Great Fundraising Organizations, by Alan Clayton. Book cover.

You've got to be in it to win it

Howard Lake | 31 July 2012 | Blogs

I’ve been lucky enough to sit on three judging panels this year for charity awards. And I’ve been a judge several times over the past few years. Each time I am surprised at the relatively modest numbers of entries that are submitted. You might imagine that charities take the decision to focus only on awards that have a cash rather than kudos value. Not so.

Of course, charities shouldn’t spend time entering all awards: they need to choose the relevant ones and those that will be a genuine reward to them. But there is only one way to win any award – and that is to enter it.

By not entering relevant awards, you guarantee that another organisation will win it, and you make the judges’ lives a little easier.

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Great Fundraising Organizations, by Alan Clayton. Buy now.

I do hope the figures above encourage you to think you do have a better chance than you imagined. Given UK Fundraising is partnering with Blackbaud Europe for its first Digital Fundraising Awards, I’ll take this opportunity to encourage you to enter those by the end of this week: 3 August is the deadline [now extended to 24 August 2012]. There is no fee. Good luck!

www.digitalfundraisingawards.co.uk

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