The document discusses education in India and areas for improvement. It notes that while India's education system is leading and on par with developed countries, the quality of education needs to be improved over quantity. Specifically, it states that the system emphasizes theoretical knowledge over practical skills and that infrastructure and staffing in government schools is insufficient. The document advocates for the government to take action in addressing these challenges to improve students' futures and help India become a developed country.
This document discusses education and the education industry in Pakistan. It provides background on the formation and regulation of higher education through the Higher Education Commission. It then discusses key public and private universities in Pakistan. The document outlines the vision, mission, and academic programs of Superior University. It analyzes consumer behavior and marketing strategies in the education industry, identifying different customer segments and the 4Ps of marketing - product, place, price, and promotion. It concludes with frameworks for understanding student decision making processes.
This presentation discusses the relationship between education and social stratification. It begins with introducing the topics of education, social stratification, and how education affects child development. It then examines how education can enable social mobility but also potentially create inequalities. The major sociological perspectives on how education relates to stratification are also summarized, including functionalism, conflict theory, and symbolic interactionism. In conclusion, while education can reduce inequalities, it also sometimes contributes to social stratification depending on the context.
1. The document is a biology project on the Ebola virus completed by a student. It includes an introduction to Ebola, its classification, symptoms, transmission, diagnosis and prevention.
2. The largest sections cover the epidemiology of Ebola, discussing its natural reservoir in fruit bats and outbreaks in West Africa.
3. Treatment of Ebola focuses on treating symptoms and several vaccine candidates are discussed, though none have been approved.
Replication allows data from a MySQL master database to be synchronized with one or more slave databases. The master records all data changes in its binary log. Slave databases connect to the master and receive the binary log transactions, which they then apply locally to stay synchronized with the master database. Replication can be used for load balancing reads across multiple slave servers or for high availability by failing over to a slave if the master fails.
Computer hardware devices include webcams, scanners, mice, speakers, trackballs, and light pens. Webcams connect via USB or network and are used for video calls and conferencing. Scanners optically scan images and documents into digital formats. Mice are pointing devices that detect motion to move a cursor. Speakers have internal amplifiers and audio jacks. Trackballs contain ball and sensors to detect rotation for cursor movement. Light pens allow pointing directly on CRT displays.
The document discusses education in India and areas for improvement. It notes that while India's education system is leading and on par with developed countries, the quality of education needs to be improved over quantity. Specifically, it states that the system emphasizes theoretical knowledge over practical skills and that infrastructure and staffing in government schools is insufficient. The document advocates for the government to take action in addressing these challenges to improve students' futures and help India become a developed country.
This document discusses education and the education industry in Pakistan. It provides background on the formation and regulation of higher education through the Higher Education Commission. It then discusses key public and private universities in Pakistan. The document outlines the vision, mission, and academic programs of Superior University. It analyzes consumer behavior and marketing strategies in the education industry, identifying different customer segments and the 4Ps of marketing - product, place, price, and promotion. It concludes with frameworks for understanding student decision making processes.
This presentation discusses the relationship between education and social stratification. It begins with introducing the topics of education, social stratification, and how education affects child development. It then examines how education can enable social mobility but also potentially create inequalities. The major sociological perspectives on how education relates to stratification are also summarized, including functionalism, conflict theory, and symbolic interactionism. In conclusion, while education can reduce inequalities, it also sometimes contributes to social stratification depending on the context.
1. The document is a biology project on the Ebola virus completed by a student. It includes an introduction to Ebola, its classification, symptoms, transmission, diagnosis and prevention.
2. The largest sections cover the epidemiology of Ebola, discussing its natural reservoir in fruit bats and outbreaks in West Africa.
3. Treatment of Ebola focuses on treating symptoms and several vaccine candidates are discussed, though none have been approved.
Replication allows data from a MySQL master database to be synchronized with one or more slave databases. The master records all data changes in its binary log. Slave databases connect to the master and receive the binary log transactions, which they then apply locally to stay synchronized with the master database. Replication can be used for load balancing reads across multiple slave servers or for high availability by failing over to a slave if the master fails.
Computer hardware devices include webcams, scanners, mice, speakers, trackballs, and light pens. Webcams connect via USB or network and are used for video calls and conferencing. Scanners optically scan images and documents into digital formats. Mice are pointing devices that detect motion to move a cursor. Speakers have internal amplifiers and audio jacks. Trackballs contain ball and sensors to detect rotation for cursor movement. Light pens allow pointing directly on CRT displays.
Building Stronger Donor Relations SystemsColin Cumming
In recent years, phrases like “culture of philanthropy” and “donor centricity” have hit the field by storm, often with budget-breaking strategies for implementation and little information about where to start when one may not be a decision-maker. Thus at the Johnson Center for Philanthropy's Brown Bag Lunch & Learn Series, I facilitated a discussion about the importance of donor relations when it comes to long-term fundraising success and ethical fundraising practices. I also talked about the role of fundraising in the context of arts and cultural organizations.
The goal of the event was for participants to walk away with easy to understand ideas for their own organizations and volunteer roles. I discussed: Donor relations and fundraising from a historical perspective; How to integrate engaging donor relations practices into your fundraising program; Fund development challenges specific to membership-based organizations, arts and cultural organizations, and organizations that frequently request general operating funds.
Charities use newsletters to communicate with donors. But often with mixed objectives and for mixed audiences. In this presentation we look at what makes good communications and what newsletters are for. Towards the end, all attendees critiqued each others newsletters (anonymously) and the result was a resounding disappointment. Only one of the newsletters were actually achieving good communications.
The document provides tips for nonprofits to drive more online giving based on insights from analyzing the donation experiences of 200 organizations. Key findings include the importance of making the donation process easy, providing personalized thank you communications, offering various payment options, and engaging donors through stories, volunteer opportunities, and asking for recurring gifts. The presentation emphasizes that retaining existing donors is cheaper than acquiring new ones and outlines specific actions nonprofits can take, such as sending timely thank yous, inviting donors to events, and using donor segmentation, to strengthen donor relationships and increase donations.
The document provides tips for nonprofits to drive more online giving based on insights from analyzing 300 nonprofit donation experiences. Key findings include making the donation process easy, providing personalized thank you communications quickly, offering various payment options, and engaging donors through stories, volunteer opportunities, and asking for recurring donations. Nonprofits are encouraged to review their donation landing pages, receipts, follow up communications, and use of phone calls and personalized emails to thank and retain donors in order to raise more online.
The document provides tips for nonprofits to drive more online giving based on insights from analyzing 300 nonprofit donation experiences. Key findings include making the donation process easy, providing personalized thank you communications quickly, offering various payment options, and engaging donors through stories, volunteer opportunities, and asking for recurring donations. Nonprofits are encouraged to review their donation experience from a donor's perspective and implement small changes like phone calls and personalized outreach to increase retention rates and fundraising.
https://bloomerang.co/resources/webinars/
Your thank you letter is the first step toward RETAINING a donor. Join Gail Perry, MBA, CFRE – just in time for the holiday season – for tips on how to NAIL your donor thank yous!
This document summarizes tips and best practices for nonprofits to drive more online giving based on analyzing 400 nonprofit donation experiences. Key findings include making the donation process easy, engaging donors on the landing page, sending timely thank you communications, and following up through newsletters, calls, and asks for recurring donations or involvement. Practical tips shared are telling impactful stories, giving donors opportunities to get involved, asking for recurring gifts, and using donor segmentation for meaningful messages. The presentation outlines these strategies and provides examples to help nonprofits retain and engage donors for increased online fundraising.
The document provides tips on how nonprofits can raise more online donations. It summarizes the results of a study where $25 donations were made to 400 organizations to analyze their donation experiences. Key findings include that donors are more likely to give again if they receive a timely thank you, feel appreciated, and know how their donation is used. The document recommends making donations easy, providing impactful stories, personalizing communications, calling donors, inviting involvement through volunteering, and asking for recurring gifts. Practical tips shared include using payment options donors prefer, customizing receipts and thank yous, and engaging donors through newsletters, calls, and events.
0311 National Accounts Online Giving Trends.pdfBloomerang
James Goalder presented on best practices for raising more online donations. He discussed exploring the donation experiences of 500 nonprofits and key insights. Some important findings included personalizing thank you communications, making the donation process easy, and engaging donors through storytelling and opportunities to get involved. Practical tips included thanking donors quickly, inviting them to events, and asking for recurring gifts to increase retention and fundraising. The presentation provided actionable strategies for nonprofits to improve the donor experience and drive more online giving.
Recruiting and Building a Strong and Effective BoardBloomerang
https://bloomerang.co/resources/webinars/
Today more than ever nonprofits boards are expected to raise significant amounts of money. Join Keith Curtis and Jay Love for a discussion on nonprofit boards. Keith’s extensive work with nonprofits over the past 30 years has provided the opportunity to interact with a wide variety of nonprofit boards of different sizes and levels of experience.
Improving Donor Retention: How Creative Thank You’s and Cultivating an Attitu...4Good.org
Simply put: Donor retention is your most important fundraising opportunity.
Most nonprofits are leaking donors like crazy. They acquire; they don’t retain. On average folks lose 7 out of 10 donors after the first gift. Why? If your answer to any of the following is “true”, this webinar will help you: (1) I spend more time and resources acquiring donors than thanking them; (2) I treat acknowledgement as an afterthought; (3) I don’t think donors care that much about when and how they’re thanked after they give.
While donors want to change the world with their gifts, most want something else too. It’s intangible, but it’s important. And if you won’t give it to them, someone else will. The important social acknowledgement and identity reinforcement that comes from a heartfelt, thoughtful thank you cannot be underestimated. Truly, how and when you thank your donors can make or break your entire fundraising program.
A great thank you program can increase the lifetime value of your donor base by 200%!
It’s not hard to do, but most of us simply don’t put much zip into our donor acknowledgment programs. If this sounds like you and your nonprofit, it’s time to show your awesome donors some awesome you!
Austin afp f ire up your board for friendmaking 3 stepsgailperry
This document discusses how to get boards more engaged in fundraising through a "Fired-Up Fundraising" approach. It recommends firing up boards by having them connect with their personal passion for the organization's mission, discuss what funds are being raised and why, and provide direct experiences with the mission. It also suggests livening up board meetings and adding social time. The approach then involves redefining fundraising as cultivating friends first through thanking, advising, and getting feedback. This is meant to inspire boards and spread optimism to get major donors involved.
Growing Your Stewardship Program — Going Beyond Just Saying Thank YouAplos Software
Stewardship is at the core of a great fundraising strategy. It is what shows donors that the organization they’ve entrusted their money to is appreciative of the gift, has used it wisely and that they’ve had an impact on the cause.
Unfortunately many nonprofit lose donors over time or donors do not increase giving because donor stewardship is not a priority or gets lost in the hustle and bustle of running a nonprofit.
Ncac f ire up your board for friendmaking 3 stepsgailperry
This document provides tips for "Fired Up Fundraising" and engaging boards of directors. It discusses common issues with boards and fundraising, and presents a system with 5 steps to fire up boards: 1) sharing personal stories, 2) discussing what funds will support, 3) providing mission experiences, 4) making meetings interesting, and 5) incorporating social time. It also recommends redefining fundraising as cultivating friends first through optimism, advice, and feedback. The goal is to inspire boards and turn donors into long-term friends of the organization.
GlobalGiving Online Fundraising Workshop in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia 2017GlobalGiving
This document provides an agenda for a workshop on online fundraising. It includes introductions, discussions on crowdfunding basics and online fundraising strategies, activities on setting goals, network mapping and storytelling, breaks for networking, and an introduction to the GlobalGiving online fundraising platform and how to join. The workshop aims to equip participants with the skills and resources to effectively fundraise online.
What Donors Really Do Online: Nine Years of Fundraising Data from 1.8 Million...Miminten
The document summarizes key findings from a study of 1.9 million online donors over 9 years. Some of the main findings are that relationship-based fundraising is more effective than technology-focused efforts, donors who give through charity websites start with higher gifts and increase giving over time more than those using generic portals, and December is the peak donation month with over 20% of annual donations coming in the last two days of the year from both existing and new donors. Cultivating strong donor relationships and personalized experiences is important for increasing long-term support.
James Goalder presented best practices for raising more online donations based on analyzing 400 nonprofits' donation experiences. Key findings included making the donation process easy, engaging donors through personalized communication and impact stories, and retaining donors by promptly thanking them and inviting their continued involvement through volunteering, recurring gifts, and events. Practical tips included telling compelling stories, giving donors opportunities to get involved, asking for recurring gifts, using donor segmentation for tailored messages, and launching a travel program to generate donations. The presentation emphasized the importance of retaining existing donors through ongoing engagement and communication.
Build donor loyalty through gratitude 12.13.23.pptx.pdfBloomerang
Krista Berry introduces herself as the Equitable Access Strategy Manager at Candid and discusses her role in ensuring Candid's resources reach communities in need. She shares her experience in fundraising, nonprofit management, and philanthropy consulting. The document then provides strategies for nonprofits to build donor loyalty through gratitude, including sharing gratitude year-round, bringing supporters together, prioritizing year-end appreciation, planning retention activities, and creative gifting. Specific tactics are outlined for each strategy with a focus on automation and personalization.
These proven tips and tricks will help you improve your donor retention rates. Stop spending your precious resources acquiring new donors just to replace those being lost.
This document describes an enlightened philanthropy workshop that aims to help participants expand their understanding of philanthropy and create a personalized Philanthropy Roadmap. The workshop is led by Deborah Goldstein, who has over 15 years of experience in fundraising and nonprofit management. Participants will articulate their values, align them with their giving, and feel more confident and engaged. Those who attended previous workshops provided positive testimonials, praising the engaging discussions and ideas generated. The workshop provides tools and strategies to facilitate philanthropic conversations within families.
Building Stronger Donor Relations SystemsColin Cumming
In recent years, phrases like “culture of philanthropy” and “donor centricity” have hit the field by storm, often with budget-breaking strategies for implementation and little information about where to start when one may not be a decision-maker. Thus at the Johnson Center for Philanthropy's Brown Bag Lunch & Learn Series, I facilitated a discussion about the importance of donor relations when it comes to long-term fundraising success and ethical fundraising practices. I also talked about the role of fundraising in the context of arts and cultural organizations.
The goal of the event was for participants to walk away with easy to understand ideas for their own organizations and volunteer roles. I discussed: Donor relations and fundraising from a historical perspective; How to integrate engaging donor relations practices into your fundraising program; Fund development challenges specific to membership-based organizations, arts and cultural organizations, and organizations that frequently request general operating funds.
Charities use newsletters to communicate with donors. But often with mixed objectives and for mixed audiences. In this presentation we look at what makes good communications and what newsletters are for. Towards the end, all attendees critiqued each others newsletters (anonymously) and the result was a resounding disappointment. Only one of the newsletters were actually achieving good communications.
The document provides tips for nonprofits to drive more online giving based on insights from analyzing the donation experiences of 200 organizations. Key findings include the importance of making the donation process easy, providing personalized thank you communications, offering various payment options, and engaging donors through stories, volunteer opportunities, and asking for recurring gifts. The presentation emphasizes that retaining existing donors is cheaper than acquiring new ones and outlines specific actions nonprofits can take, such as sending timely thank yous, inviting donors to events, and using donor segmentation, to strengthen donor relationships and increase donations.
The document provides tips for nonprofits to drive more online giving based on insights from analyzing 300 nonprofit donation experiences. Key findings include making the donation process easy, providing personalized thank you communications quickly, offering various payment options, and engaging donors through stories, volunteer opportunities, and asking for recurring donations. Nonprofits are encouraged to review their donation landing pages, receipts, follow up communications, and use of phone calls and personalized emails to thank and retain donors in order to raise more online.
The document provides tips for nonprofits to drive more online giving based on insights from analyzing 300 nonprofit donation experiences. Key findings include making the donation process easy, providing personalized thank you communications quickly, offering various payment options, and engaging donors through stories, volunteer opportunities, and asking for recurring donations. Nonprofits are encouraged to review their donation experience from a donor's perspective and implement small changes like phone calls and personalized outreach to increase retention rates and fundraising.
https://bloomerang.co/resources/webinars/
Your thank you letter is the first step toward RETAINING a donor. Join Gail Perry, MBA, CFRE – just in time for the holiday season – for tips on how to NAIL your donor thank yous!
This document summarizes tips and best practices for nonprofits to drive more online giving based on analyzing 400 nonprofit donation experiences. Key findings include making the donation process easy, engaging donors on the landing page, sending timely thank you communications, and following up through newsletters, calls, and asks for recurring donations or involvement. Practical tips shared are telling impactful stories, giving donors opportunities to get involved, asking for recurring gifts, and using donor segmentation for meaningful messages. The presentation outlines these strategies and provides examples to help nonprofits retain and engage donors for increased online fundraising.
The document provides tips on how nonprofits can raise more online donations. It summarizes the results of a study where $25 donations were made to 400 organizations to analyze their donation experiences. Key findings include that donors are more likely to give again if they receive a timely thank you, feel appreciated, and know how their donation is used. The document recommends making donations easy, providing impactful stories, personalizing communications, calling donors, inviting involvement through volunteering, and asking for recurring gifts. Practical tips shared include using payment options donors prefer, customizing receipts and thank yous, and engaging donors through newsletters, calls, and events.
0311 National Accounts Online Giving Trends.pdfBloomerang
James Goalder presented on best practices for raising more online donations. He discussed exploring the donation experiences of 500 nonprofits and key insights. Some important findings included personalizing thank you communications, making the donation process easy, and engaging donors through storytelling and opportunities to get involved. Practical tips included thanking donors quickly, inviting them to events, and asking for recurring gifts to increase retention and fundraising. The presentation provided actionable strategies for nonprofits to improve the donor experience and drive more online giving.
Recruiting and Building a Strong and Effective BoardBloomerang
https://bloomerang.co/resources/webinars/
Today more than ever nonprofits boards are expected to raise significant amounts of money. Join Keith Curtis and Jay Love for a discussion on nonprofit boards. Keith’s extensive work with nonprofits over the past 30 years has provided the opportunity to interact with a wide variety of nonprofit boards of different sizes and levels of experience.
Improving Donor Retention: How Creative Thank You’s and Cultivating an Attitu...4Good.org
Simply put: Donor retention is your most important fundraising opportunity.
Most nonprofits are leaking donors like crazy. They acquire; they don’t retain. On average folks lose 7 out of 10 donors after the first gift. Why? If your answer to any of the following is “true”, this webinar will help you: (1) I spend more time and resources acquiring donors than thanking them; (2) I treat acknowledgement as an afterthought; (3) I don’t think donors care that much about when and how they’re thanked after they give.
While donors want to change the world with their gifts, most want something else too. It’s intangible, but it’s important. And if you won’t give it to them, someone else will. The important social acknowledgement and identity reinforcement that comes from a heartfelt, thoughtful thank you cannot be underestimated. Truly, how and when you thank your donors can make or break your entire fundraising program.
A great thank you program can increase the lifetime value of your donor base by 200%!
It’s not hard to do, but most of us simply don’t put much zip into our donor acknowledgment programs. If this sounds like you and your nonprofit, it’s time to show your awesome donors some awesome you!
Austin afp f ire up your board for friendmaking 3 stepsgailperry
This document discusses how to get boards more engaged in fundraising through a "Fired-Up Fundraising" approach. It recommends firing up boards by having them connect with their personal passion for the organization's mission, discuss what funds are being raised and why, and provide direct experiences with the mission. It also suggests livening up board meetings and adding social time. The approach then involves redefining fundraising as cultivating friends first through thanking, advising, and getting feedback. This is meant to inspire boards and spread optimism to get major donors involved.
Growing Your Stewardship Program — Going Beyond Just Saying Thank YouAplos Software
Stewardship is at the core of a great fundraising strategy. It is what shows donors that the organization they’ve entrusted their money to is appreciative of the gift, has used it wisely and that they’ve had an impact on the cause.
Unfortunately many nonprofit lose donors over time or donors do not increase giving because donor stewardship is not a priority or gets lost in the hustle and bustle of running a nonprofit.
Ncac f ire up your board for friendmaking 3 stepsgailperry
This document provides tips for "Fired Up Fundraising" and engaging boards of directors. It discusses common issues with boards and fundraising, and presents a system with 5 steps to fire up boards: 1) sharing personal stories, 2) discussing what funds will support, 3) providing mission experiences, 4) making meetings interesting, and 5) incorporating social time. It also recommends redefining fundraising as cultivating friends first through optimism, advice, and feedback. The goal is to inspire boards and turn donors into long-term friends of the organization.
GlobalGiving Online Fundraising Workshop in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia 2017GlobalGiving
This document provides an agenda for a workshop on online fundraising. It includes introductions, discussions on crowdfunding basics and online fundraising strategies, activities on setting goals, network mapping and storytelling, breaks for networking, and an introduction to the GlobalGiving online fundraising platform and how to join. The workshop aims to equip participants with the skills and resources to effectively fundraise online.
What Donors Really Do Online: Nine Years of Fundraising Data from 1.8 Million...Miminten
The document summarizes key findings from a study of 1.9 million online donors over 9 years. Some of the main findings are that relationship-based fundraising is more effective than technology-focused efforts, donors who give through charity websites start with higher gifts and increase giving over time more than those using generic portals, and December is the peak donation month with over 20% of annual donations coming in the last two days of the year from both existing and new donors. Cultivating strong donor relationships and personalized experiences is important for increasing long-term support.
James Goalder presented best practices for raising more online donations based on analyzing 400 nonprofits' donation experiences. Key findings included making the donation process easy, engaging donors through personalized communication and impact stories, and retaining donors by promptly thanking them and inviting their continued involvement through volunteering, recurring gifts, and events. Practical tips included telling compelling stories, giving donors opportunities to get involved, asking for recurring gifts, using donor segmentation for tailored messages, and launching a travel program to generate donations. The presentation emphasized the importance of retaining existing donors through ongoing engagement and communication.
Build donor loyalty through gratitude 12.13.23.pptx.pdfBloomerang
Krista Berry introduces herself as the Equitable Access Strategy Manager at Candid and discusses her role in ensuring Candid's resources reach communities in need. She shares her experience in fundraising, nonprofit management, and philanthropy consulting. The document then provides strategies for nonprofits to build donor loyalty through gratitude, including sharing gratitude year-round, bringing supporters together, prioritizing year-end appreciation, planning retention activities, and creative gifting. Specific tactics are outlined for each strategy with a focus on automation and personalization.
These proven tips and tricks will help you improve your donor retention rates. Stop spending your precious resources acquiring new donors just to replace those being lost.
This document describes an enlightened philanthropy workshop that aims to help participants expand their understanding of philanthropy and create a personalized Philanthropy Roadmap. The workshop is led by Deborah Goldstein, who has over 15 years of experience in fundraising and nonprofit management. Participants will articulate their values, align them with their giving, and feel more confident and engaged. Those who attended previous workshops provided positive testimonials, praising the engaging discussions and ideas generated. The workshop provides tools and strategies to facilitate philanthropic conversations within families.
11. Thanking Donors Results In:
1. Increased awareness of CSUSB
2. Valuable repeat donations
3. Increased support and involvement
N
12. The Journey
When we thank people, we need to make sure that
we are taking the donor on a journey…
a path the donor will travel with us to achieve a goal.
L
13. Thanking needs to be the purpose of holding
the donor’s hand on this exciting journey.
N
14. The Power of a Board Member’s
“Thank You”
Because board members are volunteer advocates who
are the heart and soul of philanthropy, they bring
credibility and leverage that cannot be duplicated by
paid staff.
L
15. Board Members & Stewardship
Activities
Thanking and recognizing donors is an important part
of the fundraising process. Asking board members to
send personal thank you notes is a good way to involve
board members in the fundraising process.
N
16. Thanking donors is one of the easiest, and
most fun, ways for board members to
become involved in the fundraising
process.
L
17. Saying “Thank you” to a donor ends one
transaction, but builds a bridge to future support and
deeper engagement. Do it well, and you are on your
way to future…
N
19. Research Shows That…
94% of all donors will give
a second gift, and a larger
gift, if thanked by a board
member.
N
20. Thank You Calls
• Thank you calls from the
board to first time donors
are KEY. Second gifts were
39% higher from donors
who received thank you
calls from a board member
• AND 2 years later, over
70% of donors were
retained!
L
21. It DOES make a difference if
the board calls vs. staff
members.
A peer to peer phone call is
deemed as more meaningful
by the donor.
N
22. Surprisingly, new research shows that a thank-you gift
can actually reduce contributions.
Journal of Economic Psychology
Volume 33, Issue 5, October 2012, Pages 973–983
L
23. The Wrong Way to Thank
A gift decreases next gift Board member thank you
increases next gift
N
24. Thanking Donors…
Once is Never Enough.
There are few things more
important than
recognizing our donors.
L
26. The Power of a Board Member’s
“Thank You”
Is invaluable
L
27. Now We Have Some Thank You Note
Assignments
Dr. Marc Lynch
P.O. Box 782
Rancho Cucamonga, CA 91729
CSUSB PHILANTHROPIC FOUNDATION
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
DONOR THANK YOU NOTE ASSIGNMENT
• Donor name
• Gift amount
• Gift designation
• Brief donor history
L