At
our agency (CSS – where I work), the vast bulk of the funding comes in through
governmental sources. From memory, I think it is something like 67% of our
income comes in through the state – like 4.5 million. Another 25% comes in through
the township boards. In Illinois there is a government smaller than a county
but bigger than a municipality. There are eight of these boards that support us
for a total of roughly another million. The rest of the funding is through the
development department, eight percent or so where our income is roughly six
million dollars.
So
in absolute terms, the development department is not that small, but all of the
in-kind and individual donations and grants that come in really don’t look like
a whole lot in terms of when you plot up a pie chart. What matters is that the
state hasn’t increased rates for reimbursement for some of our programs for ten
years or so and each year we have to do more with less (The statutory
reimbursement rate for some of our workers is below minimum wage because they
haven’t kept up).
What
this means is that the development department is a key place because that is
the place where it determines if our net assets will increase or decrease
(because you can’t say “make a profit” in a nonprofit, but you can’t operate in
the red consistently).
So
you have to both keep nurturing the people who do give both in terms of
foundations and in terms of individuals. I think this is where you board is so
important. It’s not just the ask that is important, but it is also utilizing their
professional networks. I’m sure there are places you can go online and find
calls for proposals that you can write a grant for sight unseen and if you are
really good you might hook it. The reality is that relationships are so
essential that you need to mine those first before you go taking yourself down
blind alleys.