Do we need a fundraiser bill of rights? And if so…why?

A bill of rights is designed to protect one group of people from exploitation by a different group. We get them in politics to protect the people from the excesses of government and their rulers. We get them in the business world to protect consumers and customers from being exploited by marketers. We have a donor bill of rights. Occasionally, someone argues we need a bill of rights for fundraisers. But why? What is wrong in the fundraising profession that fundraisers need protection from harm or exploitation? And whom do they need protecting from? In the latest edition of Philanthropy Masterminds, Ian MacQuillin of the international fundraising think tank Rogare, discusses the issues.

Additional Resources

Video camera in the background with a profile picture of Holly Hull Miori

How to be More Important than Avocado Toast

|
Read More

Changing Lanes for Good: Non-Profit Career Shifts from Education to Human Services

|
Read More

<strong>Nonprofits: The Key to Ending First Quarter Blues? <em>Personalization</em></strong>

|
Read More