Talent Market

Talent Market's mission is to promote liberty by providing talent for critical roles within the free-market nonprofit sector

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Talent Tip #62 Take a Chance on Me: Nontraditional Candidates and Fundraising Roles

February 3, 2015

Talent Tip #62 Take a Chance on Me: Nontraditional Candidates and Fundraising Roles

You know what I have a boatload of?

Complaints about the government, yes. But do you know what else I have oodles of?

Fundraising roles.

As it turns out, I also have a Mayflower truck full of candidates who would love to break into fundraising for the free-market nonprofit sector.

So, what’s the disconnect? It’s that most nonprofits want to hire fundraisers with development experience (for roles beyond entry-level, anyway). Now, before you fault them for thinking this way, understand that many of these groups have tried to hire fundraisers without experience only to get burned.

How can we lower the risk for nonprofits while still being open to nontraditional candidates? Here’s one idea: hire someone with high potential (but without fundraising experience) into a low-risk role for which the individual is qualified and slowly add development responsibilities to the new hire’s portfolio. If the person excels in fundraising, great! Add more responsibilities and eventually transition the employee into fundraising if that makes sense. If it turns out this person isn’t suited for fundraising, you can keep the person in the original role where you can be confident the employee will add value to your organization.

My friend Michelle Easton, president of the Clare Boothe Luce Policy Institute, shared a beautiful example of this idea in action.

Michelle recently hired a woman into an administrative assistant role who had been an active consumer of CBLPI’s programs and events. She had experience in a previous position researching people’s backgrounds; so, when she volunteered to help perform donor research, Michelle agreed. Not surprisingly, she did a bang-up job. But things didn’t end there. Michelle found that her winning and gracious personality worked wonders on the phone with donors, and her persistence and organizational skills opened the door for several key donor meetings – including one that led to an impressive five-figure gift for the Institute. Michelle has seen so much promise that she sent her to two courses to expand her fundraising knowledge. In fact, she now spends half of her time on development and will soon be moving into fundraising full-time. Needless to say, she turned out to be a great hire all around and a tremendous help in CBLPI’s fundraising effort.

While this is an idea for nonprofits to consider, there is also a lesson here for candidates looking to break into fundraising roles: be willing to take your non-dream job in a great organization if it might open the door to your dream job later.

After all, what you’re asking nonprofits to do is – in the words of Abba – Take a Chance on Me. (Friends, this is what music videos looked like in 1977. We’ve come a long way, haven’t we?)

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About Us

Claire Kittle Dixon
Executive Director

Claire runs the day-to-day operations of Talent Market, manages searches for clients, and oversees the organization’s fundraising communications, technology, administration, and cat-herding efforts…
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Katy Gambella
Director of Outreach

Katy oversees Talent Market’s outreach to young professionals and manages the outreach team. She also manages searches and executes outreach directly herself…
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Stephanie Keaveney
Senior Manager of Outreach
Stephanie splits her time between managing talent searches for free-market nonprofits, maintaing Talent Market’s social media presence, and engaging in outreach to young professionals interested in liberty-oriented careers…
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Bailey Drouant
Project Manager
Bailey assists free-market nonprofits with their hiring needs by helping them manage the search process from start to finish…
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Savannah Rupp
Project Manager
Savannah channels her expertise to manage searches for free-market nonprofits, ensuring they find the perfect match to drive their missions forward. She also supports Talent Market’s…
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Wait, You’re a Nonprofit?

Talent Market is a nonprofit. We’ll wait here while that sinks in. We know it’s a crazy concept, but it’s been working like a charm since 2009.

Talent Market’s mission is to promote liberty by providing talent for critical roles within the free-market nonprofit sector.

We provide consulting and recruiting services at no cost to 501(c)3 nonprofit organizations that clearly and directly focus on advancing the principles of economic freedom, free enterprise, free trade, free speech, property rights, rule of law, and limited regulation. (We do not work with political organizations, organizations with mission statements that do not clearly advance free-market principles, organizations that focus on social issues, or organizations that have a focus outside of the United States. We are not a job board. ) 

Talent Market believes that the road to prosperity is paved with freedom and that the success of our movement hinges on the talent that will take us there.

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