How do we raise more money for our nonprofit?
It’s the question most organizations are trying to answer.
And it sounds practical.
But it often leads in the wrong direction.
Because it assumes the next step is:
- more campaigns
- more outreach
- more activity
In many cases, that’s not what’s missing.
Before asking how to raise more money for your nonprofit, there’s a more useful question:
What is your current fundraising actually capable of producing?
This builds on two earlier conversations:
👉 What happens after the first gift?
👉 What actually makes a fundraising campaign successful?
Donors don’t appear when you need them.
Campaigns don’t fix weak assumptions.
So, the issue isn’t just how to increase fundraising revenue.
It’s whether your current approach can actually support it.
Most fundraising activity isn’t designed to grow
This is the part that doesn’t get said clearly.
Not all fundraising activities are built to produce growth.
Some:
- build on themselves
- deepen over time
- create future revenue
Others:
- reset every cycle
- rely on new effort every time
- and don’t carry forward in a meaningful way
Both can raise money.
Only one creates sustained and scalable growth.
Most organizations are doing a mix of both.
Very few can clearly distinguish between them.
That’s where growth breaks down
From the outside, things look active:
- campaigns are running
- events are happening
- outreach is increasing
Inside, it’s less clear.
Because activity is not the same as progress.
If your revenue depends on:
- repeating the same events
- re-securing the same grants
- restarting donor relationships each cycle
Then growth will be difficult to create.
Not because of effort. Because of structure.
This is not just internal. It’s environmental
There is less margin for error than there used to be.
- The proportion of Canadians donating has declined significantly over time (Statistics Canada; Imagine Canada)
- Giving is increasingly concentrated among fewer donors
- And 88% of charities report financial uncertainty as a major concern (Charity Insights Canada Project)
Sources:
That combination creates a simple reality:
More of your revenue depends on fewer things going right.
And if those things don’t build over time:
You’re not growing revenue. You’re recreating it.
The question most teams don’t ask clearly
Not:
“How do we raise more money?”
But:
“Which of our current fundraising activities can actually support sustained and scalable growth and which can’t?”
Bcause those are not the same thing.
If revenue were going to grow, you would be able to show it
Not describe it. Show it.
You would be able to point to:
- which activities are increasing revenue over time
- which donors are deepening their support
- what happens after someone gives
- and what specifically is expected to carry forward into next year
If that’s not clear:
then your fundraising strategy isn’t designed for growth.
It’s designed for continuation.
Where this gets stuck
Most teams already feel this tension.
They can see:
- which activities are working harder than they should
- where results feel fragile
- where too much depends on repeating the same effort
But it rarely becomes explicit.
So, the organization keeps moving.
More activity.
More campaigns.
More pressure.
Without changing what the system actually produces.
The Shift
Before adding more, separate what builds from what resets
- which activities carry forward
- which ones need to be recreated
- and what that means for your ability to grow
Because if that distinction isn’t clear, more effort won’t lead to more revenue.
It will just lead to more work.
If you’re trying to increase fundraising revenue
Start here.
Not with new tactics.
Not with another campaign.
With a clear view of:
what your current fundraising is actually built to do
If this feels familiar
You’re not alone.
Most organizations reach this point:
- they’re working hard
- they’re doing the right kinds of things
but growth isn’t showing up the way it should
That’s where this conversation starts.
If you’re not sure which parts of your fundraising actually support growth and which are just maintaining it. This is the work to do next.
Final thought
Organizations don’t struggle to raise more money because they lack ideas.
They struggle because they don’t clearly separate what builds revenue
From what simply replaces it
That distinction changes everything.
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