts
Washington DC
About The Kennedy Center “I am certain that after the dust of centuries has passed over our cities, we, too, will be remembered not for victories or defeats in battle or in politics, but for our contribution to the human spirit.” – President John F. Kennedy The Kennedy Center is the nation’s cultural center and living memorial to President John F. Kennedy. Located on the banks of the Potomac River in Washington, D.C., the Center presents performances across all genres, and is also home to artistic affiliates Washington National Opera and National Symphony Orchestra. At the Kennedy Center, we strive to foster belonging and empowerment at work. We are able to advance our mission because of our committed and passionate employees. We are fortunate to be able to leverage their diverse perspectives, life experiences and skills to inform how our workplace can be a safe, transparent, and replenishing community. The Kennedy Center is an equal opportunity employer and does not discriminate against any employee or applicant based on race, religion, gender identity, sexual orientation, disability, veteran status, marital status, pregnancy or related condition, or any other basis protected by law. Mission Statement: As the nation's performing arts center, and a living memorial to President John F. Kennedy, we are a leader for the arts across America and around the world, reaching and connecting with artists, inspiring and educating communities. We welcome all to create, experience, learn about, and engage with the arts. Why Join Us We offer a comprehensive range of benefits to all full-time employees including: Staff offers for discount tickets Retirement plan with organization matching (after 1 year of employment) Qualifying employer for the Public Student Loan Forgiveness Program (PSLF) Commuter programs including pre-tax options for discounted parking and SmartBenefits (WMATA) Annual Leave, Sick Leave, and Personal Days available immediately upon hire 11 paid holidays per year Medical, Dental, and Vision benefits with FSA and HSA options, and paid FMLA Flexible work arrangements We like to have fun! Check out the Kennedy Center National Dance Day 2023 staff video! Job Description The Development Office at the Kennedy Center is a vibrant, dynamic, and creative group of more than 90 professionals responsible for finding new, creative, sustainable, and efficient ways to meet or exceed the institution’s over $80M annual contributed income goal each year. These funds support the organization’s extraordinary programming—world class performances on our many stages at the Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C.; local, regional, and national education programs reaching students, teachers, families, and budding artists; and community-driven social impact programming that upholds the legacy of President Kennedy in our role as his presidential memorial. The Prospect Development, Intelligence, and Analytics team is a shared services division in the Development Office, using data-driven decision-making, strategic planning, revenue forecasting, pipeline analytics, and prospect research to inform, support, and evaluate departmental fundraising initiatives. The Assistant Manager, Prospect Development (Institutional Giving) reports directly to the Director, Prospect Development, Intelligence, and Analytics (PDIA). This position collaborates day-to-day with gift officers, advises on portfolio and pipeline management best practices through prospect identification, data analysis, portfolio optimization and related services in support of the Corporate Relations and Foundation and Government Giving team’s fundraising goals. This individual will research, analyze and recommend strategy on corporate, foundation and government prospects, translate results/findings into actionable intelligence, and develop reporting tools that support year-over-year growth in fundraising at the Kennedy Center. This highly collaborative individual is detail-oriented, analytical, a creative problem solver, and committed to using data-driven decision making in project management. This person must have the ability to multi-task, independently plan and organize activities to prioritize daily workloads and projects and meet deadlines. Key Responsibilities Prospect & Portfolio Management Implement the departmental moves management system to synchronize relationships with institutional funders and gifts officers based on the prospective funder’s philanthropic/community relations interests, affiliation, level of capacity, and existing contacts across the organization. Work directly with corporate and foundation gift officers to ensure prospect assignments are clear and transparent, information is accurate, and moves management activities are tracked in the CRM to evaluate the success rate of converting prospects to donors. Prepare materials for portfolio and strategy review meetings that will take place at least quarterly with development officers. Assess existing funding relationships as well as status of recently lapsed donors; brainstorm methods to engage, retain, and upgrade these donors. Prospect Research Conduct prospect research in order to proactively identify prospective funders, leverage attendance at major events for pipeline development and prospect cultivation, and build the roster of screened prospects ready for assignment. Research institutional prospects on a reactive and proactive basis and make appropriate assignments to development officers. Compose detailed research materials, such as snapshots and profiles, for institutional prospects. Ensure complete, accurate, and timely updates of information are maintained in the CRM as it relates to staff contacts, research notes, and prospect management data. Major Gifts Tracking and Reporting Assess capacity, balance and overall health of portfolios for corporate relations and institutional gift officers. Design and deliver pipeline and fundraising activity reports for development officers. Provide regular reporting on metrics, portfolio baselines, and pipeline management practices for development officers and departmental leadership. Conduct trend analysis that supports the strategic planning and operational effectiveness of the corporate and institutional giving programs. Support the Director of PDIA in revenue forecasting and budget projections. Leverage CRM data to make these decisions data-driven, transparent, and accurate. Training Assist in developing curriculum and training materials for the overall department. Provide ongoing group and one-on-one training sessions for development officers as needed. Help conduct ongoing user support sessions for corporate and foundation gift officers. Participate in professional development activities to keep abreast of current trends and practices in the field of prospect research. Key Qualifications Bachelor’s degree or applicable professional experience. Minimum of 2 years of prospect development experience with demonstrated achievement. Proven research and analytical techniques, emphasizing the ability to gather, evaluate and synthesize complex and large sets of data from various sources and present information in a clear and cohesive manner. Experience developing work plans with tasks and tactics that achieve strategic goals and outcomes. Experience navigating large, complex organizations, and collaborating across teams to achieve shared goals. Familiarity with the philanthropic industry and best practices in prospect development. Specific familiarity with the performing arts is beneficial, but not required. Proficiency in database management, Microsoft Office Suite, and other computer skills, as required. Experience with Tessitura strongly preferred. Experience with prospect research databases (iWave, WealthEngine, Hoovers, etc.) strongly preferred. Candidate must be local or willing to relocate to the DMV area. Additional Information This position is eligible for flexible work arrangements for candidates who are local or willing to relocate to the DMV area.
Full Time Regular
About The Kennedy Center “I am certain that after the dust of centuries has passed over our cities, we, too, will be remembered not for victories or defeats in battle or in politics, but for our contribution to the human spirit.” – President John F. Kennedy The Kennedy Center is the nation’s cultural center and living memorial to President John F. Kennedy. Located on the banks of the Potomac River in Washington, D.C., the Center presents performances across all genres, and is also home to artistic affiliates Washington National Opera and National Symphony Orchestra. At the Kennedy Center, we strive to foster belonging and empowerment at work. We are able to advance our mission because of our committed and passionate employees. We are fortunate to be able to leverage their diverse perspectives, life experiences and skills to inform how our workplace can be a safe, transparent, and replenishing community. The Kennedy Center is an equal opportunity employer and does not discriminate against any employee or applicant based on race, religion, gender identity, sexual orientation, disability, veteran status, marital status, pregnancy or related condition, or any other basis protected by law. Mission Statement: As the nation's performing arts center, and a living memorial to President John F. Kennedy, we are a leader for the arts across America and around the world, reaching and connecting with artists, inspiring and educating communities. We welcome all to create, experience, learn about, and engage with the arts. Why Join Us We offer a comprehensive range of benefits to all full-time employees including: Staff offers for discount tickets Retirement plan with organization matching (after 1 year of employment) Qualifying employer for the Public Student Loan Forgiveness Program (PSLF) Commuter programs including pre-tax options for discounted parking and SmartBenefits (WMATA) Annual Leave, Sick Leave, and Personal Days available immediately upon hire 11 paid holidays per year Medical, Dental, and Vision benefits with FSA and HSA options, and paid FMLA Flexible work arrangements We like to have fun! Check out the Kennedy Center National Dance Day 2023 staff video! Job Description The Development Office at the Kennedy Center is a vibrant, dynamic, and creative group of more than 90 professionals responsible for finding new, creative, sustainable, and efficient ways to meet or exceed the institution’s over $80M annual contributed income goal each year. These funds support the organization’s extraordinary programming—world class performances on our many stages at the Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C.; local, regional, and national education programs reaching students, teachers, families, and budding artists; and community-driven social impact programming that upholds the legacy of President Kennedy in our role as his presidential memorial. The Prospect Development, Intelligence, and Analytics team is a shared services division in the Development Office, using data-driven decision-making, strategic planning, revenue forecasting, pipeline analytics, and prospect research to inform, support, and evaluate departmental fundraising initiatives. The Assistant Manager, Prospect Development (Institutional Giving) reports directly to the Director, Prospect Development, Intelligence, and Analytics (PDIA). This position collaborates day-to-day with gift officers, advises on portfolio and pipeline management best practices through prospect identification, data analysis, portfolio optimization and related services in support of the Corporate Relations and Foundation and Government Giving team’s fundraising goals. This individual will research, analyze and recommend strategy on corporate, foundation and government prospects, translate results/findings into actionable intelligence, and develop reporting tools that support year-over-year growth in fundraising at the Kennedy Center. This highly collaborative individual is detail-oriented, analytical, a creative problem solver, and committed to using data-driven decision making in project management. This person must have the ability to multi-task, independently plan and organize activities to prioritize daily workloads and projects and meet deadlines. Key Responsibilities Prospect & Portfolio Management Implement the departmental moves management system to synchronize relationships with institutional funders and gifts officers based on the prospective funder’s philanthropic/community relations interests, affiliation, level of capacity, and existing contacts across the organization. Work directly with corporate and foundation gift officers to ensure prospect assignments are clear and transparent, information is accurate, and moves management activities are tracked in the CRM to evaluate the success rate of converting prospects to donors. Prepare materials for portfolio and strategy review meetings that will take place at least quarterly with development officers. Assess existing funding relationships as well as status of recently lapsed donors; brainstorm methods to engage, retain, and upgrade these donors. Prospect Research Conduct prospect research in order to proactively identify prospective funders, leverage attendance at major events for pipeline development and prospect cultivation, and build the roster of screened prospects ready for assignment. Research institutional prospects on a reactive and proactive basis and make appropriate assignments to development officers. Compose detailed research materials, such as snapshots and profiles, for institutional prospects. Ensure complete, accurate, and timely updates of information are maintained in the CRM as it relates to staff contacts, research notes, and prospect management data. Major Gifts Tracking and Reporting Assess capacity, balance and overall health of portfolios for corporate relations and institutional gift officers. Design and deliver pipeline and fundraising activity reports for development officers. Provide regular reporting on metrics, portfolio baselines, and pipeline management practices for development officers and departmental leadership. Conduct trend analysis that supports the strategic planning and operational effectiveness of the corporate and institutional giving programs. Support the Director of PDIA in revenue forecasting and budget projections. Leverage CRM data to make these decisions data-driven, transparent, and accurate. Training Assist in developing curriculum and training materials for the overall department. Provide ongoing group and one-on-one training sessions for development officers as needed. Help conduct ongoing user support sessions for corporate and foundation gift officers. Participate in professional development activities to keep abreast of current trends and practices in the field of prospect research. Key Qualifications Bachelor’s degree or applicable professional experience. Minimum of 2 years of prospect development experience with demonstrated achievement. Proven research and analytical techniques, emphasizing the ability to gather, evaluate and synthesize complex and large sets of data from various sources and present information in a clear and cohesive manner. Experience developing work plans with tasks and tactics that achieve strategic goals and outcomes. Experience navigating large, complex organizations, and collaborating across teams to achieve shared goals. Familiarity with the philanthropic industry and best practices in prospect development. Specific familiarity with the performing arts is beneficial, but not required. Proficiency in database management, Microsoft Office Suite, and other computer skills, as required. Experience with Tessitura strongly preferred. Experience with prospect research databases (iWave, WealthEngine, Hoovers, etc.) strongly preferred. Candidate must be local or willing to relocate to the DMV area. Additional Information This position is eligible for flexible work arrangements for candidates who are local or willing to relocate to the DMV area.
Assoc Director of Corp & Found Relations / Development Officer II
Job no: 901132 Work type: Support Staff Pay Grade: 14 Major Administrative Unit / College: University Advancement Department: Constituency Program Dir 1 40001223 Sub Area: AP- Professionals Salary: Salary Commensurate with Experience Location: East Lansing Categories: Administrative/Business/Professional, PR/Media/Graphics/Comm/Fund Raising, Administrative Professionals- AP, Full Time (90-100%), Union, Remote-Friendly
Working/Functional Title Assoc Director of Corp & Found Relations
Position Summary The Eli Broad College of Business at Michigan State University is seeking an enthusiastic and energetic, results-oriented individual to join its highly successful fundraising team as the Associate Director of Corporate and Foundation Relations. Ranked one of the top 25 business programs in the country, the College completed the MSU Empower Extraordinary campaign in 2019, exceeding its $162M goal by raising $195M, including a $62 million capital project. We are now in the planning stages of the next campaign. The Associate Director will be an integral member of a team helping to steward the corporate and foundation gifts that were made during the last campaign and begin setting expectations for the next campaign.
The Associate Director will assist faculty and College administration in identifying, cultivating, and engaging potential corporate and foundation sources of support, with the overarching goal of soliciting major gifts in support of significant College initiatives.
Responsibilities:
This position is responsible for establishing and maintaining a portfolio of corporate and foundation prospects for the Eli Broad College of Business.
The successful candidate will:
Solicitation, Cultivation & Discovery:
• Meet with corporation and foundation prospects to understand their priorities and strategies with the objective of identifying and building significant alliances, leading to philanthropic support for the Eli Broad College of Business.
• Maintain an aggressive travel and communications schedule with new and existing corporate and foundation partners to build and enrich the Eli Broad College of Business relationships with them.
• Identify and build relationships with key alumni/friends within target corporations and foundations in order to seek advice and assistance in relationship building, charitable gifts, and research funding.
Strategy and Coordination:
• Establish close and effective working relationships with College administration, the University Advancement Corporate Relations and Foundation Relations teams, and MSU Business-CONNECT. This requires a person who is experienced and comfortable in working across administrative boundaries in an open and collegial environment.
• Become conversant with the Eli Broad College of Business's strengths and strategic priorities.
• In collaboration with the University Advancement Corporate Relations and Foundation Relations teams, participate in the development of a coordinated strategy to engage target corporations and foundations with the Eli Broad College of Business’ programs/researchers/educational mission.
• Participate in regular meetings with the University Advancement Corporate Relations and Foundation Relations teams.
• Establish effective working relationships with academic department heads, center and institute directors, faculty, and administrators throughout the Eli Broad College of Business in order to thoroughly understand their programs and priorities and to assist them in managing their respective corporate and foundation partnership activities.
• Create opportunities for regular and substantive contact between high-level corporate and foundation executives and the Eli Broad College of Business Dean, Chairs, Center Directors, and key faculty.
• Coordinate with the Eli Broad College of Business’s grant funding recipients to provide stewardship, monitor outcomes and prepare regular progress reports.
Reporting:
• Reports directly to the Eli Broad College of Business’s Senior Director of Development.
• Dotted line appointment to the Senior Director of Corporate Relations
Prospective candidates will have excellent written and communication skills, with the ability to produce business correspondence; solicitation materials; appropriate letters of acknowledgement; proposals to individuals, corporations, and foundations; and reports. She/he will have a demonstrated ability to establish and manage multiple business relationships with complex, multifaceted organizations successfully and simultaneously. Individuals sought for this role will have in-depth knowledge of the breadth of corporate interactions with higher education and with foundation practices. They will also have the ability to understand quickly and translate clearly and succinctly faculty research and its value to potential funders.
Unit Specific Education/Experience/Skills Knowledge equivalent to that which normally would be acquired by completing a four-year college degree program in Communications, Public Relations, Marketing, and/or Business; three to five years of related and progressively more responsible or expansive work experience in public relations, volunteer administration, professional and higher education fundraising, marketing or related field; or an equivalent combination of education and experience.
Desired Qualifications
• Minimum of bachelor’s degree in business or related field.
• Five years of demonstrated and progressively more responsible experience working within private sector corporations in higher education development, research and development, communications, public relations, or related field.
• Demonstrated experience in managing business relationships in a role such as account manager is desirable.
• Excellent writing and communication skills.
• Experience and level of sophistication needed to deal with high-level management in the corporate or education sector.
• Must be goal-oriented and an accomplished problem solver.
• Must be team-oriented/collaborative.
Equal Employment Opportunity Statement All qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, national origin, citizenship, age, disability or protected veteran status.
Required Application Materials Resume and cover letter
Special Instructions HOW TO APPLY
If you have any questions regarding this position, please contact Patricia Karam, Director of Recruitment, at karampat@msu.edu.
All candidates must submit an application, resume, and cover letter through the Michigan State University Human Resources web-based system, the URL for this website is careers.msu.edu. Please indicate the position number 901132 when submitting your application.
Screening of applicants will continue until the position is filled.
Work Hours 8 am - 5 pm with some evenings and weekends
Website Advancement.msu.edu
Remote Work Statement MSU strives to provide a flexible work environment and this position has been designated as remote-friendly. Remote-friendly means some or all of the duties can be performed remotely as mutually agreed upon.
Bidding eligibility ends October 10, 2023 at 11:55 P.M. Advertised: Oct 4, 2023 Eastern Daylight Time Applications close: Nov 2, 2023 Eastern Daylight Time
To apply, visit https://apptrkr.com/4676578
Full Time
Assoc Director of Corp & Found Relations / Development Officer II
Job no: 901132 Work type: Support Staff Pay Grade: 14 Major Administrative Unit / College: University Advancement Department: Constituency Program Dir 1 40001223 Sub Area: AP- Professionals Salary: Salary Commensurate with Experience Location: East Lansing Categories: Administrative/Business/Professional, PR/Media/Graphics/Comm/Fund Raising, Administrative Professionals- AP, Full Time (90-100%), Union, Remote-Friendly
Working/Functional Title Assoc Director of Corp & Found Relations
Position Summary The Eli Broad College of Business at Michigan State University is seeking an enthusiastic and energetic, results-oriented individual to join its highly successful fundraising team as the Associate Director of Corporate and Foundation Relations. Ranked one of the top 25 business programs in the country, the College completed the MSU Empower Extraordinary campaign in 2019, exceeding its $162M goal by raising $195M, including a $62 million capital project. We are now in the planning stages of the next campaign. The Associate Director will be an integral member of a team helping to steward the corporate and foundation gifts that were made during the last campaign and begin setting expectations for the next campaign.
The Associate Director will assist faculty and College administration in identifying, cultivating, and engaging potential corporate and foundation sources of support, with the overarching goal of soliciting major gifts in support of significant College initiatives.
Responsibilities:
This position is responsible for establishing and maintaining a portfolio of corporate and foundation prospects for the Eli Broad College of Business.
The successful candidate will:
Solicitation, Cultivation & Discovery:
• Meet with corporation and foundation prospects to understand their priorities and strategies with the objective of identifying and building significant alliances, leading to philanthropic support for the Eli Broad College of Business.
• Maintain an aggressive travel and communications schedule with new and existing corporate and foundation partners to build and enrich the Eli Broad College of Business relationships with them.
• Identify and build relationships with key alumni/friends within target corporations and foundations in order to seek advice and assistance in relationship building, charitable gifts, and research funding.
Strategy and Coordination:
• Establish close and effective working relationships with College administration, the University Advancement Corporate Relations and Foundation Relations teams, and MSU Business-CONNECT. This requires a person who is experienced and comfortable in working across administrative boundaries in an open and collegial environment.
• Become conversant with the Eli Broad College of Business's strengths and strategic priorities.
• In collaboration with the University Advancement Corporate Relations and Foundation Relations teams, participate in the development of a coordinated strategy to engage target corporations and foundations with the Eli Broad College of Business’ programs/researchers/educational mission.
• Participate in regular meetings with the University Advancement Corporate Relations and Foundation Relations teams.
• Establish effective working relationships with academic department heads, center and institute directors, faculty, and administrators throughout the Eli Broad College of Business in order to thoroughly understand their programs and priorities and to assist them in managing their respective corporate and foundation partnership activities.
• Create opportunities for regular and substantive contact between high-level corporate and foundation executives and the Eli Broad College of Business Dean, Chairs, Center Directors, and key faculty.
• Coordinate with the Eli Broad College of Business’s grant funding recipients to provide stewardship, monitor outcomes and prepare regular progress reports.
Reporting:
• Reports directly to the Eli Broad College of Business’s Senior Director of Development.
• Dotted line appointment to the Senior Director of Corporate Relations
Prospective candidates will have excellent written and communication skills, with the ability to produce business correspondence; solicitation materials; appropriate letters of acknowledgement; proposals to individuals, corporations, and foundations; and reports. She/he will have a demonstrated ability to establish and manage multiple business relationships with complex, multifaceted organizations successfully and simultaneously. Individuals sought for this role will have in-depth knowledge of the breadth of corporate interactions with higher education and with foundation practices. They will also have the ability to understand quickly and translate clearly and succinctly faculty research and its value to potential funders.
Unit Specific Education/Experience/Skills Knowledge equivalent to that which normally would be acquired by completing a four-year college degree program in Communications, Public Relations, Marketing, and/or Business; three to five years of related and progressively more responsible or expansive work experience in public relations, volunteer administration, professional and higher education fundraising, marketing or related field; or an equivalent combination of education and experience.
Desired Qualifications
• Minimum of bachelor’s degree in business or related field.
• Five years of demonstrated and progressively more responsible experience working within private sector corporations in higher education development, research and development, communications, public relations, or related field.
• Demonstrated experience in managing business relationships in a role such as account manager is desirable.
• Excellent writing and communication skills.
• Experience and level of sophistication needed to deal with high-level management in the corporate or education sector.
• Must be goal-oriented and an accomplished problem solver.
• Must be team-oriented/collaborative.
Equal Employment Opportunity Statement All qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, national origin, citizenship, age, disability or protected veteran status.
Required Application Materials Resume and cover letter
Special Instructions HOW TO APPLY
If you have any questions regarding this position, please contact Patricia Karam, Director of Recruitment, at karampat@msu.edu.
All candidates must submit an application, resume, and cover letter through the Michigan State University Human Resources web-based system, the URL for this website is careers.msu.edu. Please indicate the position number 901132 when submitting your application.
Screening of applicants will continue until the position is filled.
Work Hours 8 am - 5 pm with some evenings and weekends
Website Advancement.msu.edu
Remote Work Statement MSU strives to provide a flexible work environment and this position has been designated as remote-friendly. Remote-friendly means some or all of the duties can be performed remotely as mutually agreed upon.
Bidding eligibility ends October 10, 2023 at 11:55 P.M. Advertised: Oct 4, 2023 Eastern Daylight Time Applications close: Nov 2, 2023 Eastern Daylight Time
To apply, visit https://apptrkr.com/4676578
Associate Director of Devel, Vet Med / Development Officer II
Title: Development Officer II Level: AP14 Working Title: Associate Director of Development - College of Veterinary Medicine
Unit/Vision/Mission/Purpose/Info
Michigan State University’s College of Veterinary Medicine was formally established as a four-year, degree-granting program in 1910. Today, the college includes three biomedical science departments --Microbiology and Molecular Genetics, Pathobiology and Diagnostic Investigation, and Pharmacology and Toxicology; two clinical departments -- Large Animal Clinical Sciences and Small Animal Clinical Sciences; two service units -- the Veterinary Medical Center and the Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratory; and several research centers. The abundance and variety of animal agriculture and companion animals in Michigan provides the college with one of the largest clinical and diagnostic caseloads in the country. Educational and research opportunities are considerably enhanced by this large caseload which exceeds 27,000 each year. The Associate Director of Development is expected to be an accomplished, responsive and collaborative member of the College of Veterinary Medicine Development Team who executes an aggressive schedule of donor activity to ensure a continuous pipeline of private support for the college. The Associate Director will report directly to the Senior Director of Development for the College of Veterinary Medicine. The Associate Director of Development will manage a portfolio of approximately 100 major donor, corporate, and foundation prospects, focusing efforts on individual prospects whose philanthropic capacity is $50,000 or more and corporate prospects to support and grow research opportunities, including within a new clinical trials program. The Associate Director will average 12-15 strategic visits per month, which will result in greater engagement and movement toward a major gift solicitation at a rate of 2 to 4 solicitations per month, with all solicitation efforts cleared and coordinated with the college and University Advancement at Michigan State University. The Associate Director is expected to travel out of state while also managing prospect activity within Michigan.
The duties of the Associate Director of Development are as follows but are not limited to:
Job Duties:
FUNDRAISING
Solicitation, Cultivation & Discovery of Individual Prospects, Foundation and Corporate Entities (70% individuals, 30% corporations)
• Engage in the identification, cultivation, and solicitation of gifts from individuals, corporations, foundations, and professional groups in support of the College of Veterinary Medicine strategic and campaign priorities.
• Collaborate and coordinate with University Advancement, and administrators and faculty of the College of Veterinary Medicine to create and carry out fundraising strategies and solicitation of gifts of $50,000 and more.
• Work closely in partnership, and in alignment, with both the central University Advancement Corporate Relations and Foundation Relations teams.
• Identify and maintain an active pool of approximately 100 individual, foundation and corporate prospects under strategic management.
• Achieve the College fundraising goals through an active and consistent program of prospect/donor outreach that includes 180 significant contacts annually. Utilize phone calls, email, mail, social media and other strategies to identify, connect with and engage alums with the goal of soliciting financial support of the College.
• Identify, qualify and work to build strong, engaged relationships with major gift prospects to determine and merge prospect passions/interests/needs with the College of Veterinary Medicine areas of funding priority and opportunity.
• Develop and implement targeted strategies to maximize the involvement of key volunteers and faculty members in the College of Veterinary Medicine development effort. Schedule joint prospect visits with members of the college leadership, faculty or other Development colleagues, when appropriate.
• Serve as a liaison officer between the Unit and donors and potential donors to ensure that such information and service as may be desired is provided to the full extent permitted by University policy, rules and regulations.
• Serve as a consultant to donors on the tax advantage of various types of gifts.
• Plan and host campus visits for donors or potential donors or their representatives.
• Prepare annual personal fundraising goals and analyze/report goal accomplishment. Assist in planning and implementing special purpose appeals as necessary.
PROGRAM MANAGEMENT
• Develop and prepare solicitation appeals, development and alum articles, marketing and communication materials, proposals, and other materials with focus on gifts of $50,000 or more that, through the clear identification of funding priorities and articulation of the case for support of the college, engender a level of understanding that is conducive to giving and that help achieve the Unit’s fundraising goals.
• Assist with the coordination of and participation in college alum and donor engagement, prospecting, recognition and stewardship events, as appropriate.
• Utilize constituent relations management programs to coordinate with other development colleagues, record contact activities, update donor information, record strategic moves management steps and gift documentation as appropriate.
• Build working relationships with internal constituents to enhance information exchange between units within the College of Veterinary Medicine, including advising faculty and administrators of appropriate fund-raising strategies.
COMMUNICATIONS/INTERPERSONAL RELATIONSHIPS
Interacts with:
• Michigan State University alums/individuals/Corporations/Foundations/Businesses/Employees and corporate leadership – in order to solicit as potential donors, manage donor requests, and to cultivate and train them as potential volunteers.
• Faculty and Department Chairs, Program Directors and other College of Veterinary Medicine leaders – in order to assist in the understanding and implementation of fundraising procedures, to seek their advice on funding needs, to answer development questions, to advise them on development strategy and to solicit them as potential donors.
• Peers – in order to obtain advice and counsel on options being considered for programs and in order to coordinate the cultivation and solicitation of donor prospects.
Education/Experience:
Required: The job requires: knowledge equivalent to that which normally would be acquired by completing a four-year college degree program in Communications, Public Relations, Marketing, Business or related discipline; three to five years of related and progressively more responsible or expansive work experience in professional and/or higher education fund raising, sales, public relations, volunteer administration, marketing or related field; or an equivalent combination of education and experience.
Desired: A Bachelor’s degree; master’s degree preferred; five years of related and progressively more responsible or expansive experience in professional fundraising, public relations, marketing or related field; working knowledge of tax laws affecting charitable giving; or an equivalent combination of education and experience; possession of a valid vehicle operator’s license; excellent writing and verbal communication skills; excellent interpersonal skills; experience in public speaking; collaborative team-oriented style; experience with “Moves Management” or related strategic relationship development; ability to “close” gifts or business deals with demonstrative experiences closing gifts of $50,000 or more; working knowledge of tax laws affecting charitable giving; travel involving automobile, airline and rail.
We will continue evaluation applications until the position is filled.
How to Apply: If you have any questions regarding this position, please contact Patricia Karam, Director of Recruitment, at karampat@msu.edu.
All candidates must submit an application and resume through the Michigan State University Human Resources web-based system the URL for that website is careers.msu.edu.. Please indicate the position number 846829 when submitting your application.
To apply, visit https://apptrkr.com/4574237
MSU is an affirmative action, equal opportunity employer.
MSU is committed to achieving excellence through a diverse workforce and inclusive culture that encourages all people to reach their full potential. The University actively encourages applications and/or nominations of women, persons of color, veterans and persons with disabilities.
Full Time
Associate Director of Devel, Vet Med / Development Officer II
Title: Development Officer II Level: AP14 Working Title: Associate Director of Development - College of Veterinary Medicine
Unit/Vision/Mission/Purpose/Info
Michigan State University’s College of Veterinary Medicine was formally established as a four-year, degree-granting program in 1910. Today, the college includes three biomedical science departments --Microbiology and Molecular Genetics, Pathobiology and Diagnostic Investigation, and Pharmacology and Toxicology; two clinical departments -- Large Animal Clinical Sciences and Small Animal Clinical Sciences; two service units -- the Veterinary Medical Center and the Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratory; and several research centers. The abundance and variety of animal agriculture and companion animals in Michigan provides the college with one of the largest clinical and diagnostic caseloads in the country. Educational and research opportunities are considerably enhanced by this large caseload which exceeds 27,000 each year. The Associate Director of Development is expected to be an accomplished, responsive and collaborative member of the College of Veterinary Medicine Development Team who executes an aggressive schedule of donor activity to ensure a continuous pipeline of private support for the college. The Associate Director will report directly to the Senior Director of Development for the College of Veterinary Medicine. The Associate Director of Development will manage a portfolio of approximately 100 major donor, corporate, and foundation prospects, focusing efforts on individual prospects whose philanthropic capacity is $50,000 or more and corporate prospects to support and grow research opportunities, including within a new clinical trials program. The Associate Director will average 12-15 strategic visits per month, which will result in greater engagement and movement toward a major gift solicitation at a rate of 2 to 4 solicitations per month, with all solicitation efforts cleared and coordinated with the college and University Advancement at Michigan State University. The Associate Director is expected to travel out of state while also managing prospect activity within Michigan.
The duties of the Associate Director of Development are as follows but are not limited to:
Job Duties:
FUNDRAISING
Solicitation, Cultivation & Discovery of Individual Prospects, Foundation and Corporate Entities (70% individuals, 30% corporations)
• Engage in the identification, cultivation, and solicitation of gifts from individuals, corporations, foundations, and professional groups in support of the College of Veterinary Medicine strategic and campaign priorities.
• Collaborate and coordinate with University Advancement, and administrators and faculty of the College of Veterinary Medicine to create and carry out fundraising strategies and solicitation of gifts of $50,000 and more.
• Work closely in partnership, and in alignment, with both the central University Advancement Corporate Relations and Foundation Relations teams.
• Identify and maintain an active pool of approximately 100 individual, foundation and corporate prospects under strategic management.
• Achieve the College fundraising goals through an active and consistent program of prospect/donor outreach that includes 180 significant contacts annually. Utilize phone calls, email, mail, social media and other strategies to identify, connect with and engage alums with the goal of soliciting financial support of the College.
• Identify, qualify and work to build strong, engaged relationships with major gift prospects to determine and merge prospect passions/interests/needs with the College of Veterinary Medicine areas of funding priority and opportunity.
• Develop and implement targeted strategies to maximize the involvement of key volunteers and faculty members in the College of Veterinary Medicine development effort. Schedule joint prospect visits with members of the college leadership, faculty or other Development colleagues, when appropriate.
• Serve as a liaison officer between the Unit and donors and potential donors to ensure that such information and service as may be desired is provided to the full extent permitted by University policy, rules and regulations.
• Serve as a consultant to donors on the tax advantage of various types of gifts.
• Plan and host campus visits for donors or potential donors or their representatives.
• Prepare annual personal fundraising goals and analyze/report goal accomplishment. Assist in planning and implementing special purpose appeals as necessary.
PROGRAM MANAGEMENT
• Develop and prepare solicitation appeals, development and alum articles, marketing and communication materials, proposals, and other materials with focus on gifts of $50,000 or more that, through the clear identification of funding priorities and articulation of the case for support of the college, engender a level of understanding that is conducive to giving and that help achieve the Unit’s fundraising goals.
• Assist with the coordination of and participation in college alum and donor engagement, prospecting, recognition and stewardship events, as appropriate.
• Utilize constituent relations management programs to coordinate with other development colleagues, record contact activities, update donor information, record strategic moves management steps and gift documentation as appropriate.
• Build working relationships with internal constituents to enhance information exchange between units within the College of Veterinary Medicine, including advising faculty and administrators of appropriate fund-raising strategies.
COMMUNICATIONS/INTERPERSONAL RELATIONSHIPS
Interacts with:
• Michigan State University alums/individuals/Corporations/Foundations/Businesses/Employees and corporate leadership – in order to solicit as potential donors, manage donor requests, and to cultivate and train them as potential volunteers.
• Faculty and Department Chairs, Program Directors and other College of Veterinary Medicine leaders – in order to assist in the understanding and implementation of fundraising procedures, to seek their advice on funding needs, to answer development questions, to advise them on development strategy and to solicit them as potential donors.
• Peers – in order to obtain advice and counsel on options being considered for programs and in order to coordinate the cultivation and solicitation of donor prospects.
Education/Experience:
Required: The job requires: knowledge equivalent to that which normally would be acquired by completing a four-year college degree program in Communications, Public Relations, Marketing, Business or related discipline; three to five years of related and progressively more responsible or expansive work experience in professional and/or higher education fund raising, sales, public relations, volunteer administration, marketing or related field; or an equivalent combination of education and experience.
Desired: A Bachelor’s degree; master’s degree preferred; five years of related and progressively more responsible or expansive experience in professional fundraising, public relations, marketing or related field; working knowledge of tax laws affecting charitable giving; or an equivalent combination of education and experience; possession of a valid vehicle operator’s license; excellent writing and verbal communication skills; excellent interpersonal skills; experience in public speaking; collaborative team-oriented style; experience with “Moves Management” or related strategic relationship development; ability to “close” gifts or business deals with demonstrative experiences closing gifts of $50,000 or more; working knowledge of tax laws affecting charitable giving; travel involving automobile, airline and rail.
We will continue evaluation applications until the position is filled.
How to Apply: If you have any questions regarding this position, please contact Patricia Karam, Director of Recruitment, at karampat@msu.edu.
All candidates must submit an application and resume through the Michigan State University Human Resources web-based system the URL for that website is careers.msu.edu.. Please indicate the position number 846829 when submitting your application.
To apply, visit https://apptrkr.com/4574237
MSU is an affirmative action, equal opportunity employer.
MSU is committed to achieving excellence through a diverse workforce and inclusive culture that encourages all people to reach their full potential. The University actively encourages applications and/or nominations of women, persons of color, veterans and persons with disabilities.
Title: Development Officer I Level: AP12 Working Title: Assistant Director of Development
College of Agriculture and Natural Resources
The College of Agriculture and Natural Resources (CANR), AgBioResearch and MSU Extension Advancement team is seeking an enthusiastic, energetic and results-oriented individual to join its dynamic fundraising team as the Assistant Director of Development. The Assistant Director will be instrumental in helping the college achieve increased fundraising success.
The Assistant Director of Development is expected to be an accomplished, responsive and collaborative member of the CANR Advancement team who executes an aggressive schedule of donor activity to ensure a continuous pipeline of private support for the college. Reporting to the Associate Director of Development and Alumni Relations, and working closely with the other office staff, administration and the volunteers, the Assistant Director will develop and manage a portfolio of 150 special donor prospects, employing an aggressive, strategic moves management program, averaging 12 – 15 face-to-face strategic visits per month including a strategic focus on the identification and discovery of new prospects, and 2 to 4 solicitations per month. The position will dedicate a significant amount of time traveling, with emphasis initially focused on prospects in Michigan.
Job Duties:
FUNDRAISING
Collaborate and coordinate with the CANR Development Team, college administrators and educators, and Advancement staff to create and carry out fundraising strategies and solicitation of gifts.
• Build strong, engaged relationships with prospects to determine and merge their passions/interests/needs with CANR funding priorities and opportunities.
• Build working relationships with internal CANR constituents to enhance information exchange of appropriate fundraising priorities and strategies.
• Engage 12 to 15 prospects through personal visits which result in strategic “moves” toward closure of major and special gifts each month.
• Develop and deliver funding proposals and case statements to effectively communicate in writing and verbally, the strategic funding priorities for the College of Agriculture and Natural Resources.
• Maintain accurate donor/prospect records for planning and documenting significant strategic prospect “moves” toward closure of gifts.
• Implement a yearly strategic fundraising plan as part of the CANR Development team in collaboration with University Advancement.
• Identify and maintain an active pool of 150 prospects under management.
• Achieve CANR fundraising goals through a consistent program of prospect/donor outreach that includes 150 personal visits annually. Utilize phone calls, email, mail, social media, and other strategies to identify, connect with, and engage alumni with the goal of soliciting financial support.
• Identify, qualify, and work to build strong, engaged relationships with University Advancement regional staff.
• Work in conjunction with annual giving to develop messages and materials for annual fund campaigns, including faculty/staff and student philanthropy.
• Prepare annual personal fundraising goals and analyze/report goal accomplishment. Assist in planning and implementing special purpose appeals as necessary.
PROGRAM MANAGEMENT
• Develop and prepare annual giving solicitation appeals with focus on gifts renewing and engaging young alumni through the clear identification of funding priorities and articulation of the case for support of the college, engender a level of understanding that is conducive to giving and that help achieve the Unit’s fundraising goals.
• Assist with the coordination of and participation in college alumni and donor engagement, prospecting, recognition, and stewardship events, as appropriate.
• Utilize MSU’s Advance alumni and donor database to coordinate with other development colleagues, record contact activities, update donor information, record strategic moves management steps, and gift documentation as appropriate.
• Build working relationships with internal constituents to enhance information exchange between units within CANR, including advising faculty and administrators of appropriate fundraising strategies.
COMMUNICATIONS/INTERPERSONAL RELATIONSHIPS Interacts with:
• Michigan State University alumni/individuals/Corporations/Businesses/Employees and corporate leadership – in order to solicit as potential donors, manage donor requests, and to cultivate and train them as potential volunteers.
• Faculty and Department Chairs, Program Directors and other CANR leaders – in order to assist in the understanding and implementation of fundraising procedures, to seek their advice on funding needs, to answer development questions, to advise them on development strategy and to solicit them as potential donors.
• Peers – in order to obtain advice and counsel on options being considered for programs and in order to coordinate the cultivation and solicitation of donor prospects.
EDUCATION/EXPERIENCE
Required: The job requires: knowledge equivalent to that which normally would be acquired by completing a four-year college degree program in Communications, Public Relations, Marketing and/or Business; one to three of related and progressively more responsible or expansive work experience in public relations, professional and higher education fundraising, marketing or related field; or an equivalent combination of education and experience.
Desired:
• A Bachelor’s degree.
• Five years of related and progressively more responsible or expansive experience in professional fundraising, public relations, marketing, volunteer administration, or related field; or an equivalent combination of education and experience; possession of a valid vehicle operator’s license.
• Excellent writing and verbal communication skills.
• Excellent interpersonal skills.
• Experience in public speaking.
• Collaborative team-oriented style.
• Experience with “Moves Management” or related strategic relationship development.
• Ability to “close” gifts or business deals with demonstrative experiences closing gifts of $50,000 or more.
• Working knowledge of tax laws affecting charitable giving.
• Travel involving automobile, airline and rail.
HOW TO APPLY
We will continue evaluating applications until the position is filled. If you have any questions regarding this position, please contact Pat Karam, Director of Recruitment at karampat@msu.edu
All candidates must submit an application, resume and cover letter through the Michigan State University Human Resources web-based system the URL for that website is careers.msu.edu. Please indicate position number 878842 when submitting your application.
To apply, visit https://apptrkr.com/4400773
MSU is an affirmative action, equal opportunity employer.
MSU is committed to achieving excellence through a diverse workforce and inclusive culture that encourages all people to reach their full potential. The University actively encourages applications and/or nominations of women, persons of color, veterans and persons with disabilities.
Full Time
Title: Development Officer I Level: AP12 Working Title: Assistant Director of Development
College of Agriculture and Natural Resources
The College of Agriculture and Natural Resources (CANR), AgBioResearch and MSU Extension Advancement team is seeking an enthusiastic, energetic and results-oriented individual to join its dynamic fundraising team as the Assistant Director of Development. The Assistant Director will be instrumental in helping the college achieve increased fundraising success.
The Assistant Director of Development is expected to be an accomplished, responsive and collaborative member of the CANR Advancement team who executes an aggressive schedule of donor activity to ensure a continuous pipeline of private support for the college. Reporting to the Associate Director of Development and Alumni Relations, and working closely with the other office staff, administration and the volunteers, the Assistant Director will develop and manage a portfolio of 150 special donor prospects, employing an aggressive, strategic moves management program, averaging 12 – 15 face-to-face strategic visits per month including a strategic focus on the identification and discovery of new prospects, and 2 to 4 solicitations per month. The position will dedicate a significant amount of time traveling, with emphasis initially focused on prospects in Michigan.
Job Duties:
FUNDRAISING
Collaborate and coordinate with the CANR Development Team, college administrators and educators, and Advancement staff to create and carry out fundraising strategies and solicitation of gifts.
• Build strong, engaged relationships with prospects to determine and merge their passions/interests/needs with CANR funding priorities and opportunities.
• Build working relationships with internal CANR constituents to enhance information exchange of appropriate fundraising priorities and strategies.
• Engage 12 to 15 prospects through personal visits which result in strategic “moves” toward closure of major and special gifts each month.
• Develop and deliver funding proposals and case statements to effectively communicate in writing and verbally, the strategic funding priorities for the College of Agriculture and Natural Resources.
• Maintain accurate donor/prospect records for planning and documenting significant strategic prospect “moves” toward closure of gifts.
• Implement a yearly strategic fundraising plan as part of the CANR Development team in collaboration with University Advancement.
• Identify and maintain an active pool of 150 prospects under management.
• Achieve CANR fundraising goals through a consistent program of prospect/donor outreach that includes 150 personal visits annually. Utilize phone calls, email, mail, social media, and other strategies to identify, connect with, and engage alumni with the goal of soliciting financial support.
• Identify, qualify, and work to build strong, engaged relationships with University Advancement regional staff.
• Work in conjunction with annual giving to develop messages and materials for annual fund campaigns, including faculty/staff and student philanthropy.
• Prepare annual personal fundraising goals and analyze/report goal accomplishment. Assist in planning and implementing special purpose appeals as necessary.
PROGRAM MANAGEMENT
• Develop and prepare annual giving solicitation appeals with focus on gifts renewing and engaging young alumni through the clear identification of funding priorities and articulation of the case for support of the college, engender a level of understanding that is conducive to giving and that help achieve the Unit’s fundraising goals.
• Assist with the coordination of and participation in college alumni and donor engagement, prospecting, recognition, and stewardship events, as appropriate.
• Utilize MSU’s Advance alumni and donor database to coordinate with other development colleagues, record contact activities, update donor information, record strategic moves management steps, and gift documentation as appropriate.
• Build working relationships with internal constituents to enhance information exchange between units within CANR, including advising faculty and administrators of appropriate fundraising strategies.
COMMUNICATIONS/INTERPERSONAL RELATIONSHIPS Interacts with:
• Michigan State University alumni/individuals/Corporations/Businesses/Employees and corporate leadership – in order to solicit as potential donors, manage donor requests, and to cultivate and train them as potential volunteers.
• Faculty and Department Chairs, Program Directors and other CANR leaders – in order to assist in the understanding and implementation of fundraising procedures, to seek their advice on funding needs, to answer development questions, to advise them on development strategy and to solicit them as potential donors.
• Peers – in order to obtain advice and counsel on options being considered for programs and in order to coordinate the cultivation and solicitation of donor prospects.
EDUCATION/EXPERIENCE
Required: The job requires: knowledge equivalent to that which normally would be acquired by completing a four-year college degree program in Communications, Public Relations, Marketing and/or Business; one to three of related and progressively more responsible or expansive work experience in public relations, professional and higher education fundraising, marketing or related field; or an equivalent combination of education and experience.
Desired:
• A Bachelor’s degree.
• Five years of related and progressively more responsible or expansive experience in professional fundraising, public relations, marketing, volunteer administration, or related field; or an equivalent combination of education and experience; possession of a valid vehicle operator’s license.
• Excellent writing and verbal communication skills.
• Excellent interpersonal skills.
• Experience in public speaking.
• Collaborative team-oriented style.
• Experience with “Moves Management” or related strategic relationship development.
• Ability to “close” gifts or business deals with demonstrative experiences closing gifts of $50,000 or more.
• Working knowledge of tax laws affecting charitable giving.
• Travel involving automobile, airline and rail.
HOW TO APPLY
We will continue evaluating applications until the position is filled. If you have any questions regarding this position, please contact Pat Karam, Director of Recruitment at karampat@msu.edu
All candidates must submit an application, resume and cover letter through the Michigan State University Human Resources web-based system the URL for that website is careers.msu.edu. Please indicate position number 878842 when submitting your application.
To apply, visit https://apptrkr.com/4400773
MSU is an affirmative action, equal opportunity employer.
MSU is committed to achieving excellence through a diverse workforce and inclusive culture that encourages all people to reach their full potential. The University actively encourages applications and/or nominations of women, persons of color, veterans and persons with disabilities.
The John F. Kennedy Center for Performing Arts
Washington DC
About The Kennedy Center “I am certain that after the dust of centuries has passed over our cities, we, too, will be remembered not for victories or defeats in battle or in politics, but for our contribution to the human spirit.” – President John F. Kennedy The Kennedy Center is the nation’s cultural center and living memorial to President John F. Kennedy. Located on the banks of the Potomac River in Washington, D.C., the Center presents performances across all genres, and is also home to artistic affiliates Washington National Opera and National Symphony Orchestra. At the Kennedy Center, we strive to foster belonging and empowerment at work. We are able to advance our mission because of our committed and passionate employees. We are fortunate to be able to leverage their diverse perspectives, life experiences and skills to inform how our workplace can be a safe, transparent, and replenishing community. The Kennedy Center is an equal opportunity employer and does not discriminate against any employee or applicant based on race, religion, gender identity, sexual orientation, disability, veteran status, marital status, pregnancy or related condition, or any other basis protected by law. Mission Statement: As the nation's performing arts center, and a living memorial to President John F. Kennedy, we are a leader for the arts across America and around the world, reaching and connecting with artists, inspiring and educating communities. We welcome all to create, experience, learn about, and engage with the arts. Why Join Us We offer a comprehensive range of benefits to all full-time employees including: Staff offers for discount tickets Retirement plan with organization matching (after 1 year of employment) Qualifying employer for the Public Student Loan Forgiveness Program (PSLF) Commuter programs including pre-tax options for discounted parking and SmartBenefits (WMATA) Annual Leave, Sick Leave, and Personal Days available immediately upon hire 11 paid holidays per year Medical, Dental, and Vision benefits with FSA and HSA options, and paid FMLA Flexible work arrangements We like to have fun! Check out the Kennedy Center National Dance Day 2022 staff video! Job Description The Manager of Individual Giving, NSO oversees the raising of funds from individual donors to support all National Symphony Orchestra operations and programming by planning and assisting in the execution of campaigns which provide operating funds for the ongoing operations and future successes of the National Symphony Orchestra. This position will manage the fundraising processes for the NSO Circles (donors $1,200-$14,999), Major Gifts (donors $15,000+), Endowment, and mid-level legacy giving (in collaboration with the Kennedy Center’s Planned Giving Office). Key Responsibilities Initiate and build ongoing relationships with current and prospective Circles donors ($1,800+), Major Gifts donors ($15,000+), endowment campaign and mid-level legacy giving supporters to increase donor retention, engagement, and loyalty. In collaboration with the PDIA team, identify, cultivate, and develop a robust pipeline for NSO Circles and Major Gifts campaigns. As necessary and appropriate, personally solicit contributions and/or manage follow-up to secure closure of major gifts. Develop revenue projections, analyze current data and trends, and report on Circles, Major Gifts, and Endowment campaigns. Inventory and review solicitation, acknowledgements, stewardship, and donor recognition materials within each campaign for quality and consistency. Develop and supervise the preparation of creative, individually tailored written and/or alternative media presentations for solicitations and reports for the NSO Executive Director and NSO Board of Directors. Alongside the NSO Chief Development Officer and NSO Director of Stewardship and Operations, manage the logistics, pipeline, and donor stewardship of the NSO’s endowment campaign Act as a primary liaison to the programming and education staff to: solicit information about program/project/festival plans as they are developed; evaluate current programs for funding potential and recommend new initiatives based on known interests of funders, seek out new funding possibilities to establish institutional priorities and areas where collaborative efforts will advance the Center towards achievement of its goals. Database management, including regular up-keep of data for Major Gifts, Endowment, and Prospects Database management (reporting, list pulls, everyday up keep) Management: Effectively manage Assistant Manager of NSO Individual Giving by supervising day-to-day work and investing in their continued professional growth Hold weekly check-in meetings and lead annual review process Collaborate on projects often, providing the Assistant Manager a consistent opportunity to grow professionally. Key Qualifications Bachelor’s degree or applicable professional experience. Minimum 5-7 years development or related experience required. Working knowledge of the performing arts is preferred. Candidate must be local or willing to relocate to the DMV area.
Full Time Regular
About The Kennedy Center “I am certain that after the dust of centuries has passed over our cities, we, too, will be remembered not for victories or defeats in battle or in politics, but for our contribution to the human spirit.” – President John F. Kennedy The Kennedy Center is the nation’s cultural center and living memorial to President John F. Kennedy. Located on the banks of the Potomac River in Washington, D.C., the Center presents performances across all genres, and is also home to artistic affiliates Washington National Opera and National Symphony Orchestra. At the Kennedy Center, we strive to foster belonging and empowerment at work. We are able to advance our mission because of our committed and passionate employees. We are fortunate to be able to leverage their diverse perspectives, life experiences and skills to inform how our workplace can be a safe, transparent, and replenishing community. The Kennedy Center is an equal opportunity employer and does not discriminate against any employee or applicant based on race, religion, gender identity, sexual orientation, disability, veteran status, marital status, pregnancy or related condition, or any other basis protected by law. Mission Statement: As the nation's performing arts center, and a living memorial to President John F. Kennedy, we are a leader for the arts across America and around the world, reaching and connecting with artists, inspiring and educating communities. We welcome all to create, experience, learn about, and engage with the arts. Why Join Us We offer a comprehensive range of benefits to all full-time employees including: Staff offers for discount tickets Retirement plan with organization matching (after 1 year of employment) Qualifying employer for the Public Student Loan Forgiveness Program (PSLF) Commuter programs including pre-tax options for discounted parking and SmartBenefits (WMATA) Annual Leave, Sick Leave, and Personal Days available immediately upon hire 11 paid holidays per year Medical, Dental, and Vision benefits with FSA and HSA options, and paid FMLA Flexible work arrangements We like to have fun! Check out the Kennedy Center National Dance Day 2022 staff video! Job Description The Manager of Individual Giving, NSO oversees the raising of funds from individual donors to support all National Symphony Orchestra operations and programming by planning and assisting in the execution of campaigns which provide operating funds for the ongoing operations and future successes of the National Symphony Orchestra. This position will manage the fundraising processes for the NSO Circles (donors $1,200-$14,999), Major Gifts (donors $15,000+), Endowment, and mid-level legacy giving (in collaboration with the Kennedy Center’s Planned Giving Office). Key Responsibilities Initiate and build ongoing relationships with current and prospective Circles donors ($1,800+), Major Gifts donors ($15,000+), endowment campaign and mid-level legacy giving supporters to increase donor retention, engagement, and loyalty. In collaboration with the PDIA team, identify, cultivate, and develop a robust pipeline for NSO Circles and Major Gifts campaigns. As necessary and appropriate, personally solicit contributions and/or manage follow-up to secure closure of major gifts. Develop revenue projections, analyze current data and trends, and report on Circles, Major Gifts, and Endowment campaigns. Inventory and review solicitation, acknowledgements, stewardship, and donor recognition materials within each campaign for quality and consistency. Develop and supervise the preparation of creative, individually tailored written and/or alternative media presentations for solicitations and reports for the NSO Executive Director and NSO Board of Directors. Alongside the NSO Chief Development Officer and NSO Director of Stewardship and Operations, manage the logistics, pipeline, and donor stewardship of the NSO’s endowment campaign Act as a primary liaison to the programming and education staff to: solicit information about program/project/festival plans as they are developed; evaluate current programs for funding potential and recommend new initiatives based on known interests of funders, seek out new funding possibilities to establish institutional priorities and areas where collaborative efforts will advance the Center towards achievement of its goals. Database management, including regular up-keep of data for Major Gifts, Endowment, and Prospects Database management (reporting, list pulls, everyday up keep) Management: Effectively manage Assistant Manager of NSO Individual Giving by supervising day-to-day work and investing in their continued professional growth Hold weekly check-in meetings and lead annual review process Collaborate on projects often, providing the Assistant Manager a consistent opportunity to grow professionally. Key Qualifications Bachelor’s degree or applicable professional experience. Minimum 5-7 years development or related experience required. Working knowledge of the performing arts is preferred. Candidate must be local or willing to relocate to the DMV area.
California Lutheran University
Thousand Oaks, CA, United States
Assistant Director of Leadership Giving Position Category: Staff (Exempt) FLSA: Exempt FTE: 1 Location: Thousand Oaks University Background: The mission of California Lutheran University is to educate leaders for a global society who are strong in character and judgment, confident in their identity and vocation, and committed to service and justice. Founded in 1959 in beautiful Ventura County, the university has an enrollment of about 4,000 undergraduate and graduate students who come from across the nation and around the world from a diversity of backgrounds, cultures and faiths. As a federally recognized Hispanic-Serving Institution, Cal Lutheran is looking for candidates with a dedication to and success in working in diverse communities. The university is committed to an inclusive learning and work environment that values individual differences and respects each person’s dignity. Basic Function: Reporting to the Senior Director of Annual Giving, the Assistant Director of Leadership Giving will be responsible for revenue generation from a robust portfolio of mid-level donors who have aligned philanthropic interests and the capacity to make outright gifts of $1,000 and more, with an emphasis on donors giving between $1,000 and $25,000. Representative Duties: dentify, qualify, manage and solicit a portfolio of approximately 150 – 200 donors annually. Donors will have the capacity and inclination to make mid-level leadership gifts ranging from $1,000 – $25,000, with an emphasis on upgrading gifts at the high four and low five-figure levels. E Develop, plan and implement comprehensive outreach and engagement strategies in pursuit of developing a fundraising pipeline for securing financial contributions from donors and prospects, including identification, qualification, cultivation, solicitation, stewardship, and value-added donor engagement events, in support of the university’s strategic priorities. Effectively move leadership annual donors through the pipeline in collaboration with the Senior Director of Annual Giving, members of the Development Team, as well as our annual giving campus partners, as appropriate. E Build relationships with identified prospects with the goal of qualifying additions into the portfolio. E Partner and collaborate with the Senior Director of Annual Giving, members of the Development Team, and our annual giving campus partners to develop and implement strategies for the cultivation and stewardship of donors that will increase their connection, involvement and giving. E Manage stewardship plans for new and renewing donors at the $1,000 – $10,000 levels. E Arrange and complete 120 virtual and in-person donor meetings per year to build and deepen relationships, with the ultimate goal of soliciting and closing annual gifts of up to $25,000. E Conduct regular portfolio review and partner with members of the Development Team, and/or Vice President of University Advancement on transition of donors to the major and planned gift program when there is an indication of greater giving capacity and inclination. E In collaboration with the Senior Director of Annual Giving, coordinate and implement an ongoing stewardship program for donors giving at the Fellows level. E Solicit gifts both independently and collaboratively with other staff members. Craft written proposals when appropriate. E Exemplary writing skills, exceptional interpersonal skills, and strong attention to detail working in a fast-paced environment are essential requirements for this position Use Raiser’s Edge database to document moves management process, ensuring key donor information is recorded and pertinent research is captured. E Optimize, develop and implement systems, process, and best practices, that support effective cultivation and stewardship as a strategy for advancing relationships and giving, and strengthens a culture of philanthropy. E Meet agreed upon fundraising metrics as defined by supervisor, including donor meetings and proposals, and prepare quantitative and anecdotal reports on leadership gift program accomplishments. E Collaborate with Senior Director of Annual Giving, Development staff members, and Vice President of University Advancement to coordinate and share/exchange pertinent information about donors, strategies and activities. E Ensure compliance with all University fundraising policies, goals and procedures, including responsibility for following all protocols for prospect and donor management established and implemented by University Advancement, and the Donor Bill of Rights. E Support the Office of Annual Giving and annual giving campus partners in the planning, strategy, and implementation of Cal Lutheran’s Cares Day. E Regularly attend donor events. E Perform other duties as assigned. E *E = Essential Duties Knowledge Of: Exceptional communication skills and advanced interpersonal skills with a demonstrated ability to effectively build mutually beneficial relationships with a diverse group of people. Strong writing skills and excellent editing skills. Working with a diverse student body, faculty, staff and constituents. Planning, prioritizing and managing a diversified workload with independent judgment and resourcefulness to planning implementing events. IRS regulations for making a charitable gift. Knowledge of gift acceptance and agreement procedures including planned giving programs and gift vehicles. Proficient in database usage, strong word processing skills and knowledge of computer programs including Microsoft Office and Google Suite. Financial reports and data. Ability To: Work collaboratively with a team. Support and advance a Culture of Philanthropy in a fast-paced, dynamic environment. Reach ambitious goals. Thrive in a diverse and inclusive environment. Embrace manage through change. Model ethical behavior under all circumstances. Engage in positive employee relations on and off campus. Manage confidential data and information with the ability to discern internal and external audiences. Articulate a strong commitment to diversity and be able to work inclusively with individuals from different backgrounds. Drive a car to carry out work tasks as needed. Minimum Qualifications: Any combination equivalent to: Bachelor’s degree required and 3 years of direct or related fundraising experience leveraging high-volume phone outreach. Preferred Qualifications: Experience with Raiser’s Edge/NXT database.Budget monitoring and reconciling experience.Academic or non-profit industry experience. Licenses and Other Requirements: Valid California driver’s license.Reliable transportation.Availability to work weekends and evenings as needed.Flexibility to travel. Physical Abilities: Detect to understand appropriate written correspondence; operate a computer and other office productivity machinery, such as a calculator, copy machine, and computer printer; communicate to exchange information in person, in writing, on the telephone and by email; stationary position for extended periods of time; move or transport light objects; position self to store and/or retrieve files. Working Environment: Office environment; driving a vehicle to conduct work; evening or variable hours. Hiring Range $65,000 - $78,000 Posting Number: Staff002522022 Open Date: 05/31/2023 Close Date: 6/21/2023 To apply, visit https://careers.callutheran.edu/postings/10895 California Lutheran University is committed to providing equal opportunity in employment for all persons, regardless of race, religious creed, color, national origin, ancestry, physical disability, mental disability, medical condition, marital status, sex, age, sexual orientation, genetic information, gender, gender identity or expression, or any other basis protected by applicable law. No person shall be excluded from participation in, be denied the benefits of, or be subjected to discrimination in any program, activity or facility of the University on the basis of these factors in a manner consistent with applicable federal and state laws, regulations, ordinances, orders and rules, and University’s policies, procedures, and processes. Upon request, reasonable accommodations in the application process can be provided to individuals with qualifying disabilities. Please contact the Human Resources Department for further information or to request an accommodation. jeid-463aed21cfcdb94d970d0c3544844137
Full Time
Assistant Director of Leadership Giving Position Category: Staff (Exempt) FLSA: Exempt FTE: 1 Location: Thousand Oaks University Background: The mission of California Lutheran University is to educate leaders for a global society who are strong in character and judgment, confident in their identity and vocation, and committed to service and justice. Founded in 1959 in beautiful Ventura County, the university has an enrollment of about 4,000 undergraduate and graduate students who come from across the nation and around the world from a diversity of backgrounds, cultures and faiths. As a federally recognized Hispanic-Serving Institution, Cal Lutheran is looking for candidates with a dedication to and success in working in diverse communities. The university is committed to an inclusive learning and work environment that values individual differences and respects each person’s dignity. Basic Function: Reporting to the Senior Director of Annual Giving, the Assistant Director of Leadership Giving will be responsible for revenue generation from a robust portfolio of mid-level donors who have aligned philanthropic interests and the capacity to make outright gifts of $1,000 and more, with an emphasis on donors giving between $1,000 and $25,000. Representative Duties: dentify, qualify, manage and solicit a portfolio of approximately 150 – 200 donors annually. Donors will have the capacity and inclination to make mid-level leadership gifts ranging from $1,000 – $25,000, with an emphasis on upgrading gifts at the high four and low five-figure levels. E Develop, plan and implement comprehensive outreach and engagement strategies in pursuit of developing a fundraising pipeline for securing financial contributions from donors and prospects, including identification, qualification, cultivation, solicitation, stewardship, and value-added donor engagement events, in support of the university’s strategic priorities. Effectively move leadership annual donors through the pipeline in collaboration with the Senior Director of Annual Giving, members of the Development Team, as well as our annual giving campus partners, as appropriate. E Build relationships with identified prospects with the goal of qualifying additions into the portfolio. E Partner and collaborate with the Senior Director of Annual Giving, members of the Development Team, and our annual giving campus partners to develop and implement strategies for the cultivation and stewardship of donors that will increase their connection, involvement and giving. E Manage stewardship plans for new and renewing donors at the $1,000 – $10,000 levels. E Arrange and complete 120 virtual and in-person donor meetings per year to build and deepen relationships, with the ultimate goal of soliciting and closing annual gifts of up to $25,000. E Conduct regular portfolio review and partner with members of the Development Team, and/or Vice President of University Advancement on transition of donors to the major and planned gift program when there is an indication of greater giving capacity and inclination. E In collaboration with the Senior Director of Annual Giving, coordinate and implement an ongoing stewardship program for donors giving at the Fellows level. E Solicit gifts both independently and collaboratively with other staff members. Craft written proposals when appropriate. E Exemplary writing skills, exceptional interpersonal skills, and strong attention to detail working in a fast-paced environment are essential requirements for this position Use Raiser’s Edge database to document moves management process, ensuring key donor information is recorded and pertinent research is captured. E Optimize, develop and implement systems, process, and best practices, that support effective cultivation and stewardship as a strategy for advancing relationships and giving, and strengthens a culture of philanthropy. E Meet agreed upon fundraising metrics as defined by supervisor, including donor meetings and proposals, and prepare quantitative and anecdotal reports on leadership gift program accomplishments. E Collaborate with Senior Director of Annual Giving, Development staff members, and Vice President of University Advancement to coordinate and share/exchange pertinent information about donors, strategies and activities. E Ensure compliance with all University fundraising policies, goals and procedures, including responsibility for following all protocols for prospect and donor management established and implemented by University Advancement, and the Donor Bill of Rights. E Support the Office of Annual Giving and annual giving campus partners in the planning, strategy, and implementation of Cal Lutheran’s Cares Day. E Regularly attend donor events. E Perform other duties as assigned. E *E = Essential Duties Knowledge Of: Exceptional communication skills and advanced interpersonal skills with a demonstrated ability to effectively build mutually beneficial relationships with a diverse group of people. Strong writing skills and excellent editing skills. Working with a diverse student body, faculty, staff and constituents. Planning, prioritizing and managing a diversified workload with independent judgment and resourcefulness to planning implementing events. IRS regulations for making a charitable gift. Knowledge of gift acceptance and agreement procedures including planned giving programs and gift vehicles. Proficient in database usage, strong word processing skills and knowledge of computer programs including Microsoft Office and Google Suite. Financial reports and data. Ability To: Work collaboratively with a team. Support and advance a Culture of Philanthropy in a fast-paced, dynamic environment. Reach ambitious goals. Thrive in a diverse and inclusive environment. Embrace manage through change. Model ethical behavior under all circumstances. Engage in positive employee relations on and off campus. Manage confidential data and information with the ability to discern internal and external audiences. Articulate a strong commitment to diversity and be able to work inclusively with individuals from different backgrounds. Drive a car to carry out work tasks as needed. Minimum Qualifications: Any combination equivalent to: Bachelor’s degree required and 3 years of direct or related fundraising experience leveraging high-volume phone outreach. Preferred Qualifications: Experience with Raiser’s Edge/NXT database.Budget monitoring and reconciling experience.Academic or non-profit industry experience. Licenses and Other Requirements: Valid California driver’s license.Reliable transportation.Availability to work weekends and evenings as needed.Flexibility to travel. Physical Abilities: Detect to understand appropriate written correspondence; operate a computer and other office productivity machinery, such as a calculator, copy machine, and computer printer; communicate to exchange information in person, in writing, on the telephone and by email; stationary position for extended periods of time; move or transport light objects; position self to store and/or retrieve files. Working Environment: Office environment; driving a vehicle to conduct work; evening or variable hours. Hiring Range $65,000 - $78,000 Posting Number: Staff002522022 Open Date: 05/31/2023 Close Date: 6/21/2023 To apply, visit https://careers.callutheran.edu/postings/10895 California Lutheran University is committed to providing equal opportunity in employment for all persons, regardless of race, religious creed, color, national origin, ancestry, physical disability, mental disability, medical condition, marital status, sex, age, sexual orientation, genetic information, gender, gender identity or expression, or any other basis protected by applicable law. No person shall be excluded from participation in, be denied the benefits of, or be subjected to discrimination in any program, activity or facility of the University on the basis of these factors in a manner consistent with applicable federal and state laws, regulations, ordinances, orders and rules, and University’s policies, procedures, and processes. Upon request, reasonable accommodations in the application process can be provided to individuals with qualifying disabilities. Please contact the Human Resources Department for further information or to request an accommodation. jeid-463aed21cfcdb94d970d0c3544844137
United Way of Central Indiana
Indianapolis, IN, USA
Major Gifts Operations Associate
Fundraising
We partner to design, support and grow systems that accelerate financial stability and upward mobility for individuals and families living in or near poverty and striving for a brighter future. Our vision is that Central Indiana will be a community where children, individuals and families thrive; neighbors care for each other; and we are proud of all our residents' quality of life.
We pursue this vision in all we do as we ask our community to give, advocate and volunteer. We believe that vision can only be achieved if pursued with shared values, and therefore place great emphasis on building a team that will pursue this vision together with ICARE . This is an exciting time to be part of United Way of Central Indiana's team as we embark on a new strategic framework that fosters innovation, builds community partnerships, and integrates across traditional functional areas.
I nclusion -C ourage- A ccountability- R espect- E xcellence
Position Summary
United Way of Central Indiana recognizes that the key to success is a strong and cohesive team that works through shared values to achieve our mission. Major Gifts Operations Associate will help advance the mission of UWCI by providing strategic project support to the Major Gifts Team members, volunteers, and donors. This includes coordinating schedules internally and externally, data entering and reporting, and overall tracking of events and deadlines for the team. Major Gifts reporting and basic prospect research will be part of the role. This role is also responsible for assisting with events involving the Tocqueville and Meridian Societies, as well as the Forever United Network (FUN)
Position Duties & Responsibilities
The following statements are intended to describe the general nature and level of work being performed. They are not intended to be construed as an exhaustive list of all responsibilities, duties and skills required of personnel so classified.
Partnership: Actively participate in team meetings, providing suggestions and feedback to further the effectiveness of the team fundraising efforts.
Team Support: Responsible for timely, accurate, thorough and pro-active support of the major gifts fundraising team members. Efforts include, but are not limited to the following:
Provide primary fundraising and project support.
Schedule meetings, prepare agendas and materials, track RSVPs, and coordinate logistics.
Query organizational database and extract data as requested.
Generate and run multiple accurate reports from organizational database.
Pull lapsed donor reports and send lapsed donor letters as requested.
Monitor check log for real time knowledge of individual gifts arriving in the mail and process accordingly.
Compile and type statistical reports (charts, graphs, and spreadsheets)
Managing email communication lists and mailing lists for Tocqueville Society, Meridian Society, and the Forever United Network. Pulling and organizing as needed for specific invitations and communications.
Manage the Tocqueville and Meridian Master List and cross checking with available pledge data sources.
Type & prepare correspondence, mail merges, labels & other documents.
Proofread and edit documents as needed and requested.
Update mailing lists and record bulk communications and event participation in the database.
Data tracking and reporting for Major Gifts and Forever United Network.
Request and collect data for the Major Gift Executive Summary and other executive/board reports and create the summary.
Troubleshoot and field general requests from donors and team members.
Provide donor and/or company reports and other materials for weekly meetings.
Assist with the evaluation of trends within portfolios.
Manage special event cash payments and deposits.
Track inventory & ordering of fundraising supplies not managed by logistics.
Work collaboratively with Major Gifts Team and Fundraising Team to deliver a quality experience to constituents.
Troubleshoot and field general requests from donors and team members.
Annual Goals: Achieve established goals. Work with the Leadership Giving Director to ensure goals reflect, align, and contribute to the broader goals of the organization.
Constituent Relationships
Work collaboratively with Major Gifts Team and Fundraising Team to deliver a quality experience to constituents.
Troubleshoot and field general requests from donors and team members.
Flexibility: As with any successful organization, UWCI is evolving with our changing external environment. Flexibility is a key attribute for this position. A willingness to take on additional duties to ensure the success of the team is essential.
Performs special assignments and other work, on an as-needed basis
Qualifications
To perform this job successfully, an individual must be able to perform each essential job function satisfactorily. The requirements listed are representative of the basic knowledge, skills, and/or abilities required. Reasonable accommodations may be made to enable individuals with disabilities to perform the essential functions. The individual in this role must display the highest level of integrity and confidentiality. United Way also values innovative thinking, and a successful candidate will be a self-starter who can work within the team to achieve goals and objectives. The individual should have effective communication skills, attention to detail and organization, flexibility, adaptability and the ability to multi-task and be open-minded in a fast-paced environment. The individual will also maintain knowledge of trends in his/her area of responsibility and reviews literature to understand key issues.
This individual is able to read and comprehend instructions, correspondence, and memos. Writes routine reports and correspondence. Presents information in one-on-one and/or group situations to customers, clients, managers and other employees of the organization and/or responds to questions and complaints. Routinely applies common sense understanding to carry out instructions furnished in written, oral, or diagram form. Is able to deal with problems involving concrete variables in standardized situations. Makes limited decisions and determines best methods to solve problems by referring to established precedents and policies. Impact of decisions is usually low to moderate cost.
Education and/or Experience
Bachelor's degree preferred. Four years administrative or sales support experience required. Thorough knowledge of all aspects of non-profit organizations preferred.
Must have excellent written and verbal communication skills, a strong reputation for integrity and professionalism, ability to resolve conflict constructively, strong performance management and evaluation capabilities including the willingness and ability to ensure accountability, ability to build strong relationship both inside and outside UWCI, ability to think strategically, commitment to fostering an inclusive environment consistent with UWCI's commitment to diversity and inclusion. Must have the ability to prepare, explain, and monitor performance, manage a diverse group of donors and volunteers, manage projects and workload, and engage constructively with the other members of the UWCI team.
Must be proficient with Microsoft Office Suite.
*Work experience may substitute for education requirements on a case-by-case basis.
Core Competencies
United Way of Central Indiana's team is evaluated on the following core competencies:
Inclusion
Courage
Accountability
Respect
Excellence
Job Knowledge
Thriving in Change
Position Leader: Leadership Giving Director
Position Leads: N/A
FLSA Status: Non-Exempt, Full-Time
Salary Range : $23/hr
Benefits: Complete Benefits Package Available
Reviewed: May 2023
Equal Opportunity Employer
Please apply at uwci.org/careers
This position description does not constitute a contract of employment or a guarantee of any terms or conditions of employment. UWCI employees are employed on an at-will basis. In addition, nothing in this position description restricts UWCI's right to assign or reassign duties and responsibilities to this position at any time.
Full Time
Major Gifts Operations Associate
Fundraising
We partner to design, support and grow systems that accelerate financial stability and upward mobility for individuals and families living in or near poverty and striving for a brighter future. Our vision is that Central Indiana will be a community where children, individuals and families thrive; neighbors care for each other; and we are proud of all our residents' quality of life.
We pursue this vision in all we do as we ask our community to give, advocate and volunteer. We believe that vision can only be achieved if pursued with shared values, and therefore place great emphasis on building a team that will pursue this vision together with ICARE . This is an exciting time to be part of United Way of Central Indiana's team as we embark on a new strategic framework that fosters innovation, builds community partnerships, and integrates across traditional functional areas.
I nclusion -C ourage- A ccountability- R espect- E xcellence
Position Summary
United Way of Central Indiana recognizes that the key to success is a strong and cohesive team that works through shared values to achieve our mission. Major Gifts Operations Associate will help advance the mission of UWCI by providing strategic project support to the Major Gifts Team members, volunteers, and donors. This includes coordinating schedules internally and externally, data entering and reporting, and overall tracking of events and deadlines for the team. Major Gifts reporting and basic prospect research will be part of the role. This role is also responsible for assisting with events involving the Tocqueville and Meridian Societies, as well as the Forever United Network (FUN)
Position Duties & Responsibilities
The following statements are intended to describe the general nature and level of work being performed. They are not intended to be construed as an exhaustive list of all responsibilities, duties and skills required of personnel so classified.
Partnership: Actively participate in team meetings, providing suggestions and feedback to further the effectiveness of the team fundraising efforts.
Team Support: Responsible for timely, accurate, thorough and pro-active support of the major gifts fundraising team members. Efforts include, but are not limited to the following:
Provide primary fundraising and project support.
Schedule meetings, prepare agendas and materials, track RSVPs, and coordinate logistics.
Query organizational database and extract data as requested.
Generate and run multiple accurate reports from organizational database.
Pull lapsed donor reports and send lapsed donor letters as requested.
Monitor check log for real time knowledge of individual gifts arriving in the mail and process accordingly.
Compile and type statistical reports (charts, graphs, and spreadsheets)
Managing email communication lists and mailing lists for Tocqueville Society, Meridian Society, and the Forever United Network. Pulling and organizing as needed for specific invitations and communications.
Manage the Tocqueville and Meridian Master List and cross checking with available pledge data sources.
Type & prepare correspondence, mail merges, labels & other documents.
Proofread and edit documents as needed and requested.
Update mailing lists and record bulk communications and event participation in the database.
Data tracking and reporting for Major Gifts and Forever United Network.
Request and collect data for the Major Gift Executive Summary and other executive/board reports and create the summary.
Troubleshoot and field general requests from donors and team members.
Provide donor and/or company reports and other materials for weekly meetings.
Assist with the evaluation of trends within portfolios.
Manage special event cash payments and deposits.
Track inventory & ordering of fundraising supplies not managed by logistics.
Work collaboratively with Major Gifts Team and Fundraising Team to deliver a quality experience to constituents.
Troubleshoot and field general requests from donors and team members.
Annual Goals: Achieve established goals. Work with the Leadership Giving Director to ensure goals reflect, align, and contribute to the broader goals of the organization.
Constituent Relationships
Work collaboratively with Major Gifts Team and Fundraising Team to deliver a quality experience to constituents.
Troubleshoot and field general requests from donors and team members.
Flexibility: As with any successful organization, UWCI is evolving with our changing external environment. Flexibility is a key attribute for this position. A willingness to take on additional duties to ensure the success of the team is essential.
Performs special assignments and other work, on an as-needed basis
Qualifications
To perform this job successfully, an individual must be able to perform each essential job function satisfactorily. The requirements listed are representative of the basic knowledge, skills, and/or abilities required. Reasonable accommodations may be made to enable individuals with disabilities to perform the essential functions. The individual in this role must display the highest level of integrity and confidentiality. United Way also values innovative thinking, and a successful candidate will be a self-starter who can work within the team to achieve goals and objectives. The individual should have effective communication skills, attention to detail and organization, flexibility, adaptability and the ability to multi-task and be open-minded in a fast-paced environment. The individual will also maintain knowledge of trends in his/her area of responsibility and reviews literature to understand key issues.
This individual is able to read and comprehend instructions, correspondence, and memos. Writes routine reports and correspondence. Presents information in one-on-one and/or group situations to customers, clients, managers and other employees of the organization and/or responds to questions and complaints. Routinely applies common sense understanding to carry out instructions furnished in written, oral, or diagram form. Is able to deal with problems involving concrete variables in standardized situations. Makes limited decisions and determines best methods to solve problems by referring to established precedents and policies. Impact of decisions is usually low to moderate cost.
Education and/or Experience
Bachelor's degree preferred. Four years administrative or sales support experience required. Thorough knowledge of all aspects of non-profit organizations preferred.
Must have excellent written and verbal communication skills, a strong reputation for integrity and professionalism, ability to resolve conflict constructively, strong performance management and evaluation capabilities including the willingness and ability to ensure accountability, ability to build strong relationship both inside and outside UWCI, ability to think strategically, commitment to fostering an inclusive environment consistent with UWCI's commitment to diversity and inclusion. Must have the ability to prepare, explain, and monitor performance, manage a diverse group of donors and volunteers, manage projects and workload, and engage constructively with the other members of the UWCI team.
Must be proficient with Microsoft Office Suite.
*Work experience may substitute for education requirements on a case-by-case basis.
Core Competencies
United Way of Central Indiana's team is evaluated on the following core competencies:
Inclusion
Courage
Accountability
Respect
Excellence
Job Knowledge
Thriving in Change
Position Leader: Leadership Giving Director
Position Leads: N/A
FLSA Status: Non-Exempt, Full-Time
Salary Range : $23/hr
Benefits: Complete Benefits Package Available
Reviewed: May 2023
Equal Opportunity Employer
Please apply at uwci.org/careers
This position description does not constitute a contract of employment or a guarantee of any terms or conditions of employment. UWCI employees are employed on an at-will basis. In addition, nothing in this position description restricts UWCI's right to assign or reassign duties and responsibilities to this position at any time.
United Way of Central Indiana
Indianapolis, IN, USA
Manager of Major Gifts
Major Gifts
Fundraising
We partner to design, support and grow systems that accelerate financial stability and upward mobility for individuals and families living in or near poverty and striving for a brighter future. Our vision is that Central Indiana will be a community where children, individuals and families thrive; neighbors care for each other; and we are proud of all our residents' quality of life.
We pursue this vision in all we do as we ask our community to give, advocate and volunteer. We believe that vision can only be achieved if pursued with shared values, and therefore place great emphasis on building a team that will pursue this vision together with ICARE . This is an exciting time to be part of United Way of Central Indiana's team as we embark on a new strategic framework that fosters innovation, builds community partnerships, and integrates across traditional functional areas.
I nclusion -C ourage- A ccountability- R espect- E xcellence
Position Summary
United Way of Central Indiana recognizes that the key to success is a strong and cohesive team that works through shared values to achieve our mission by deepening and maintaining relationships with major donors and prospects. The manager will identify, qualify, engage, cultivate, solicit and steward current and prospective major donors. The manager will be responsible for meeting various benchmarks and an annual revenue target. This role supports the Tocqueville Society's ability to reach its goals through support of the Director of Major Gift's management of the Tocqueville Council. This role also manages the creative and engaging stewardship of Tocqueville donors and/or leads the non-workplace portfolio efforts, including setting goals, developing, and executing upon an annual communications and solicitations plan, and stewarding donors.
United Way of Central Indiana's Tocqueville Society was formed in 1990 and is made up of hundreds of individuals, each making annual contributions of $10,000 or more. Society members reflect extraordinary dedication to inspiring a better way of life for everyone in our community.
Position Duties & Responsibilities
The following statements are intended to describe the general nature and level of work being performed. They are not intended to be construed as an exhaustive list of all responsibilities, duties and skills required of personnel so classified.
Fundraising: Work closely with the Major Gifts Director to reach defined Tocqueville goals around donor retention, acquisition, and growth. Be an active member of the Transformational Giving Team, driving attainment of personal goals within the donor pipeline. Actively and creatively engage and steward Tocqueville donors who do not desire traditional donor call stewardship and cultivation. Create and execute strategies to meet and exceed personal donor portfolio goals. Complete a minimum of 120 meaningful donor interactions per year with assigned portfolio, focusing on Tocqueville members and prospects. Portfolio will consist of donors and prospects both within and outside of UWCI corporate partner companies. Management of an assigned portfolio of current and prospective individual donors and/or reaching the strategic goals set for the non-workplace portfolio through development and execution of an annual communications and solicitations plan supports our ability to reach the strategic goals set for the Tocqueville Society. Portfolio management includes development of a communications plan and regular outreach through phone, email, mail, and meetings to ensure donors progress through the moves management continuum.
Constituent Relationships: Work with UWCI's Community Impact and Fundraising team to identify, develop and implement opportunities to communicate community impact work and UWCI goals and priorities to key stakeholders. Be knowledgeable about UWCI's work in Central Indiana and be an effective and compelling communicator to advance engagement and brand value. Ensure acknowledgement of gifts is sent in a timely manner. Ensure all donor recognition is tracked and implemented in SCRM and through regular maintenance of the Tocqueville and Meridian Societies master list.
Relationships: Develop and maintain regular contact with existing and prospective donors. Identify and communicate with appropriate UWCI team members regarding opportunities to leverage these relationships more broadly. Support the Director of Major Gifts in providing leadership, strategy, and support to the Tocqueville Society Council.
Annual Goals: Achieve established goals for annual fundraising, engagement, and donor calls. Work with other members of the UWCI team to ensure goals reflect and align and contribute to the broader goals of the organization. Lead and support work group and short-term project efforts related to strengthening major gifts strategies.
Flexibility: UWCI is evolving with our changing external environment. Flexibility is a key attribute for this position. A willingness to take on additional duties to ensure the success of the team is essential.
Performs special assignments and other work, on an as-needed basis.
Qualifications
To perform this job successfully, an individual must be able to perform each essential job function satisfactorily. The requirements listed are representative of the basic knowledge, skills, and/or abilities required. Reasonable accommodations may be made to enable individuals with disabilities to perform the essential functions. The individual in this role must display the highest level of integrity and confidentiality. United Way also values innovative thinking, and a successful candidate will be a self-starter who can work within the team to achieve goals and objectives. The individual should have effective communication skills, attention to detail and organization, flexibility, adaptability and the ability to multi-task and be open-minded in a fast-paced environment. The individual will also maintain knowledge of trends in his/her area of responsibility and reviews literature to understand key issues.
This individual routinely reads , interprets and analyzes financial reports, general business periodicals, professional journals, technical procedures, and/or governmental / legal regulations. Routinely writes complex and detailed reports and business correspondence. Routinely presents information and responds to questions from groups of managers (may include Top Management), clients, customers, and the general public. Routinely solves practical problems and deals with a variety of concrete variables in situations where standardization exists. Is able to interpret a variety of instructions furnished in written, oral, diagram, or schedule form. Makes day-to-day and/or daily decisions used to support strategic direction . Decisions often require thought and are structured . Decisions tend to be short term (one year or less) and usually moderate to high cost.
Education and/or Experience
Bachelor's degree required. Master's degree preferred. CFRE preferred. Two to four years major gift fundraising experience required. Experience soliciting and securing gifts of $10,000 or more is preferred. Knowledge of the central Indiana community and the human service sector is preferred.
Must have excellent written and verbal communication skills, a strong reputation for integrity and professionalism, ability to resolve conflict constructively, strong performance management and evaluation capabilities including the willingness and ability to ensure accountability, ability to build strong relationship both inside and outside UWCI, ability to think strategically, commitment to fostering an inclusive environment consistent with UWCI's commitment to diversity and inclusion. Must have the ability to prepare, explain, and monitor performance, manage a diverse group of donors and volunteers, manage projects and workload, and engage constructively with the other members of the UWCI team.
*Work experience may substitute for education requirements on a case-by-case basis.
Position Leader: Major Gifts Director
Position Leads: N/A
FLSA Status: Exempt, Full-time
Salary Range : Mid 60's to Low 70's
Benefits: Complete Benefits Package Available
Reviewed: June 2023
Equal Opportunity Employer
Please apply at uwci.org/careers
This position description does not constitute a contract of employment or a guarantee of any terms or conditions of employment. UWCI employees are employed on an at-will basis. In addition, nothing in this position description restricts UWCI's right to assign or reassign duties and responsibilities to this position at any time.
Full Time
Manager of Major Gifts
Major Gifts
Fundraising
We partner to design, support and grow systems that accelerate financial stability and upward mobility for individuals and families living in or near poverty and striving for a brighter future. Our vision is that Central Indiana will be a community where children, individuals and families thrive; neighbors care for each other; and we are proud of all our residents' quality of life.
We pursue this vision in all we do as we ask our community to give, advocate and volunteer. We believe that vision can only be achieved if pursued with shared values, and therefore place great emphasis on building a team that will pursue this vision together with ICARE . This is an exciting time to be part of United Way of Central Indiana's team as we embark on a new strategic framework that fosters innovation, builds community partnerships, and integrates across traditional functional areas.
I nclusion -C ourage- A ccountability- R espect- E xcellence
Position Summary
United Way of Central Indiana recognizes that the key to success is a strong and cohesive team that works through shared values to achieve our mission by deepening and maintaining relationships with major donors and prospects. The manager will identify, qualify, engage, cultivate, solicit and steward current and prospective major donors. The manager will be responsible for meeting various benchmarks and an annual revenue target. This role supports the Tocqueville Society's ability to reach its goals through support of the Director of Major Gift's management of the Tocqueville Council. This role also manages the creative and engaging stewardship of Tocqueville donors and/or leads the non-workplace portfolio efforts, including setting goals, developing, and executing upon an annual communications and solicitations plan, and stewarding donors.
United Way of Central Indiana's Tocqueville Society was formed in 1990 and is made up of hundreds of individuals, each making annual contributions of $10,000 or more. Society members reflect extraordinary dedication to inspiring a better way of life for everyone in our community.
Position Duties & Responsibilities
The following statements are intended to describe the general nature and level of work being performed. They are not intended to be construed as an exhaustive list of all responsibilities, duties and skills required of personnel so classified.
Fundraising: Work closely with the Major Gifts Director to reach defined Tocqueville goals around donor retention, acquisition, and growth. Be an active member of the Transformational Giving Team, driving attainment of personal goals within the donor pipeline. Actively and creatively engage and steward Tocqueville donors who do not desire traditional donor call stewardship and cultivation. Create and execute strategies to meet and exceed personal donor portfolio goals. Complete a minimum of 120 meaningful donor interactions per year with assigned portfolio, focusing on Tocqueville members and prospects. Portfolio will consist of donors and prospects both within and outside of UWCI corporate partner companies. Management of an assigned portfolio of current and prospective individual donors and/or reaching the strategic goals set for the non-workplace portfolio through development and execution of an annual communications and solicitations plan supports our ability to reach the strategic goals set for the Tocqueville Society. Portfolio management includes development of a communications plan and regular outreach through phone, email, mail, and meetings to ensure donors progress through the moves management continuum.
Constituent Relationships: Work with UWCI's Community Impact and Fundraising team to identify, develop and implement opportunities to communicate community impact work and UWCI goals and priorities to key stakeholders. Be knowledgeable about UWCI's work in Central Indiana and be an effective and compelling communicator to advance engagement and brand value. Ensure acknowledgement of gifts is sent in a timely manner. Ensure all donor recognition is tracked and implemented in SCRM and through regular maintenance of the Tocqueville and Meridian Societies master list.
Relationships: Develop and maintain regular contact with existing and prospective donors. Identify and communicate with appropriate UWCI team members regarding opportunities to leverage these relationships more broadly. Support the Director of Major Gifts in providing leadership, strategy, and support to the Tocqueville Society Council.
Annual Goals: Achieve established goals for annual fundraising, engagement, and donor calls. Work with other members of the UWCI team to ensure goals reflect and align and contribute to the broader goals of the organization. Lead and support work group and short-term project efforts related to strengthening major gifts strategies.
Flexibility: UWCI is evolving with our changing external environment. Flexibility is a key attribute for this position. A willingness to take on additional duties to ensure the success of the team is essential.
Performs special assignments and other work, on an as-needed basis.
Qualifications
To perform this job successfully, an individual must be able to perform each essential job function satisfactorily. The requirements listed are representative of the basic knowledge, skills, and/or abilities required. Reasonable accommodations may be made to enable individuals with disabilities to perform the essential functions. The individual in this role must display the highest level of integrity and confidentiality. United Way also values innovative thinking, and a successful candidate will be a self-starter who can work within the team to achieve goals and objectives. The individual should have effective communication skills, attention to detail and organization, flexibility, adaptability and the ability to multi-task and be open-minded in a fast-paced environment. The individual will also maintain knowledge of trends in his/her area of responsibility and reviews literature to understand key issues.
This individual routinely reads , interprets and analyzes financial reports, general business periodicals, professional journals, technical procedures, and/or governmental / legal regulations. Routinely writes complex and detailed reports and business correspondence. Routinely presents information and responds to questions from groups of managers (may include Top Management), clients, customers, and the general public. Routinely solves practical problems and deals with a variety of concrete variables in situations where standardization exists. Is able to interpret a variety of instructions furnished in written, oral, diagram, or schedule form. Makes day-to-day and/or daily decisions used to support strategic direction . Decisions often require thought and are structured . Decisions tend to be short term (one year or less) and usually moderate to high cost.
Education and/or Experience
Bachelor's degree required. Master's degree preferred. CFRE preferred. Two to four years major gift fundraising experience required. Experience soliciting and securing gifts of $10,000 or more is preferred. Knowledge of the central Indiana community and the human service sector is preferred.
Must have excellent written and verbal communication skills, a strong reputation for integrity and professionalism, ability to resolve conflict constructively, strong performance management and evaluation capabilities including the willingness and ability to ensure accountability, ability to build strong relationship both inside and outside UWCI, ability to think strategically, commitment to fostering an inclusive environment consistent with UWCI's commitment to diversity and inclusion. Must have the ability to prepare, explain, and monitor performance, manage a diverse group of donors and volunteers, manage projects and workload, and engage constructively with the other members of the UWCI team.
*Work experience may substitute for education requirements on a case-by-case basis.
Position Leader: Major Gifts Director
Position Leads: N/A
FLSA Status: Exempt, Full-time
Salary Range : Mid 60's to Low 70's
Benefits: Complete Benefits Package Available
Reviewed: June 2023
Equal Opportunity Employer
Please apply at uwci.org/careers
This position description does not constitute a contract of employment or a guarantee of any terms or conditions of employment. UWCI employees are employed on an at-will basis. In addition, nothing in this position description restricts UWCI's right to assign or reassign duties and responsibilities to this position at any time.
California Lutheran University
Thousand Oaks, CA, United States
Assistant Director of Leadership Giving Position Category: Staff (Exempt) FLSA: Exempt FTE: 1 Location: Thousand Oaks University Background: The mission of California Lutheran University is to educate leaders for a global society who are strong in character and judgment, confident in their identity and vocation, and committed to service and justice. Founded in 1959 in beautiful Ventura County, the university has an enrollment of about 4,000 undergraduate and graduate students who come from across the nation and around the world from a diversity of backgrounds, cultures and faiths. As a federally recognized Hispanic-Serving Institution, Cal Lutheran is looking for candidates with a dedication to and success in working in diverse communities. The university is committed to an inclusive learning and work environment that values individual differences and respects each person’s dignity. Basic Function: Reporting to the Senior Director of Annual Giving, the Assistant Director of Leadership Giving will be responsible for revenue generation from a robust portfolio of mid-level donors who have aligned philanthropic interests and the capacity to make outright gifts of $1,000 and more, with an emphasis on donors giving between $1,000 and $25,000. Representative Duties: dentify, qualify, manage and solicit a portfolio of approximately 150 – 200 donors annually. Donors will have the capacity and inclination to make mid-level leadership gifts ranging from $1,000 – $25,000, with an emphasis on upgrading gifts at the high four and low five-figure levels. E Develop, plan and implement comprehensive outreach and engagement strategies in pursuit of developing a fundraising pipeline for securing financial contributions from donors and prospects, including identification, qualification, cultivation, solicitation, stewardship, and value-added donor engagement events, in support of the university’s strategic priorities. Effectively move leadership annual donors through the pipeline in collaboration with the Senior Director of Annual Giving, members of the Development Team, as well as our annual giving campus partners, as appropriate. E Build relationships with identified prospects with the goal of qualifying additions into the portfolio. E Partner and collaborate with the Senior Director of Annual Giving, members of the Development Team, and our annual giving campus partners to develop and implement strategies for the cultivation and stewardship of donors that will increase their connection, involvement and giving. E Manage stewardship plans for new and renewing donors at the $1,000 – $10,000 levels. E Arrange and complete 120 virtual and in-person donor meetings per year to build and deepen relationships, with the ultimate goal of soliciting and closing annual gifts of up to $25,000. E Conduct regular portfolio review and partner with members of the Development Team, and/or Vice President of University Advancement on transition of donors to the major and planned gift program when there is an indication of greater giving capacity and inclination. E In collaboration with the Senior Director of Annual Giving, coordinate and implement an ongoing stewardship program for donors giving at the Fellows level. E Solicit gifts both independently and collaboratively with other staff members. Craft written proposals when appropriate. E Exemplary writing skills, exceptional interpersonal skills, and strong attention to detail working in a fast-paced environment are essential requirements for this position Use Raiser’s Edge database to document moves management process, ensuring key donor information is recorded and pertinent research is captured. E Optimize, develop and implement systems, process, and best practices, that support effective cultivation and stewardship as a strategy for advancing relationships and giving, and strengthens a culture of philanthropy. E Meet agreed upon fundraising metrics as defined by supervisor, including donor meetings and proposals, and prepare quantitative and anecdotal reports on leadership gift program accomplishments. E Collaborate with Senior Director of Annual Giving, Development staff members, and Vice President of University Advancement to coordinate and share/exchange pertinent information about donors, strategies and activities. E Ensure compliance with all University fundraising policies, goals and procedures, including responsibility for following all protocols for prospect and donor management established and implemented by University Advancement, and the Donor Bill of Rights. E Support the Office of Annual Giving and annual giving campus partners in the planning, strategy, and implementation of Cal Lutheran’s Cares Day. E Regularly attend donor events. E Perform other duties as assigned. E *E = Essential Duties Knowledge Of: Exceptional communication skills and advanced interpersonal skills with a demonstrated ability to effectively build mutually beneficial relationships with a diverse group of people. Strong writing skills and excellent editing skills. Working with a diverse student body, faculty, staff and constituents. Planning, prioritizing and managing a diversified workload with independent judgment and resourcefulness to planning implementing events. IRS regulations for making a charitable gift. Knowledge of gift acceptance and agreement procedures including planned giving programs and gift vehicles. Proficient in database usage, strong word processing skills and knowledge of computer programs including Microsoft Office and Google Suite. Financial reports and data. Ability To: Work collaboratively with a team. Support and advance a Culture of Philanthropy in a fast-paced, dynamic environment. Reach ambitious goals. Thrive in a diverse and inclusive environment. Embrace manage through change. Model ethical behavior under all circumstances. Engage in positive employee relations on and off campus. Manage confidential data and information with the ability to discern internal and external audiences. Articulate a strong commitment to diversity and be able to work inclusively with individuals from different backgrounds. Drive a car to carry out work tasks as needed. Minimum Qualifications: Any combination equivalent to: Bachelor’s degree required and 3 years of direct or related fundraising experience leveraging high-volume phone outreach. Preferred Qualifications: Experience with Raiser’s Edge/NXT database.Budget monitoring and reconciling experience.Academic or non-profit industry experience. Licenses and Other Requirements: Valid California driver’s license.Reliable transportation.Availability to work weekends and evenings as needed.Flexibility to travel. Physical Abilities: Working Environment: Office environment; driving a vehicle to conduct work; evening or variable hours. Posting Number: Staff002522022 Number of Vacancies: Desired Start Date: 06/26/2023 Position End Date: Open Date: 05/31/2023 Close Date: 6/14/2023 Open Until Filled: No Application Procedure/Special Instructions: To apply, visit https://careers.callutheran.edu/postings/10785 California Lutheran University is committed to providing equal opportunity in employment for all persons, regardless of race, religious creed, color, national origin, ancestry, physical disability, mental disability, medical condition, marital status, sex, age, sexual orientation, genetic information, gender, gender identity or expression, or any other basis protected by applicable law. No person shall be excluded from participation in, be denied the benefits of, or be subjected to discrimination in any program, activity or facility of the University on the basis of these factors in a manner consistent with applicable federal and state laws, regulations, ordinances, orders and rules, and University’s policies, procedures, and processes. Upon request, reasonable accommodations in the application process can be provided to individuals with qualifying disabilities. Please contact the Human Resources Department for further information or to request an accommodation. jeid-8c5e50b43eb9dc4aa3e9eb61b80ff9ce
Full Time
Assistant Director of Leadership Giving Position Category: Staff (Exempt) FLSA: Exempt FTE: 1 Location: Thousand Oaks University Background: The mission of California Lutheran University is to educate leaders for a global society who are strong in character and judgment, confident in their identity and vocation, and committed to service and justice. Founded in 1959 in beautiful Ventura County, the university has an enrollment of about 4,000 undergraduate and graduate students who come from across the nation and around the world from a diversity of backgrounds, cultures and faiths. As a federally recognized Hispanic-Serving Institution, Cal Lutheran is looking for candidates with a dedication to and success in working in diverse communities. The university is committed to an inclusive learning and work environment that values individual differences and respects each person’s dignity. Basic Function: Reporting to the Senior Director of Annual Giving, the Assistant Director of Leadership Giving will be responsible for revenue generation from a robust portfolio of mid-level donors who have aligned philanthropic interests and the capacity to make outright gifts of $1,000 and more, with an emphasis on donors giving between $1,000 and $25,000. Representative Duties: dentify, qualify, manage and solicit a portfolio of approximately 150 – 200 donors annually. Donors will have the capacity and inclination to make mid-level leadership gifts ranging from $1,000 – $25,000, with an emphasis on upgrading gifts at the high four and low five-figure levels. E Develop, plan and implement comprehensive outreach and engagement strategies in pursuit of developing a fundraising pipeline for securing financial contributions from donors and prospects, including identification, qualification, cultivation, solicitation, stewardship, and value-added donor engagement events, in support of the university’s strategic priorities. Effectively move leadership annual donors through the pipeline in collaboration with the Senior Director of Annual Giving, members of the Development Team, as well as our annual giving campus partners, as appropriate. E Build relationships with identified prospects with the goal of qualifying additions into the portfolio. E Partner and collaborate with the Senior Director of Annual Giving, members of the Development Team, and our annual giving campus partners to develop and implement strategies for the cultivation and stewardship of donors that will increase their connection, involvement and giving. E Manage stewardship plans for new and renewing donors at the $1,000 – $10,000 levels. E Arrange and complete 120 virtual and in-person donor meetings per year to build and deepen relationships, with the ultimate goal of soliciting and closing annual gifts of up to $25,000. E Conduct regular portfolio review and partner with members of the Development Team, and/or Vice President of University Advancement on transition of donors to the major and planned gift program when there is an indication of greater giving capacity and inclination. E In collaboration with the Senior Director of Annual Giving, coordinate and implement an ongoing stewardship program for donors giving at the Fellows level. E Solicit gifts both independently and collaboratively with other staff members. Craft written proposals when appropriate. E Exemplary writing skills, exceptional interpersonal skills, and strong attention to detail working in a fast-paced environment are essential requirements for this position Use Raiser’s Edge database to document moves management process, ensuring key donor information is recorded and pertinent research is captured. E Optimize, develop and implement systems, process, and best practices, that support effective cultivation and stewardship as a strategy for advancing relationships and giving, and strengthens a culture of philanthropy. E Meet agreed upon fundraising metrics as defined by supervisor, including donor meetings and proposals, and prepare quantitative and anecdotal reports on leadership gift program accomplishments. E Collaborate with Senior Director of Annual Giving, Development staff members, and Vice President of University Advancement to coordinate and share/exchange pertinent information about donors, strategies and activities. E Ensure compliance with all University fundraising policies, goals and procedures, including responsibility for following all protocols for prospect and donor management established and implemented by University Advancement, and the Donor Bill of Rights. E Support the Office of Annual Giving and annual giving campus partners in the planning, strategy, and implementation of Cal Lutheran’s Cares Day. E Regularly attend donor events. E Perform other duties as assigned. E *E = Essential Duties Knowledge Of: Exceptional communication skills and advanced interpersonal skills with a demonstrated ability to effectively build mutually beneficial relationships with a diverse group of people. Strong writing skills and excellent editing skills. Working with a diverse student body, faculty, staff and constituents. Planning, prioritizing and managing a diversified workload with independent judgment and resourcefulness to planning implementing events. IRS regulations for making a charitable gift. Knowledge of gift acceptance and agreement procedures including planned giving programs and gift vehicles. Proficient in database usage, strong word processing skills and knowledge of computer programs including Microsoft Office and Google Suite. Financial reports and data. Ability To: Work collaboratively with a team. Support and advance a Culture of Philanthropy in a fast-paced, dynamic environment. Reach ambitious goals. Thrive in a diverse and inclusive environment. Embrace manage through change. Model ethical behavior under all circumstances. Engage in positive employee relations on and off campus. Manage confidential data and information with the ability to discern internal and external audiences. Articulate a strong commitment to diversity and be able to work inclusively with individuals from different backgrounds. Drive a car to carry out work tasks as needed. Minimum Qualifications: Any combination equivalent to: Bachelor’s degree required and 3 years of direct or related fundraising experience leveraging high-volume phone outreach. Preferred Qualifications: Experience with Raiser’s Edge/NXT database.Budget monitoring and reconciling experience.Academic or non-profit industry experience. Licenses and Other Requirements: Valid California driver’s license.Reliable transportation.Availability to work weekends and evenings as needed.Flexibility to travel. Physical Abilities: Working Environment: Office environment; driving a vehicle to conduct work; evening or variable hours. Posting Number: Staff002522022 Number of Vacancies: Desired Start Date: 06/26/2023 Position End Date: Open Date: 05/31/2023 Close Date: 6/14/2023 Open Until Filled: No Application Procedure/Special Instructions: To apply, visit https://careers.callutheran.edu/postings/10785 California Lutheran University is committed to providing equal opportunity in employment for all persons, regardless of race, religious creed, color, national origin, ancestry, physical disability, mental disability, medical condition, marital status, sex, age, sexual orientation, genetic information, gender, gender identity or expression, or any other basis protected by applicable law. No person shall be excluded from participation in, be denied the benefits of, or be subjected to discrimination in any program, activity or facility of the University on the basis of these factors in a manner consistent with applicable federal and state laws, regulations, ordinances, orders and rules, and University’s policies, procedures, and processes. Upon request, reasonable accommodations in the application process can be provided to individuals with qualifying disabilities. Please contact the Human Resources Department for further information or to request an accommodation. jeid-8c5e50b43eb9dc4aa3e9eb61b80ff9ce
The Biomimicry Institute is a fully remote organization. However, preferred candidates are from the states of Montana, Pennsylvania or California.
Applicants from states with salary band posting requirements: Salary is determined based on internal equity; internal salary ranges; market data/ranges; applicant’s skills; prior relevant experience; degrees or certifications, etc. The salary for this position ranges from $50,000 - $60,000.
**We encourage people of all backgrounds and experiences to apply. Even if you don’t think you are a perfect fit, apply anyway - you might have qualifications we haven’t even thought of yet.**
Job Purpose
The Development Assistant is responsible for all administrative aspects of development and fundraising activities. This new position reports to the Director of Marketing and Outreach, and plays an important role by providing support for key fundraising efforts including foundational giving, donor relations, appeals, individual and institutional donor research, grant-focused development efforts, marketing and communications, and special events.
The Development Assistant will work to expand fundraising opportunities, manage a database documenting our fundraising efforts, and work to improve donor relations. Our ideal candidate has experience attracting support for an organization and improving fundraising efforts. While we prefer candidates with a degree, we are willing to onboard the right person as long as they have the relevant skills, experience, and the ability to work as part of a team.
Priorities include assisting with writing grant proposals, LOIs, outreach emails and reports (30%); identifying and cultivating new sources of income for the organization (20%); helping to grow TBI’s major donor program, including writing direct mail and electronic solicitations and assisting in occasional donor events (20%); supporting the design of an annual work plan for institutional and individual donor engagement (10%); providing content for social media and funder education (10%); activity tracking and reporting (10%).
Essential Functions
The Development Assistant is responsible for assisting all donor relations activities and providing support for key fundraising and development efforts
Research and identify grant opportunities and sponsors aligned with the organization's mission; coordinate timely and comprehensive applications to target grant programs; communicate to appropriate staff the terms and conditions of awarded grants in conjunction with the granting organization’s agreements
Assist in writing grant reports to comply with grant requirements
Manage the timely acknowledgement of gifts and ensure that all types of donations (cash, pledges, matching gifts, and planned gifts) are properly documented
Assist Director of Marketing and Outreach with donor learning sessions/webinars, and other donor-facing activities
Manage fundraising CRM (Neon), including records management for all prospects and donors, maintaining records of contributions, and corresponding acknowledgment letters and pledge commitments
Provide management with concise, meaningful, and up-to-date activity reports, and ensure accuracy of donation gift recording and financial accounting of all income and sources in collaboration with the Director of Finance and Accounting
Assist the Director of Marketing and Outreach with fundraising events each year. Events may be in conjunction with programmatic growth goals or stand-alone events hosted by Board members
Maintain document of standard operating procedures for development programs, processes, and systems, updating as needed
QUALIFICATIONS
Education and Experience
BA in related field and 2-4 years of progressive non-profit fundraising/development experience, specifically in grant writing and administration. Proven track record in setting and achieving revenue targets.
Knowledge of best practices in donor management. Understanding of all components of a diversified funding base. Familiarity with state and federal funding is a plus.
Knowledge of the social impact or environmental funding space, or education and entrepreneurship domain expertise.
Familiarity with new/ emerging fundraising ideas and strategies such as crowd-sourcing, fundraising on social media platforms, or creating campaigns that members can lead.
Proven commitment to diversity, equity, and inclusion:
Ability to actively cultivate and develop inclusive and equitable working relationships with coworkers, management, board members and clients.
Employs anti-racist practices and principles to accomplish work.
Experience working directly with people from diverse racial, ethnic, and socioeconomic backgrounds.
Incorporates an anti-racist and anti-oppressive lens into TBI programs.
Teaches using equitable and inclusive pedagogy.
Skills/Abilities
Familiarity with CRM platforms for nonprofits. NEON is a plus.
Specific knowledge of biomimicry is encouraged; new hires without this experience will be asked to complete training (e.g. fundamentals course) in biomimicry.
Confident, energetic, and dedicated to the mission of the Biomimicry Institute.
Comfortable learning and using the digital tools the Biomimicry Institute uses—with little to no assistance, and willing to try out new technologies and work tools. G-Suite and Microsoft Office Suite required. Virtual meeting software, Asana, Box, Slack, and Zoom are helpful.
A successful track record in setting priorities; keen analytic, organization and problem solving skills which support and enable sound decision making. Keeps track of responsibilities and meets deadlines and goals.
Adaptable—manages a constantly changing remote work environment; learns to collaborate with geographically dispersed new team members, etc.
Clear, direct, and succinct writer.
Self-sufficient—takes the initiative and completes work without undue supervision
Strong communication and relationship building skills. Ensures every team member is given a chance to speak. Demonstrates the ability to understand others’ thoughts and feelings (social sensitivity). Respectfully engages in disagreements. Keeps team members informed/updated. Is a good active listener who understands what’s being asked of them and the priorities of various tasks.
Physical Requirements
The physical demands described here are representative of that which an employee encounters while performing the essential functions of this job. Reasonable accommodation can be made to enable individuals with disabilities to perform the essential functions.
Activities that occur constantly are communicating effectively with others to exchange information; assessing the accuracy, neatness and thoroughness of the work; repeating motions efficiently that may include the wrists, hands and/or fingers; prolonged periods of working at a computer; remaining in a stationary position, often standing or sitting for prolonged periods.
Activities that occur occasionally are moving about to accomplish tasks or moving from one worksite to another; adjusting or moving objects less than 50 pounds in all directions.
Work Environment (Remote)
The work environment described here is representative of that which an employee encounters while performing the essential functions of this job. Reasonable accommodation can be made to enable individuals with disabilities to perform the essential functions.
Duties are performed in a home workspace. Employees are expected to maintain their home workspace in a safe manner, free from safety hazards.
No travel is required at this time.
This is not necessarily an exhaustive or all-inclusive list of responsibilities, skills, duties, requirements, efforts, functions, or working conditions associated with the job. This job description is not a contract of employment, or a promise or guarantee of any specific terms or conditions of employment. The Biomimicry Institute may add to, modify, or delete any aspect of this job (or the position itself) at any time as it deems advisable.
The Biomimicry Institute is an equal opportunity employer committed to diversity and consideration of all applicants for positions without regard to race, color, national origin, ancestry, religion, sex, gender identity, gender expression, marital status, sexual orientation, military and veteran status, pregnancy, age, physical or mental disability, medical condition, genetic information or any other legally protected category.
Full Time
The Biomimicry Institute is a fully remote organization. However, preferred candidates are from the states of Montana, Pennsylvania or California.
Applicants from states with salary band posting requirements: Salary is determined based on internal equity; internal salary ranges; market data/ranges; applicant’s skills; prior relevant experience; degrees or certifications, etc. The salary for this position ranges from $50,000 - $60,000.
**We encourage people of all backgrounds and experiences to apply. Even if you don’t think you are a perfect fit, apply anyway - you might have qualifications we haven’t even thought of yet.**
Job Purpose
The Development Assistant is responsible for all administrative aspects of development and fundraising activities. This new position reports to the Director of Marketing and Outreach, and plays an important role by providing support for key fundraising efforts including foundational giving, donor relations, appeals, individual and institutional donor research, grant-focused development efforts, marketing and communications, and special events.
The Development Assistant will work to expand fundraising opportunities, manage a database documenting our fundraising efforts, and work to improve donor relations. Our ideal candidate has experience attracting support for an organization and improving fundraising efforts. While we prefer candidates with a degree, we are willing to onboard the right person as long as they have the relevant skills, experience, and the ability to work as part of a team.
Priorities include assisting with writing grant proposals, LOIs, outreach emails and reports (30%); identifying and cultivating new sources of income for the organization (20%); helping to grow TBI’s major donor program, including writing direct mail and electronic solicitations and assisting in occasional donor events (20%); supporting the design of an annual work plan for institutional and individual donor engagement (10%); providing content for social media and funder education (10%); activity tracking and reporting (10%).
Essential Functions
The Development Assistant is responsible for assisting all donor relations activities and providing support for key fundraising and development efforts
Research and identify grant opportunities and sponsors aligned with the organization's mission; coordinate timely and comprehensive applications to target grant programs; communicate to appropriate staff the terms and conditions of awarded grants in conjunction with the granting organization’s agreements
Assist in writing grant reports to comply with grant requirements
Manage the timely acknowledgement of gifts and ensure that all types of donations (cash, pledges, matching gifts, and planned gifts) are properly documented
Assist Director of Marketing and Outreach with donor learning sessions/webinars, and other donor-facing activities
Manage fundraising CRM (Neon), including records management for all prospects and donors, maintaining records of contributions, and corresponding acknowledgment letters and pledge commitments
Provide management with concise, meaningful, and up-to-date activity reports, and ensure accuracy of donation gift recording and financial accounting of all income and sources in collaboration with the Director of Finance and Accounting
Assist the Director of Marketing and Outreach with fundraising events each year. Events may be in conjunction with programmatic growth goals or stand-alone events hosted by Board members
Maintain document of standard operating procedures for development programs, processes, and systems, updating as needed
QUALIFICATIONS
Education and Experience
BA in related field and 2-4 years of progressive non-profit fundraising/development experience, specifically in grant writing and administration. Proven track record in setting and achieving revenue targets.
Knowledge of best practices in donor management. Understanding of all components of a diversified funding base. Familiarity with state and federal funding is a plus.
Knowledge of the social impact or environmental funding space, or education and entrepreneurship domain expertise.
Familiarity with new/ emerging fundraising ideas and strategies such as crowd-sourcing, fundraising on social media platforms, or creating campaigns that members can lead.
Proven commitment to diversity, equity, and inclusion:
Ability to actively cultivate and develop inclusive and equitable working relationships with coworkers, management, board members and clients.
Employs anti-racist practices and principles to accomplish work.
Experience working directly with people from diverse racial, ethnic, and socioeconomic backgrounds.
Incorporates an anti-racist and anti-oppressive lens into TBI programs.
Teaches using equitable and inclusive pedagogy.
Skills/Abilities
Familiarity with CRM platforms for nonprofits. NEON is a plus.
Specific knowledge of biomimicry is encouraged; new hires without this experience will be asked to complete training (e.g. fundamentals course) in biomimicry.
Confident, energetic, and dedicated to the mission of the Biomimicry Institute.
Comfortable learning and using the digital tools the Biomimicry Institute uses—with little to no assistance, and willing to try out new technologies and work tools. G-Suite and Microsoft Office Suite required. Virtual meeting software, Asana, Box, Slack, and Zoom are helpful.
A successful track record in setting priorities; keen analytic, organization and problem solving skills which support and enable sound decision making. Keeps track of responsibilities and meets deadlines and goals.
Adaptable—manages a constantly changing remote work environment; learns to collaborate with geographically dispersed new team members, etc.
Clear, direct, and succinct writer.
Self-sufficient—takes the initiative and completes work without undue supervision
Strong communication and relationship building skills. Ensures every team member is given a chance to speak. Demonstrates the ability to understand others’ thoughts and feelings (social sensitivity). Respectfully engages in disagreements. Keeps team members informed/updated. Is a good active listener who understands what’s being asked of them and the priorities of various tasks.
Physical Requirements
The physical demands described here are representative of that which an employee encounters while performing the essential functions of this job. Reasonable accommodation can be made to enable individuals with disabilities to perform the essential functions.
Activities that occur constantly are communicating effectively with others to exchange information; assessing the accuracy, neatness and thoroughness of the work; repeating motions efficiently that may include the wrists, hands and/or fingers; prolonged periods of working at a computer; remaining in a stationary position, often standing or sitting for prolonged periods.
Activities that occur occasionally are moving about to accomplish tasks or moving from one worksite to another; adjusting or moving objects less than 50 pounds in all directions.
Work Environment (Remote)
The work environment described here is representative of that which an employee encounters while performing the essential functions of this job. Reasonable accommodation can be made to enable individuals with disabilities to perform the essential functions.
Duties are performed in a home workspace. Employees are expected to maintain their home workspace in a safe manner, free from safety hazards.
No travel is required at this time.
This is not necessarily an exhaustive or all-inclusive list of responsibilities, skills, duties, requirements, efforts, functions, or working conditions associated with the job. This job description is not a contract of employment, or a promise or guarantee of any specific terms or conditions of employment. The Biomimicry Institute may add to, modify, or delete any aspect of this job (or the position itself) at any time as it deems advisable.
The Biomimicry Institute is an equal opportunity employer committed to diversity and consideration of all applicants for positions without regard to race, color, national origin, ancestry, religion, sex, gender identity, gender expression, marital status, sexual orientation, military and veteran status, pregnancy, age, physical or mental disability, medical condition, genetic information or any other legally protected category.