Remove Charitable Contribution Remove Governance Remove Nonprofit governance and management Remove Philanthropy
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Sponsorship v. Donations: The Drawbacks and Benefits

NonProfit Hub

Needing money is a common denominator among all nonprofits. With the rise of social impact as a business metric, companies are more eager than ever to contribute to meaningful causes, yet many nonprofits don’t make the most of this fundraising avenue. A dependence on corporate interests may influence nonprofit agendas.

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How Guarantees Can Advance Community Development and Racial Equity

NonProfit Quarterly

While many foundations screen their endowment investments based on environmental, social, and governance factors, only a few optimize their investment strategies for mission impact. There is, however, a way for nonprofits to gain greater access to “flexible” capital and for foundations to generate a financial return.

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5 Reasons Why You Should Focus Your Fundraising On Foundations, Funds, Trusts, and Endowments

iMarketSmart

Many fundraisers don’t understand the world of big philanthropy. They don’t understand charitable instruments. the most important charitable instruments include, Charitable remainder and lead trusts. Step 1: Donor gives to a charitable fund that he controls. Step 2: Donor manages the assets in the charitable fund.