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January 8, 2020

What I learned from my personal fundraising campaign for 澳门真正最准的免费资料

It is wonderful.
It is disappointing.
It is surprising.
It is not surprising.
It changes your point of view about people.
It reinforces your point of view about people.
It makes you cry (happy).
It makes you cry (sad).
It is for you. No, it is not.
It is for the kids.
It is worth it.

Every week, I show up at PS 175 at 134th Street in Harlem, ready to wrangle second- through fourth-graders in their reading journeys. Sometimes they鈥檙e cheery, sometimes recalcitrant. Always, I know they need me and deep in their hearts, they鈥檙e happy to get me and my fellow tutors for 45 minutes of one-on-one attention with a side of learning thrown in. When I鈥檓 up in the library under the helpful guidance of Ms. Suzan (the site coordinator), we tackle phonetic basics, word analysis, and vocabulary, leading to understanding themes, characters, fact organization. In essence, learning to read, then reading to learn鈥攁ll via the sequential lessons stacked in bins next to each child鈥檚 progress folders.

All of this takes time. And commitment. And money.

Beth

Last year was a big year for me. Twenty years of health after a bad year of cancer. So, I decided to mark the event by celebrating with a fundraiser for 澳门真正最准的免费资料. How prophetic that my anniversary matched 澳门真正最准的免费资料鈥 20th anniversary. I had never asked my friends, family or colleagues for money before, but I鈥檝e participated in countless fundraisers, galas, campaigns over the years, all for good causes that have meaning to the folks sponsoring them. Now would be my turn to ask for their participation.

I reached out to 200 people, friends, good friends, family, colleagues. We set a goal to raise $25,000.

My business partner brainstormed copy and headlines for the letters I鈥檇 send. My sister, the professor, edited. My niece, a professional fundraiser, gave me 鈥渄o鈥檚 and don鈥檛s鈥 and a lot of encouragement to make my ask. My husband sent notes to his friends and a few colleagues. 澳门真正最准的免费资料 . My daughter corrected my Excel sheets. My real estate agent taught me how to use Mail Chimp.

And I worked up the nerve to do the ask via a series of emails: 鈥淧lease celebrate my 20 years of health with a donation honoring 澳门真正最准的免费资料鈥 20th anniversary!鈥 I sent the first batch via Mail Chimp and religiously (compulsively?) checked results on who opened the emails, who didn鈥檛, which addresses bounced back, and ultimately who made a contribution. (And who didn鈥檛).

When the donations were shown online, by name, I was buoyed emotionally. The most important people in my life stepped up immediately and with gusto. They called to tell me how thrilled they were to participate; they joined in my joy in being still 鈥渉ere鈥 and able to live a good life, 20 years after they saw me so sick.

They gave big. I wrote thank you notes (handwritten if I had a mailing address, or email if I didn鈥檛) and made thank you calls. I posted thank you鈥檚 on Facebook and Instagram stories and photos, and included my fundraising page link on every email and social media post. A day that didn鈥檛 show a new donation was a bummer.

After three weeks, I culled my list and sent emails directly to those who had not yet contributed.聽 I know how people get busy, they plan to give but sometimes forget, or emails from distribution lists can wind up in SPAM, so I reached out to this group directly and individually. Again, I checked off responses and contributions on my Excel sheet. Then, three weeks later, I sent a last round of personalized emails to the stragglers.

I know we can鈥檛 (and should not) count other people鈥檚 money, but I had high hopes of reaching my $25,000 goal. Some people, casual friends, long ago colleagues, elementary school friends who saw my Facebook posts, former clients of my husband, surprised me with their generosity.聽 Friends of my sister; friends of my daughter. My ex-husband donated. Most of my book club. And the finance guys (all guys! but we鈥檒l deal with that another time) were stupendous.

Fundraising page

Some people gave more than I could have imagined; some gave less than I expected. All my grandchildren (age 2-18) gave individually. One friend brought the fundraiser to her family fund and they decided to donate in honor of her late father; she blew me away with their unexpectedly large donation. Her comment: 鈥淢y dad would have loved the idea.鈥 Almost all the people I asked showed up with a meaningful contribution.

And a handful of key people were conspicuously silent. No response at all. That鈥檚 the thing about fundraising: sometimes it is painful and you may be disappointed by what you learn about a few people. But their choices don鈥檛 diminish the respect and gratitude I feel for all the others who did chime in with words and contributions.

Four months later, I reflect back on the fundraising process as well as the results. It is hard to ask for money; it is hard to say, 鈥淚 know this isn鈥檛 鈥榶our鈥 cause, but it is mine, and please do this for me.鈥 It is hard to put yourself on the line, and in some ways, the 鈥渁sk鈥 feels like a referendum on your relationships. Maybe it is, and maybe that鈥檚 a good lesson.

Was this fundraising program the right thing to do? Absolutely.

Did it work? Absolutely. We made鈥 and passed our goal.

Do I feel more committed to 澳门真正最准的免费资料? Also, absolutely.

Would I encourage others to do their own campaign? Yes, yes, yes.

As I write this, I鈥檓 wrapping up a few books for my students for their winter holiday break. Will they read them? I鈥檓 hopeful.聽聽My fundraising campaign added to that hope. And clarified how grateful I am for all the big-hearted people in my life who cared enough to make a donation 鈥 for me, and for the kids.

I鈥檓 blessed to be a reading partner.

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