Newsletter: Partnership Contracts: Lessons from the American Revolution β ; How Cause Marketing Can Help Businesses Get People Back in the Office π’ ; 3 Things That Disconnect Donors from Your Cause
The American Revolution started over a broken contract. So, discussing partnership contracts the week before Independence Day seems only appropriate.
According to the Declaration of Independence, King George III broke the social contract between himself and his subjects, the American colonists. (Boy, punctuation and capitalization were off the rails in 1776!)
"We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness. That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed, That whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Government, laying its foundation on such principles and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their Safety and Happiness."
Contracts matter and should be upheld. They should be honored when they are made between a king and his subjects - and when they are made between a nonprofit and a company.
But what should be in a contract?
Ironically, it was a post from my friends at Remarkable Partnerships in the U.K. (awkward, right?π¬) that got me thinking about agreements and contracts.
They shared βfive recommendations for effective partnership agreementsβ. I liked their fourth point: Establish a dispute resolution mechanism. That's a great idea.
Their post reminded me that just three years ago, cause marketing attorney extraordinaire Karen Wu of Perlman & Perlman fame π€© and I shared a detailed post on contracts that included a 15-point agreement checklist.
The very first item on the checklist is to outline a clear description of the promotion, including:
Name of the benefiting charitable organization and charitable purpose supported by the promotion
Participating goods/services
Dollar amount or percentage of the purchase price to be donated
Promotion period
Minimum guarantee or donation cap (if applicable)
Any additional requirements to trigger a donation (e.g., coupon redemption, submission of special code, etc.)
βYou can check out the other 14 points hereβ.
When you sign a contract, both partners agree to do certain things. Reneging can lead to hard feelings, bickering, litigation, and maybe even revolt.
King George should have thought twice. The fireworks he got for breaking his contract weren't the festive kind, and he lost the colonies. Let's make sure your contract is a cause for celebration.
βοΈ Partnership Notes
1. How to do cause marketing with a business trying βto get employees to return to the officeβ.
2. Have you downloaded Engage for Good's β2023 America's Charity Checkout Champions Reportβ?
Get this: In 2022, more than $749 million was raised in the U.S. by 77 point-of-sale fundraising campaigns that each raised at least $1 million. π€―π€―π€―
π€ Marketing Your Cause
1. I β€οΈ this rant from marketer Amanda Natividad. #1 speaks directly to nonprofits: βYour marketing tests are a waste of timeβ.
2. βHow to talk to Gen Xβ (aka people like me between the ages of 43-58).
3. Remember the Ice Bucket Challenge? I do, and I bet you do too. But I wish the ALS Association would forget it. Their new fundraising idea: βThe CEO Soakβ.
Really?
But it's not just ALSA. Tried and true ideas are why we have βover a dozen other moviesβ inspired by the 1976 blockbuster Rocky. But none of them have been as successful as the original.
The CEO Soak will be as popular as maybe Creed II. Still, I hope the ALSA raises a few bucks!
π Cool Jobs in Cause
1. Director of Strategic Partnerships, βSociety for Scienceβ, Washington, DC
2. Director of Race Partnerships, βMarathon Kidsβ, Austin, TX ($65k - $70k)
3. Associate Director, Corporate Sponsorships, βParalyzed Veterans of Americaβ, Washington, DC
4. Director, Corporate Partnerships, βPartnership for a Healthier Americaβ, Washington, DC
5. Senior Director of Corporate Philanthropy, βThe Conservation Fundβ, Washington DC-Baltimore Area
π§ π Brain Food
1. β3 things that disconnect donors from your causeββ¦and four that connect them. I hate when nonprofits do #3.
2. This is interesting. It's the latest edition of βThe Geography of Givingβ, an analysis of contributions made through Fidelity Charitable, the giant donor-advised fund program established by Fidelity Investments.
Jump ahead to page 13 of the report and check out the top 20 nonprofits supported by Fidelity DAFs.
For my Boston homies, βthis article lists the top 10 Bay State nonprofitsβ supported by Fidelity DAFs.
3. I have your next big fundraising event: βA bouncy house for adultsβ. But remember, it's all fun and games...until someone gets hurt! π€π