YP Journal

Find Donor Partners at Fundraiser Events

Find Donor Partners at Fundraiser Events

How many special event fundraisers have you attended - this year, last year, the last decade?  I've been to so many that it would take all the fingers and toes of a roomful of friends to count them all.  None stand out; they blend together in my mind. Now before you...

read more
Give Philanthropically AND Make a Difference

Give Philanthropically AND Make a Difference

Why should you give philanthropically and strive to make a difference?  You have to think about it for a minute to catch the importance of  the "and" word. And it is very important. In our philanthropy we often assume we're making  a difference. We take the idea of...

read more
My Philanthropy or Your Philanthropy?

My Philanthropy or Your Philanthropy?

Here’s how it happens time after time. Someone I haven’t seen for a while asks me how my new business is going? Then they often follow it with “What’s the name again? My Philanthropy?” I always smile and say with emphasis “no, it’s Your Philanthropy.” What often...

read more
Philanthropy Zones Need Better Signs

Philanthropy Zones Need Better Signs

Did you know philanthropy zones are easy to miss? They lack clearly marked signs. Sometimes philanthropy zones have signs but they are confusing. It's like the school zone I drove through this week. It's really two overlapping zones - one a public middle school, the...

read more
Philanthropy Changes: How The Next Generation will Operate

Philanthropy Changes: How The Next Generation will Operate

In honor of “The Dog Days of Summer” let’s talk about a new opportunity to be philanthropic and entrepreneurial at the same time. For a $20 donation you can support the start-up of Silidog Silent Tags. It’s the best kind of opportunity – a way to make life better for...

read more
How to Grow Young Philanthropists

How to Grow Young Philanthropists

A Young Philanthropist Begins We asked a group of kids between the ages of eight and thirteen to come up with ideas to donate their own money. Two nine year old boys (an important element of the story) put their heads together in serious and silly discussion. When it...

read more
4 Questions Lead to a Better Gift

4 Questions Lead to a Better Gift

The weather man predicted 100 degree days are on the horizon. It’s too hot here in Texas for most outdoor activities unless you’re heading for water. It’s hard to even find a breeze. My solution is early morning walks before the thermometer starts climbing. Then I...

read more
Give the American Way

Give the American Way

She waves proudly in the wind. As I drive down neighborhood streets evidence of our patriotism is most on exhibit between June 14 and July 4. Our Flag stands proudly in front yards next to mailboxes and flies from porches, street after street. As a young teen living...

read more
Four Tips to Donate Fast and Well

Four Tips to Donate Fast and Well

Flash philanthropy is here. Also known as crowdfunding, it’s an email or a social media request followed by an immediate and overwhelming urge to say yes, add the credit card and hit send. Will the emotion be enough to trigger digging out the credit card? Will the...

read more
Encouraging Your Grad’s Brand of Philanthropy

Encouraging Your Grad’s Brand of Philanthropy

If one of the first words out of a toddler's mouth is no, then why is fast behind it. Parents spend a lot of time fielding innocent why questions from children and in later years the frustrating and demanding why questions from teenagers. By the time they graduate...

read more
Start Now and Create a 100 Year Family

Start Now and Create a 100 Year Family

How deep and how wide is a family? For genealogy buffs, it’s a look back in time. Let’s look forward and create a 100-year family. What would that look like? What would we have to do today to make it happen? The 100-year family spans generations. In my case, one...

read more
Google Can’t Answer Every Question

Google Can’t Answer Every Question

I just read that effective people usually ask good questions - not just of others, but of themselves. Then I read this, “Life is a big question that even Google can’t answer.” I don’t know who said it, but it’s the right quote for this fast-paced internet-driven world...

read more
Cares a Whole Awful Lot

Cares a Whole Awful Lot

“Unless someone like you cares a whole awful lot, nothing is going to get better. It’s not.” That’s sage advice from one of the most popular children’s authors of all time, Dr. Seuss. Giving to the causes you care “a whole awful lot about” should be easy. It should...

read more
Giving is a Business Matter

Giving is a Business Matter

Let’s talk about how giving can be an important part of the WHY of buying. Author Simon Sinek says “People don’t buy or give to WHAT you do or HOW you do it, they buy or give to WHY you do it.” Once you open this door and include giving in your WHY you need to know...

read more
Follow That Apple

Follow That Apple

Who is going to buy the new Apple Watch? Short answer - the next-gens.  They are known as Gen X and Y, can still read small print, and they're younger than me. They are learning new technologies rapidly and integrating them into their lives. Their brains are...

read more
Why Talk About Your Money?

Why Talk About Your Money?

What does your money look like? It used to be green paper and change in our pockets, then paper turned to plastic and now it looks an awful lot like my iPhone. More than ever before the “medium is the message”. How we define money - share, spend, or save it – makes us...

read more

Kids Can Change the World

  When asked what he would invent to change the world, he asked for a pass so he could think about it. When we came back to him, he laughed, put his head on the table, giggled and then announced “I would invent a flying hot-dog machine to feed the homeless.” We...

read more
Just my Opinion

Just my Opinion

May I call myself an expert based on 33 years experience? That's what my opinions are based on - years working in and with nonprofit organizations, and many experiences with donors. I'm going to take the risk and share a couple of opinions. I hope you'll respond with...

read more
The Spirit of the Gift

The Spirit of the Gift

In my memory he is always sitting. My grandfather could be found in his chair at the end of the kitchen table, behind the steering wheel of his old truck, in the caboose of a Cotton Belt train, and sometimes a top his favorite Appaloosa horse.  When he wasn’t riding a...

read more
Four Lessons From Many Puzzles

Four Lessons From Many Puzzles

My work this year can be described as many different puzzles. Whether it was a family, a business, or a foundation fitting all the pieces together was as easy as it was hard. Every puzzle was different, and finishing was rewarding. Giving puzzles are more frequent...

read more
Giving Stories Create Family Legacies

Giving Stories Create Family Legacies

Family legacies grow from stories. I've witnessed it first hand. Last year I spent time with a family mulling over a family gift in honor of grandmother.  Grandmother had been involved with several organizations, so the family sorted through various ideas about what...

read more
Give Together, Learn Together

Give Together, Learn Together

Will the next generation give as much as their grandparents and parents? Which generation is “the next generation”? The answer is relative, isn't it? Every generation wonders about the one that follows.  Baby Boomers have been wondering about Generation X and they are...

read more
A Family Experience

A Family Experience

I could call it the best family counseling we ever paid for. We weren’t there for family counseling, but if functioning better as a family is a fringe benefit who’s going to complain, right? We turned to Dawn Franks for some good old-fashioned advice on how to be...

read more
Four Ways to Think Small, But Give Big

Four Ways to Think Small, But Give Big

I was reminded recently to stop and think small.  You may ask what happened to think big, dream big, be a part of something big? For just a few minutes, or a small amount of your time, reflect with me on how small can impact your giving in a big way. To Think Small is...

read more
Build Your Own Giving Bridge

Build Your Own Giving Bridge

I know my childhood memory of the Big Eddy Bridge, now under Lake Palestine, is not quite accurate. But the memory is real. Every chance we got my brother and I would convince my dad to drive over the very old and very rickety bridge.  It seemed like every board in...

read more
The Godfather was Wrong

The Godfather was Wrong

I've been thinking a lot about business and philanthropy lately.  Why would a business spend any of their valuable time focused on something other than making a profit? Could being involved with a nonprofit actually make the business better somehow? I've recently been...

read more
Three ways to Explore

Three ways to Explore

A donor asked me if I was familiar with the organization USA Cares. The donor is very interested in supporting their efforts through the Texas Chapter. Since I didn’t know about the organization, I immediately turned to GuideStar to do a quick check of their tax...

read more
A Plain Answer Will Do

A Plain Answer Will Do

The question was posed this way. “The next time you write a column would you answer a question from “a little old lady?” Now without going into a lot of detail I know this “little old lady” quite well.  Let’s just say she probably knows me better than I know myself....

read more
The Path Below Giants

The Path Below Giants

Would you follow a path into woods unknown below giant trees? I would follow that path. You see I love trees and I love to follow a path to see where it goes. I’m at a place like that right now.  I have no idea where my new path with Your Philanthropy will lead.  I...

read more
Philanthropy from Within

Philanthropy from Within

“The desire to engage must come from within.” These words came from Azim Premji, chairman of the Indian global technology company Wipro. Premji was the recipient of the Economic Times Life Achievement Award in 2013. In his acceptance speech, he also said,...

read more
Why is it so HOT?

Why is it so HOT?

It’s July! What comes to mind? Vacation, swimming, Barb B Q, fireworks, family, baseball. Ok, what would you add to the list? It really is that time of year that can be jam packed with activities just like another time of year – yep, Christmas time.  In fact I just...

read more
Summer of Generosity

Summer of Generosity

During the last month, I had conversations with two different mothers, one with average family resources and one with significant resources. In spite of their differences, they had one desire in common. Both mothers hope to raise generous children. Both mothers have...

read more
At the Corner of Happy and Healthy

At the Corner of Happy and Healthy

Happy should describe the way you feel about serving on the board. Healthy should describe the organization. Your time on the board shouldn’t feel like a six year prison sentence, looking through the bars of early interest and well-intended commitment. You remember...

read more
From Best First to Next Best Gift

From Best First to Next Best Gift

Please allow me to refer to the donor as HT. “HT said I made a commitment to help"; then later said "I follow through on my commitments." Finally, HT said "I know they need my help to make this idea happen.” Three critical statements made during an hour-long...

read more
Nearly Spaces

Nearly Spaces

I'm nearly moved into new office space. That project is nearly completed. Not long ago I even heard myself tell another person "I have nearly decided and would get back with them." Right now there is more nearly in my life than I like. I'm transitioning into new...

read more
Finally, answers to my questions….

Finally, answers to my questions….

She’s almost here.  We’ve been talking about Thayer Willis joining us for Dessert and Coffee for a discussion on intergenerational wealth for months.  In spite of an unexpected weather event in March that kept her plane from arriving and the rest of us keeping warm at...

read more
Name That Fundraiser!

Name That Fundraiser!

Quick – name the last fundraiser you attended. Good music, friends, a fun auction, or a healthy walk through tree lined streets. Were there any nagging questions? How will they use the money raised? How much will be left over after the event expenses are paid? Am I...

read more
Mistakes in Full View

Mistakes in Full View

Is there anything more humiliating than making mistakes in full public view? Frankly it frustrates me when mistakes happen for all to see. It happened recently when I posted the YP Journal only to discover it wasn’t working correctly.  I immediately received emails...

read more
Inside Outside Information

Inside Outside Information

I’ve had occasion over the years to be involved in a number of giving decisions that didn’t work out as expected.  Results we hoped for didn’t materialize.  Occasionally, part of the grant was returned if it had not all been spent. In spite of the frustration, the...

read more
Walk and Talk Generosity

Walk and Talk Generosity

  I have a distinct memory at ten years old asking my mother at what age I could marry.  Her answer was not an age; it was graduate college first. That’s the first time I remember knowing a lot of plans would have to wait until after college. At the time neither...

read more
Describing Wealth

Describing Wealth

Is it a large pile of money, possessions, or investment portfolios? Our upcoming March speaker, Thayer Willis, describes it this way: “Let’s say the family has a big pile of money and a trail of broken relationships; nobody working or family members doing work that...

read more
Best Birthday Gift

Best Birthday Gift

Guest Post by Cathy Krafve Diamonds. Golf clubs. Pearls. Chocolates. Cowboy boots. What is the best birthday gift you ever received? Until last fall, I would have answered my favorite gift was a pair of black lizard skin boots that my husband gave me years ago. Of...

read more
Who is You

Who is You

One of the things I hear most often these days since announcing Your Philanthropy is spinning off to become its own philanthropic consulting firm is, "I’m so excited for you...now explain again exactly what you’ll be doing?" The question usually can be interpreted to...

read more
Yes, I Love This Work!

Yes, I Love This Work!

Dawn Franks closed a chapter in a 33-year career of working with nonprofits, foundations and companies when she left Fourth Partner on December 31, 2013. She is spinning Your Philanthropy, a service developed in 2013 under the Fourth Partner umbrella, into a private...

read more
The Fifty-Dollar Bonus

The Fifty-Dollar Bonus

Yes, the year is winding down. If you’re like me you’re still rushing around trying to accomplish a few more things on this year’s list before taking a deep breath for a day or two. If giving year-end bonus checks to employees is on your list, you might want to check...

read more
Giving Traditions Create Family Glue

Giving Traditions Create Family Glue

I just measured the stack of letters from various charities seeking funding that has arrived in the last few weeks, and it’s two inches tall. That’s enough to create a Scrooge moment if there ever was one, but if your style is to tackle the stack and get it done as...

read more
Fred Smith: Obstacles or Opportunties

Fred Smith: Obstacles or Opportunties

As a percentage of all charitable giving in the United States ($316 billion), the religious sector continues to collect the lion's share - 36 percent. While that is considerably less than the 50 percent of religious giving represented 10 years ago, it is still true...

read more
Fred Smith: The First Leaf of Fall

Fred Smith: The First Leaf of Fall

The Velvet Revolution, or Gentle Revolution, was a non-violent, student-led revolution in Czechoslovakia that took place from November 17 to December 29, 1989. Dominated by student and other popular demonstrations against the one-party government of the Communist...

read more
SMART and Faith-Based

SMART and Faith-Based

When is faith-based giving smart?  According to Gray Keller, a self-described thinker, author and philanthropist, “It can be the beginning of a journey of a lifetime.” He recently wrote about what he describes as “SMART Giving for the Community of Faith.”  I’ve used...

read more

Gift-Giving Advice for Children

I heard a great story last week. A father told me that his young daughter had asked if she could adopt a child in another country and his reply was something like, “Oh honey, the organizations that say they do that are just scams, and the money doesn’t really feed the...

read more
Five Tips for a Better Family Conversation

Five Tips for a Better Family Conversation

“We need to talk to our kids about some of our philanthropy decisions, but we’ve never had those kinds of talks before. It’s all in our will, but we haven’t shared it with them.  I think we’re late, but when is late too late? We don’t know where to start.” You may...

read more

Fred Smith: My Fair Lady

In 1931, Judge Sam Lindsey donated a plot of land on South Broadway to the Tyler Women's Forum for their new building - the Tyler Woman's Building - with the stipulation that the building be completed within one year. That was quite a challenge in 1931, but it was...

read more
Ready, Set, Go!

Ready, Set, Go!

As a kid, I can remember the excitement of lining up at recess to begin a race and the teacher saying those exact words, "Ready, Set, Go!"  We were all supposed to take a moment at the chalked starting line to get ready, set our tennis shoes in the most advantageous...

read more
When is Late Too Late?

When is Late Too Late?

That was the question she asked me in a casual conversation recently.  It started as the common “how are things going?” conversation. She asked about our organization's name change again, "Your something?"  I reminded her it was "Your Philanthropy" and things were...

read more
Fred Smith: It’s a Conspiracy

Fred Smith: It’s a Conspiracy

Like most of the people reading this, I have more than enough meetings. So, when someone calls and says they want to get together, I have learned to ask a few questions ahead of time. I should have asked more questions about my meeting this week with Steve Smith. I...

read more
Changing Leadership, Changing Gifts

Changing Leadership, Changing Gifts

The conversation went something like this: “I’m sure you’ve heard they have a new Executive Director. What do you think is happening over there? Do you think they will survive?” The answer is yes, they will survive. In fact, my guess is they’ll still be going strong...

read more
Fred Smith: Mailbox Money

Fred Smith: Mailbox Money

My family moved to Tyler in 1984, and I almost immediately began teaching a Bible study that had been going for 20 years. The couples had begun as young parents and kept meeting weekly through all the stages of raising children and seeing them go off -  and then...

read more
Another Side of Why

Another Side of Why

The eraser came hurling directly at me. I had just asked my favorite professor if he could explain the concept he was teaching in our summer statistics class one more time. The concepts were challenging for me, and my professor lost patience with my continual...

read more
Maxi Anderson: A Millennial Perspective

Maxi Anderson: A Millennial Perspective

Note: Maxi Anderson, 18, is a recent graduate of All Saints Episcopal School and is an incoming freshman at the University of Oklahoma. She is part of the Generation Y/Millennial age group, which is loosely identified as being born after 1979. We asked Maxi to write...

read more
The Next Generation of Givers: Steven Rogers

The Next Generation of Givers: Steven Rogers

Steven Rogers was raised in Tyler, Texas, in a family that is serious, but quietly active in the giving community. Today he works as a business consultant and has been working with clients both in the U.S. and Mexico. When he was in his senior year at Wheaton College...

read more
The Proof Is In The Pudding

The Proof Is In The Pudding

At a family reunion this past weekend, I learned my father used to pay his younger siblings a nickel for their chocolate pudding when he came home on military leave. He loved chocolate pudding, and I was raised on it – the homemade kind my mother cooled down in a...

read more
Fred Smith: Inheritance

Fred Smith: Inheritance

When my father died I was named the executor of the estate. While I had read through some articles on the subject, I was not prepared for the actual work required of me for the next full year. I could not have imagined the complexity involved and the maddening...

read more
Fred Smith: The Land of Opportunity

Fred Smith: The Land of Opportunity

Kyle Penney at the East Texas Communities Foundation has created an interesting and insightful study of the transfer of wealth that is going on in East Texas and will last for at least the next 50 years. While the total transfer in the United States is in the...

read more
The Overhead Question

The Overhead Question

Once when I worked at the East Texas Crisis Center, I received a call from a potential donor named Ray who had been referred to us by friends while playing golf. Ray was new in the area and wanted to visit with me and learn more about the Crisis Center. At that point...

read more
No Secret Recipe

No Secret Recipe

Wouldn’t it be great if you could go online and find a recipe for effective philanthropy that resulted in the perfect gift every time? It would be wonderful to do away with the anxiety of not knowing if your gift accomplished what you hoped for - or even worse - the...

read more
Fred Smith: The Next 10 Years in East Texas

Fred Smith: The Next 10 Years in East Texas

In 1952 a minister, Sam Shoemaker, told Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania city leaders that “one day Pittsburgh will be more famous for God than steel.”  That was quite a statement to make at the time.  Pittsburgh was the steel capital of the world.  It wasn’t a boast or...

read more
We’re Going All the Way

We’re Going All the Way

“If you’re going to try, go all the way. Otherwise, don’t even start.” Writer and poet Charles Bukowski said it very succinctly. Start and go all the way. We’re doing exactly that, we’re starting something new – Your Philanthropy - and we’re going all the way. There...

read more

Recent Journal Posts

Sep 04 2024

You Choose – Riley or Seuss – Who’s Best for Donor and Nonprofit Alike

What's that saying, "If it looks like a duck, swims like a duck, and quacks like a duck, then it probably is a duck." It's also known as the duck test. It seems so...
Aug 21 2024

How to Level Up: Transform Your Mom & Pop Shop to Give Like Big Players

Photo by Shashi Chaturvedula on Unsplash Let's talk about the business of philanthropy – not improving nonprofits with business principles, but rather, the power of...
Aug 06 2024

Today’s Gift Can Impact the Future

The first bicycle I attempted to ride lacked training wheels and was a bit large for me. My cousin was eighteen months older, taller, and had long legs. She made riding...
Jul 24 2024

Seven Tips To Teach Generosity to Kids Before Summer Ends

Summer is almost done! School clothes and supplies are on sale. Amidst the plans for one last trip to visit grandparents, a Saturday at the theme park down the road or...
Jul 10 2024

How Nonprofits Got Smarter and What it Means for Donors

I turned the calendar page this morning and found this quote: “Starting over is not starting from scratch; it’s starting from experience.” Career changes, family...
Jun 19 2024

3 Questions and 3 Tips to Give Like Melinda Gates

I stepped out of the sunroom to a sunny, cool morning. Then I realized it's mid-June, and the year is half over. Summers used to mean running barefoot through the...
Jun 04 2024

5 Easy Tips for Summer Time with Grandkids

A morning walk triggered a fond memory in early June, mid-sixties. The water was cold as I jumped into the pool's shallow end. Slowly walking down the pool steps, my...
May 20 2024

Six Ideas to Honor the 2024 Graduate

The front page of today's newspaper has a wonderful story about a graduating high school senior at the top of his class, already facing life's realities and unexpected...
May 08 2024

Why the Science of Fundraising Makes for Better Fundraising

Photo:  Astronomical Clock in Prague, Czech Republic Over twenty years of my nonprofit career, I drove or flew home from meetings and conferences, wondering how to...
Apr 17 2024

Aspiration and Generosity: The Dynamic Duo that Leads to Your Best Giving

What are your aspirations for generosity? Do you dream of what might be? What you could be doing? How you might do something differently? Dreams always lead to me...

Let’s start a conversation!