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TITLE
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Panel discussion and dialogue with Grantmakers
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CITY
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New York , NY
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DATE
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Tuesday, July 01, 2008
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TIME
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9:00 AM - 12:00 PM
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PRICE
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$ 95.00
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Panel discussion and dialogue with Grantmakers
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 As the grant seeking process becomes more and more competitive, it is essential to understand what grantmakers are actually looking for when they decide whether or not to award a grant. This session offers an unusual opportunity to hear directly from a variety of corporate, community, private and family foundation funders, and consists of two parts:
A. Panel Discussion
In the first two hours, grantmakers from a variety of private, corporate and family foundations will participate in a panel discussion. Issues we will explore with the panelists include:
- Foundation culture: what kinds of projects do grantmakers like to fund?
- Winning proposals: what makes them stand out?
- Foundation guidelines: are they set in stone?
- Building the relationship: what gives foundations confidence in the organizations they fund?
Whether you have been securing grants for decades or are just starting out, the panel discussion will provide you with a valuable view of the grantmaking world from the point of view of the grantmaker.
B. Q&A session
In the third hour, the grantmakers will join attendees at at their tables to answer specific questions. Grantmakers will switch every 15 minutes to a different table to ensure that everyone in the room is able to ask them questions.
| | Speakers for this session:
| | Marc Hurlbert | | Director, Avon Breast Cancer Crusade | | Avon Foundation | | Dr. Marc Hurlbert directs the breast cancer research and access to care grant programs of the Avon Foundation. In his role, Dr. Hurlbert oversees Avon’s $40+ million annual grant-making budget; develops overall strategy, funding guidelines, manages review committees, and monitors and evaluates the progress of grant awardees. The Avon Foundation and Avon Products has raised and awarded more than $525 million for the breast cancer cause since 1992. He serves on the board of the Health Research Alliance and on numerous NIH/NCI panels. Dr. Hurlbert received his Ph.D. in pharmacology from the University of Colorado Health Sciences Center and completed his training with a fellowship at New York University Medical Center. After completing his training, Dr. Hurlbert began a career in the nonprofit, grant-making sector with the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation (JDRF) International prior to Avon. | | | Wilma Montanez | | Program Officer for Reproductive Rights | | Noyes Foundation | | Wilma Montañez, Program Officer for Reproductive Rights
Since 1974, Wilma has been a reproductive health and rights advocate, community organizer, educator, doula and administrator in Rhode Island, New York City and California. She joined the Foundation in 1996 after serving as Executive Director of the Latina Roundtable on Health and Reproductive Rights, a former Noyes grantee. Wilma has served on the boards of the Women’s Funding Network, Funders Network on Population, Reproductive Health and Rights, and Women and Philanthropy.
During her tenure at the Foundation, Wilma has been an active member of the Funders Network’s Women of Color Working Group that has worked to leverage more funds for women of color reproductive rights and justice organizations nationwide with an emphasis on new and young leadership. Wilma has also ardently advocated on behalf of, and provided technical assistance to, smaller state-level advocacy groups with limited access to foundation resources.
| | | Yvonne Moore | | Executive Director | | Daphne Foundation | | Yvonne Moore is the Executive Director of the Daphne Foundation, a family foundation supporting programs that confront the causes and consequences of poverty in the five boroughs of New York City. Yvonne received her BA from Texas Tech University and her MS in Nonprofit Management from Milano The New School for Management & Urban Policy. Before joining the Daphne Foundation Yvonne was a program associate at The Klingenstein Third Generation Foundation, and before relocating to New York she was director of the Court Appointed Special Advocates (CASA) program in Midland, Texas. Yvonne serves as vice-chair of the Increasing Diversity in Philanthropy Committee for the New York Regional Association of Grantmakers (NYRAG) and also serves on the Grants Advisory & Allocations Committee for the New York Women’s Foundation, the New York Times Company Nonprofit Excellence Awards Committee and is a member of Emerging Practitioners in Philanthropy. | | | Julie Wong | | Coordinator, New Project Development | | William T. Grant Foundation | | Julie Wong is the coordinator of new project development at the William T. Grant Foundation. The Foundation supports research and other activities to understand and improve the settings of youth, ages 8 to 25, in the United States. Julie works with the president to launch new programs and improve processes at the Foundation. Among her current responsibilities, she oversees the Youth Service Improvement Grants program, which funds efforts by community-based organizations to improve the quality of services for young people in the New York metropolitan area. Julie joined the Foundation in September 2003. | |
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| New York Fundraising Summit
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A relationship approach to fundraising Nonprofit fundraising has become highly specialized, and each segment of your donor market requires a different set of relationship management skills. Whether you are reaching out to private foundations, wealthy individuals or your own members, you need to understand who they give to, and why. The New York Summit focuses on the relationship aspects of fundraising, and offers you several ways to enhance your relationship management skills:
Day One:
In the morning, listen to a panel of private, corporate and community grantmakers who will openly discuss their philosophy on grantmaking, how they operate, and most important, how you can build a more successful relationship with the grantmaking community. In the afternoon, participate in seminars led by experienced grant seekers who have successfully secured many foundation grants, and have built successful relationships with the grantmaking community.
Day Two:
Attend a series of fundraising seminars covering the hottest areas of fundraising (capital campaigns, major gifts, annual giving campaigns, and many more). Panels of experts will discuss the latest developments in these fields, and then enter into a dialogue with the participants that addresses their most pressing questions.
WHY ATTEND THE FUNDRAISING SUMMIT?
Fundraising is primarily a relationship business, and with increasing pressures facing all nonprofit professionals to build key relationships, it is becoming more important, though much more difficult to meet people face-to-face. Our innovative Summit format provides the most efficient and cost effective use of time away from the office by enabling attendees to interact with experts in the field, as well as other nonprofit leaders.
CAN ONE ATTEND SPECIFIC SESSIONS ONLY?
We understand the demands that are placed on you and on your time. That’s why you can attend only the seminars that are of interest to you. Come for the day or stop by for a couple of hours. You pay for only the seminars you wish to attend and only for the information relevant to you. It’s a novel approach to learning that allows you to get exactly what you’re looking for in a short amount of time.
WHAT IS THE FORMAT OF THE SEMINARS?
Each seminar features a panel of 3-4 experts who will give a short overview of the key developments in that field. After that , we will move into a moderated discussion to explore what these developments mean for nonprofit organizations. During the seminar, panelists will engage with the audience in an interactive manner to ensure the real-world implications of these developments emerge, and the session will end with a summary of practical next steps.
HOW IS THE SUMMIT DIFFERENT FROM OTHER EDUCATIONAL EVENTS?
The Summit offers a unique format to help you accomplish the following:
- Build relationships: to ensure maximum exposure to the experts and other nonprofit leaders, each seminar offers structured networking before the session starts
- Hear different perspectives: the experts are drawn from different sectors of the nonprofit community to ensure cross-pollination of ideas and practices
- Provide a global view: speakers give an overview of key issues so that you can eliminate any gaps in your understanding of the subject
- Drill down to the specifics: speakers will also focus on providing specific answers to real-world questions that are common to most attendees
- Obtain information you can use: the emphasis in all sessions is on avoiding theoretical discussions in favor of practical tools and techniques that nonprofit leaders can actually use
WHO IS RESPONSIBLE FOR THE SUMMIT?
The Summit is organized by the Center for Nonprofit Success, a nonprofit organization that specializes in bringing highly relevant information that nonprofit leaders need to run their organizations successfully. We developed the Fundraising Summit series as a follow-on to the Nonprofit Success Forum, a highly successful educational series on grantmaking that has been taking place around the country for the past two years. The Fundraising Summit drills down into specific areas of fundraising to give nonproft leaders cutting edge tools and techniques.
HOW DO I REGISTER FOR THE SUMMIT?
Simply click on the seminars listed below to learn more about the topics that will be covered in each seminar. Then select only those seminars that you wish to attend. |
| | Location/Directions
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The Summit will take place at NYU's Kimmel Center located at Washington Square Park in Greenwich Village. The Kimmel Center is just minutes away from subway and train lines (see directions below). The full address is:
Kimmel Center
Eisner & Lubin Auditorium
60 Washington Square South
New York, NY 10012
Directions by Subway
Lexington Avenue Subway (6 Train)
Local to Astor Place Station. Walk west on Astor Place to Broadway, then south on Broadway to Waverly Place, and west on Waverly Place to Washington Square.
Broadway Subway (R,W Trains)
Local to Eighth Street Station. Walk south on Broadway to Waverly Place, then west on Waverly Place to Washington Square.
Sixth or Eighth Avenue Subway (A, C, E, F, V Trains)
Express to West Fourth Street-Washington Square Station. Walk east on West Fourth Street or Waverly Place to Washington Square.
Seventh Avenue Subway (1 Train)
Local to Christopher Street-Sheridan Square Station. Walk east on West Fourth Street to Washington Square.
By Bus
Fifth Avenue Bus
Buses numbered 2, 2A, 3 and 5 to Eighth Street and University Place. Walk South to Washington Square.
Bus numbered 1 to Broadway and Eighth Street. Walk south on Broadway to Waverly Place and west to Washington Square.
Eighth Street Crosstown Bus
Bus numbered 8 to University Place. Walk south to Washington Square.
Broadway Bus
Bus numbered 6 to Waverly Place. Walk west to Washington Square.
By PATH Train
Port Authority Trans-Hudson (PATH) To 9th Street Station
Walk south on Avenue of the Americas (Sixth Avenue) to Waverly Place, then east to Washington Square.
By Car
From Brooklyn
Take the Manhattan Bridge. Off the Bridge, take Canal Street West to Avenue of the Americas (6th Avenue). Take 6th Avenue North to West 4th Street and travel East to Washington Square.
From Queens
Take the 59th Street Bridge. Travel West to Fifth Avenue. Turn South on Fifth Avenue. Fifth Avenue ends at Washington Square.
From Staten Island
Take the Staten Island Express across the Verrazano-Narrows Bridge crossing into Brooklyn. Take the Belt Parkway (West). Continue on the Belt Parkway to the Brooklyn-Queens Expressway (East). Take the Manhattan Bridge exit and follow the instructions above to Washington Square.
From the Bronx, Westchester County, and Upstate N.Y.
Take The New York State Thruway (I-87), which becomes the Major Deegan Expressway in the Bronx. Continue to the Willis Avenue (Third Avenue) Bridge. Then cross to the FDR Drive in Manhattan. Travel South on FDR Drive to Houston Street, then west to La Guardia Place and North 3 blocks to Washington Square.
From New Jersey by way of the New Jersey Turnpike
Holland Tunnel: Travel North on the Avenue of the Americas (also known as 6th Avenue) to West 4th Street. Turn Right onto West 4th Street to Washington Square.
Lincoln Tunnel: Travel East to 5th Avenue; turn Right, going South. Fifth Avenue ends at Washington Square.
From George Washington Bridge
Take the Henry Hudson Parkway South to 14th Street. Then East to 5th Avenue. Turn South on 5th Avenue which ends at Washington Square.
From Long Island
Take the Long Island Expressway (also known as the L.I.E. or I-495) to the Queens-Midtown Tunnel. Drive East on 37th Street to 5th Avenue. Take 5th Avenue South to Washington Square
Hotels
Best Western Seaport, 2 miles, 212-766-6600, $229
Gramercy Park , 0.8 mile, 212-475-4320, $495
Soho Grand Hotel, 0.7 mile, 800-965-3000, $270
Washington Square Hotel, 0.2 mile , 212-777-9515, $215
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One-on-one mentoringOur unique one-on-one mentoring sessions offer you the opportunity to sit down with an experienced fundraising professional for 30 minutes to discuss any questions that are specific to your organization. Mentoring sessions cover the same topics as the seminars, and we will assign you a mentor based on his/her availability at your requested times. Mentoring sessions are available for the cost of $ per session. If you register for a full Summit pass, mentoring sessions are included in the pass. Below is a list of mentors who will be available at the Summit. Please note that you must register to attend at least one seminar in order to sign up for a mentor. |
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