299: Training Choices & 2Q16 Fundraising Results – Tony Martignetti Nonprofit Radio

tony_martignetti_300x300-itunes_image2Tony’s guests this week:

Kevin Martone, technology program manager at Harold Grinspoon Foundation; Debra Askanase, founder & digital engagement strategist, Community Organizer 2.0; and Rene Swink, technical assistance coordinator with Exceptional Children’s Assistance Center.

Also, Rob Mitchell, CEO of Atlas of Giving.

There’s more at tonymartignetti.com

297: Everyone’s A Winner & Political Giving – Tony Martignetti Nonprofit Radio

tony_martignetti_300x300-itunes_image2Tony’s guests this week:

Steve Daigneault, senior vice president at M+R consulting.

Also, Maria Semple, our prospect research contributor, The Prospect Finder, and author of “Magnify Your Business: Tips, Tools and Strategies for Growing Your Business or Your Nonprofit.”

There’s more at tonymartignetti.com

283: Digital Metrics & 1Q16 Fundraising Metrics – Tony Martignetti Nonprofit Radio

tony_martignetti_300x300-itunes_image2Tony’s guests this week:

Meico Whitlock, digital communications consultant and associate director of communications at NASTAD; Rebecca Reyes, digital marketing consultant at Spring Media Strategies.

Also, Rob Mitchell, CEO of Atlas of Giving.

There’s more at tonymartignetti.com

267: Get Creative & Safeguard Your Donor Data – Tony Martignetti Nonprofit Radio

tony_martignetti_300x300-itunes_image2Tony’s guests this week:

Lissa Piercy, executive director of Strength of Doves.

Also, Scott Koegler, editor of Nonprofit Technology News.

There’s more at tonymartignetti.com

258: Run Like A Biz & Program Your Board – Tony Martignetti Nonprofit Radio

tony_martignetti_300x300-itunes_image2Tony’s guests this week:

Hillary Schafer, executive director of the Jefferson Awards Foundation.

Also, Gene Takagi, our legal contributor and principal of the Nonprofit & Exempt Organizations Law Group.

There’s more at tonymartignetti.com

190: Numbers In Your Stories & Research Pre- and Post-Event – Tony Martignetti Nonprofit Radio

tony_martignetti_300x300-itunes_image2Tony’s guests this week:

Brian Mittendorf, professor of accounting and MIS at The Ohio State University’s Fisher College of Business.

Maria Semple, The Prospect Finder, consultant in prospect research and author of “Panning for Gold: Find Your Best Donor Prospects Now!”

Read and watch more on Tony’s blog: http://tonymartignetti.com

170: Brandraise To Fundraise & Safeguard Your Donor Data – Tony Martignetti Nonprofit Radio

tony_martignetti_300x300-itunes_image2Tony’s guests this week:

Sarah Durham, principal & founder of Big Duck and author of “Brandraising.”

Scott Koegler, editor of Nonprofit Technology News.

Read and watch more on Tony’s blog: http://tonymartignetti.com

124: Social Media Data & Get Engaged IV – Tony Martignetti Nonprofit Radio

Tony’s guests this week:

Casey Golden, CEO of Small Act

Mark Davis, director of product marketing for Blackbaud

Amy Sample Ward, membership director for Nonprofit Technology Network

Read and watch more on Tony’s blog: http://tonymartignetti.com

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No. Hello and welcome to tony martignetti non-profit radio big non-profit ideas for the other ninety five percent it’s january eleventh, the day before my birthday. Oh, i very much hope that you were with me last week. It would hurt me deeply if i found out that you had missed the future of planned e-giving marketing. Greg warner, the founder of marketsmart, shared his insights on multi-channel awareness building, generating and cultivating leads and tracking what works and free radio and tv to boost online ticket sales. Amy spencer, market manager for blackbaud, and kevin russell, professional services manager for blackbaud wanted you to recognize that you have leverage with the media and that’s. Sending press releases is no longer the way to get radio and tv exposure for your event this week, social media data to find advocates, leaders and hidden vips casey golden, ceo of small act, and mark davis, director of product marketing for blackbaud want youto leverage social media metrix to find hidden gems among your constituents. This was pre recorded at the bb khan twenty twelve conference that i was at last october and get engaged for amy sample ward, our social media scientist and membership director for non-profit technology network and ten continues our siri’s on serious engagement through the social networks looking this month at staffing who should do this social network engagement? How much time will they spend and what policies do you need between the guests on tony’s take to my block this week is charitable ira rollover revived? It was brought back in last week’s tax act, and i’ll explain how it works, and claire meyerhoff will be with me to give quick tip on promoting charitable ira roll over donation duitz right now we go into my pre recorded interview with casey golden and mark davis, social media data to find advocates, leaders and hidden vips here is that interview welcome to tony martignetti non-profit radio coverage of bb khan twenty twelve we are outside washington, dc at the gaylord convention center and with me now are casey, golden and mark davis closest to mia’s, kacey and he’s, the chief executive officer of small act and mark davis is director of product marketing blackbaud they’re seminar, topic is creating impact with social data identifying and harnessing advocates, team leaders and hidden vips. Sounds very secretive. We’re gonna unpack that. Gentlemen, welcome. Thank you very much. Thank you. Case you want to tell us order audience first. What? What small acts work is sure we were focused in the non-profit industry to help organisations use social media, but also importantly, social data too do better job on social, but also importantly, really realized the value from social and intelligence for all parts organization for direct marketing advocacy campaigns. Okay? And why don’t we stick with you and see hidden pipes is the most sort of interesting part of your seminar topic? What were we talking about? Hidden vips? Sure, so typically within the non-profits they have ah, you know, a large number of people that they received donations from, but they don’t really know the full context of who they are, so they know how much they’ve been given maybe how often or if it’s more than once, but they really don’t know the context of that gift. And so for most often, when we sort of work with non-profits there’s, usually somewhere between one two five percent of their list, that has a really big potential that they just had no idea was there, so they’re kind of hidden. Gems where either they’re a blogger or there very advanced professional in their career and so on. Some really different ways that people are valuable for gun is ations, but they’re just unknown. All the noon was as a donor. Yeah, okay, mark. What? What? What is it you guys are trying to improve upon what we see charities doing incorrectly or not doing that? They ought to be with with their social data? Sure. So where black bod in partnership with small act is what we’ve basically introduced? This concept of a social score and a social score takes simplifies for fundraisers marking professionals and non-profits to really summarize their constituents, whether they be donors or advocates or their supporters into four categories, and those categories span from individuals who are going to be very well, highly connected through social media, those individuals we call key influencers on the second level, we’re going to be those individuals who we call engage er’s. Aii those people that can really expand the message and or holly engage in social networks and the other two categories, which are the masses are consumers, whether they’re consuming from multiple channels, maybe they have a twitter account and have a facebook account and they’re consuming information via by those channels or standard consumers just an individual as a facebook profile. So what we’re trying to really improve upon is having non-profits have a better understanding of their supporter base of their database to understand how these individuals were interacting through social media, okay, and scoring people not unlike you would with a screening for financial wealth. Yeah, way talking, something analogous and absolutely so you know blackbaud we have a whole number of financial scoring metrics, whether it’s wth e-giving score where we could understand people’s based off of their ability to give and their interest to give, this really has to do with understanding and individuals can activity and the reach through social media, how many people can they reach and through their friends and people are following them, but also more than just how deep is that reach? How connected our lead these people are they are they just tweeting once once you know, month oh, are they really tweeting every single day? And they have a very strong connection. So really trying help non-profits find their justin bieber’s in starita base, ok? And now an example. Ok, a great one, but we’ll work with it. It makes the point now, so i around around different social platforms, i do see companies that are trying to tell you how deeply influenced you are deeply influencing you are, or how deeply influencing let’s say in twitter, your your followers are, which, which is a measure of how deeply influencing you are as well, but you’re trying to coalesce this all together, i guess, yeah, so i think the value to is that it’s not just a general influence and i think the big guy of working in partnership with blackbaud is that it’s relating influence on social to meaningful things inside the non-profit to sustainers programs to annual giving to advocacy efforts, and i think that’s really makes it different from any other type of influential rating where it’s not just dozes person connect, but it also incorporates their relationship with the organization and really kind of bringing out the best and how they can sort of be engaged in a win win relationship. So we really try to help take that influence and really could use that in a meaningful way. Okay, now. Mark, is this a is this a blackboard product that what’s the name of the product? That’s called the social score and it’s available through our target analytics, who as you for mentioned the data screening around wealth, they provide the same capabilities for non-profits around wealth screening and that same organization could now provide this opportunity around social going now help listeners understand what’s the relationship between target analytics and what they’re probably most familiar with is your razor’s edge product what’s the relationship between those two? Sure, yeah, analytics and absolutely so. Target analytics is a division of black bug that focus is really on a number of areas, but in particular, talking about modeling. It also talks about data enrichment services, which we talked about, which is really taking your database within the razor’s edge, and the targ analytics team can add new data that you may not have like everywhere from the age or e-giving are they’re giving in other organisations or, in this case, obviously social media connective ity ah, and also the targ analytics team can help on organization with the razor’s edge database, analyze and kind of predict predictably modeling understanding hey, these are individuals who you think you should talk to a little bit more. So when you’re talking to people about in blackbaud about target analytics, you could say that you want to include the social score absolute or it sze already included no itt’s an add on it’s, a new data service that blackbaud much early this year and partnership with small act on dso that’s an add on service and we could talk about the logistics and how it’s doing its really easy, actually, so really, all organization needs to do is to give blackbaud a database of file and really all we need in order match up the social score and a whole bunch of other data really have to do a social networks is just an email address, so we’ll take that e mail address and then using through small lack service, we provide back to the non-profit all ho, ho ah, whole host of information that is all publicly available so we don’t get in and, you know, access data that may be on the facebook’s on individuals facebook profile that’s not publicly available if it’s private setting, we don’t have access to it, but ifit’s publicly available, we have access and we’ll and we’ll give that information. And also, as i said, the social scoring there’s some calculations associated with that. Okay, now, casey, obviously a lot of the work is proprietary, but sure you can. You can you tell us what you can about what small act is doing with that email address? To come up with the social score for each person? Sure. So a cz mark said everything is it’s possible to do this all manually. So just taking, you know, maybe fifteen, twenty, thirty minutes to sort of go to your google searches and find things out there. So what we do is we mapped an email to the social networks that are sort of publicly available and connected. We also then go step further where we actually take a look and at the person’s pope behaviors. So there’s, the first step is to kind of create the blueprint of where this person is a member of and how they socially network. The second step is to understand their engagement, their networks, they’re reciprocity levels, all those types of things. It was really creative, valuable influence or a person who can engage your content or what style is really going to best fit so that’s kind of where we do the blueprint and then we sort of color in the different pieces with a little bit more analytical. I’m understanding of what they talk about, who they talk to, how often you know how much they share and how much people share with them, etcetera. Ok, and how deep are you going into social sites that aren’t particularly common waken all name the easy ones off the top of our heads, but into our maybe kora is one, but how deep are you able to go? Yes, so so we so at a sort of maximum capacity that we find somewhere between twenty to twenty five different networks. So, interestingly enough, you mentioned cora when we’re working with national wildlife as one of the interesting things found in that analysis, those who had a membership encore actually gave significantly more so is very interesting sort of subset of them that they hadn’t even thought about before could sort of minor network pompel yes, oh, it’s comprehensive that way, but but it’s a full set talking alternative radio twenty four hours a day. Are you stuck in your business or career trying to take your business to the next level, and it keeps hitting a wall? This is sam liebowitz, the conscious consultant. I will help you get to the root cause of your abundance issues and help move you forward in your life. Call me now and let’s. Create the future. You dream of two one two seven to one eight, one eight. Three backs to one to seven to one, eight one eight three. The conscious consultant helping conscious people be better business people. Are you concerned about the future of your business for career? Would you like it all to just be better? Well, the way to do that is to better communication, and the best way to do that is training from the team at improving communications. This is larry sharp, host of the ivory tower radio program and director at improving communications. Does your office need better leadership, customer service sales, or maybe better writing, are speaking skills? Could they be better at dealing with confrontation conflicts, touchy subjects all are covered here at improving communications. If you’re in the new york city area, stop by one of our public classes, or get your human resource is in touch with us. The website is improving communications, dot com, that’s, improving communications, dot com, improve your professional environment, be more effective, be happier, and make more money improving communications. That’s. The answer. Hey, all you crazy listeners looking to boost your business? Why not advertise on talking alternative with very reasonable rates? Interested simply email at info at talking alternative dot com okay, now tony martignetti non-profit radio i have drug in jail, which i’m probably guilty of myself because quarrel, because it’s not that well known it is among some circles, but it’s, not another. So it’s it’s first for listeners, it’s spelled qu o r a and casey, i’m going to ask youto back-up we participated on ly very lightly. Why don’t you explain how quarrel works and why it might be valuable for charity? Sure. So i think there’s a, you know, a different couple way to ways to describe it, but, um, in viewing it from our perspective, there’s a lot of thought leaders there, right is people have opinions who have something to say and usually it’s not just chatter, conversation it’s usually a bit more meaningful, sort of kind of like a conversational sort of dialogue versus just chit chat back and forth and that we found theirs or some really interesting again thought leaders, not just conversationalist. Perhaps they really kind of put a lot of time into that. And who were some of the thought leaders in the charity community? I mean, there’s there’s a lot. I mean, it really depends upon the specific. Area, you know, and it’s so arranges across board weathers healthcare or some sort of education or or different wildlife related organizations. Okay, mark so now we’ve identified why don’t you give the four categories again? Just perfectly just take those off. Yeah, so the four categories at the top of level, which represents approximately about andi, this is based off of data from blackbaud is small, like customers we evaluated, but in general, about the top one percent of an organization’s database are those individuals who are going to be key influencers and that’s, the top of the pyramid, these worthy individuals excuse my example, but justin bieber but justin bieber’s got all the twitter followers he’s got everyone who tracks he’s very active on that example. It’s a terrible example. I got craig newmark founder craigconnects. Would he be a key influence? You use him? He’s. Been a guest on the show twice. Actually, fair enough. Fair now is so much better. You can just say i have not had just okay, way turned him down. Actually, i would if you okay, so so that’s. The key in florence. These air individuals who are again have a wide audience on their generating lots of content and their and their content has, you know, lives through a very viral method in terms of it gets kayman to be connected and repurposed to the next grouper engages these are individuals who represent about five percent of the population but actually generate over nearly eighty percent of the content. So these are people who are in there doing consumer reviews, they’re they’re they’re they’re updating constantly through facebook, they may not necessarily have a cz wide of a range of connections is the key influencers, but they’re they’re they’re they’re level of engagement is so high that they become influential and influential in terms of the metal content of generating and then flows that can have and then the other two categories, which are the masses roughly between forty run, forty percent are going to be the multi-channel consumers, these are people that we would described as being on, you know, multiple major networks, so they usually have a facebook and at length in profile, or they’re made perhaps the twitter profile and the last one at least the standard consumers these are individuals who are kind of basically arm or most comfortable and stay in one particular network. And there these these blast two groups of people not necessarily creating lots of content, but they’re consuming content, and they’re they’re using facebook and lengthen all the social networks to to be connected with obviously all their friends and family. Okay, i’m going to take a risk here now and tried to put myself into one of these categories. So this podcast gets about eleven hundred, listeners per per week between it for two years. So we have over one hundred, one hundred episodes, is weekly. I’m totally you know, if i end up on this on the standard consumer, i’ll really be disappointed as a standard consumer. Have a block that gets between thirty, five hundred for thousand unique visitors, not hits, but unique visitors per month. Twitter. About eighteen hundred or so followers following about six hundred, people. Facebook doesn’t matter facebook radio show page has just about just scarcely eight hundred likes dahna number of likes, how do i reach that? I’ve each key influence or casey? I don’t know, i’m not you know, i didn’t mean that i really didn’t mean your floats because that’s great new mark die reaching gauger could i be engaged or status? Get so so actually doing a little bit of profiling on you prior to this, you would definitely be actually in the key influence or category mean craig newmark is, you know, like point. Oh, one percent. Yeah. Absolutly, congratulations. Yeah. No, i know where the segment if you don’t say that. No, i can i can send you a profile. Right? So we were naming the rial outliers. Yeah, among them. We knew all that already way on everything you told us. We already know that. All right? Because if you came on and said, you know, key influencers were, like twenty martignetti that would know no it’s one percent. It doesn’t make the point we love we lower the bar a little mean that lower the bar that’s the wrong way. But obviously, you know the key influences you don’t have to be the super super keum ok, that’s cool. All right, thank you. All right, so now we have these people categorized, we have our follow-up gotta go, mark what’s what’s let’s get started with some advice on what to do with this information. Now, that’s valuable, sure and that’s, you know, our session really, and goes into a lot of that because what we want to do is we want obviously educate non-profits in terms of that, that this information is available, that it is useful, but obviously a lot of non-profits they’re most interested in, you know, how does it how can i use it to find advocates and volunteers? Almost specifically, how can use it to help my fund-raising so with with the work and partnership with small act and all the organizations that we’ve worked with jointly together, we’ve begun to understand that this information is valuable because they’re certain key attributes and trends that these different groups they follow. So we tracked and analyzed individuals based off of their fund-raising potential so is it could potentially this scoring and and the presence of these individuals on certain networks could that actually be a predictor in terms of the ability to give so good example that is linked in lincoln profiles individuals who were on lengthen generally based off the data we’ve seen terms customers have use of the information these individuals have hyre lifetime value and they give hyre average gifts makes sense, right? Because they’re employed, they’re obviously well connected through through the workplace they care about their career. So therefore, these individuals are generally speaking, going to be more wealthy, so that’s a very easy example, more complicated or more sophisticated example, certainly not complicated, but definitely more sophisticated argast examples would be the correlation of an individual who was highly connected, whether the key influence you are engaged or francis the top tier and their ability to reach individuals and, say francis a peer-to-peer fund-raising event. So another group of organizations that we’ve been working with a lot have had a lot of success on this is using it to predict hey, if i’m highly connected, if i can create a network of people through facebook and twitter lengthened, for instance, or thrown blawg then very likely i knew a lot of people and if i know a lot of people than likely, i can probably know i can reach a lot of people to ask them to give me a gift. So if i’m walking for susan g komen race for the cure or make a diabetes association american heart association, these types of organizations can use this information to predict who would be good team captains potentially for walk because these individuals, naturally a good recruiters are very sociable. So it’s a very good predictor like that, and the third good example, by the way highlight that really gets a lot of non-profits thinking is the multi channel consumer. This is not a key influencers not engaged, but that third level there’s a lot of them out there, i feel bad for them as a gay influence, right? I feel bad for the multi-channel consumers well, there’s a lot of them so, so sad that it’s almost a pity that they outnumber you quite a bit, but it’s a good predictor because a lot of non-profit struggle with who our who could they connect with through online channels? You know who’s going to be a good individual who may give an online gift who may be an individuals who will consume email and communications through the online channel. So a lot eso organise you’ve been working with have been using that to predict who could be a good opportunity to give a sustainers gift ah, monthly online gift, which is very valuable for non-profits because it’s it’s recurring revenue at sitting it’s in a longer term engagement with the non-profit and they an individual who’s willing to say, i’m going to give fifty dollars, per month for the next five years is actually worth a lot more than a vigil is going to give a onetime get to six hundred dollars, because they have that that that that connection not that you ever ever used that term, but that commitment to the non profit organization. So a lot of the information we’ve been receiving from organizations is that that multi-channel consumer there used to be an online and they’re comfortable being online. So that’s a good predictor of individuals you khun target for those types of online campaigns? Okay, interesting. Now, what i didn’t hear you say is that you approach them about using there networks or talking to their networks about your work directly, yeah. Trying to help you spread your message through there through their networks, but in a more explicit way, you’re trying to do it suddenly it sounds like, you know, all three of those examples they are i think of it this way, an organization that’s using the razor’s edge or, you know, using whatever databases here and system they’re using this is additional information that can help them target those people for specific existing campaigns. What you’re talking about, which i think is also is a very good example, which i know casey likes to use, the term citizen journalists is finding those those top tier individuals who, you know they’re in your database. So how then your database, how are they connected to you? Can you start cultivating these people to be an extension, really, of your marketing? Can they get out in front of a news story or potentially some sort of of conflict or something like that where they can actually help think newsworthy that release where they either if not directly to your charity? Certainly to the work that you’re doing and how can they help spread that they could spread the message that could spread? Your message, they can connect, record their people, they could potentially become an advocate for your position. It happens to be in conflict with something else that’s going on, maybe that’s newsworthy case if you got a couple a couple examples to, it really also gives local smaller non-profits the ability to understand so one example is maryland public television buy-in working with them, they will there find this key blogger who lives in baltimore, where they didn’t know her so sophistication and she was a key influence, sir, they’re engaging her by just calling around say, hey, come down to our facility and see what we do and understanding she’s big on a lot of sort of sort of women’s issues and programming and things like that. So the key is when you find these influential people make sure that whatever is you’re asking them to do aligns with their existing passion, you’re not going to change their heart, just giving them a place to share their heart and really kind of connected with your mission that’s where i’ve seen a lot of really great things happen in another panel here, so the exact same thing really kind of working with where they are emotionally and in matching up your your mission how that they’d be happy to promote it number one because they’d be more likely to do it, but number to their audience knows that they’re an expert on that or that’s something they really care about as well. Casey, what is it you love about this work? What makes you wake up every morning? Motivated? Sure. Honestly, i really love helping great organizations who do great things in starting this particular company that’s. Why? Folks? Dahna non-profit industry instead of a lot of other compelling, you know commercial areas. Because all you know there’s on ly non-profits you have on ly non-profits and and really me nose was being with someone from st jude today anything we can do to help you know kids go through that life experience better and like that’s. Awesome it’s. Not just a job. It’s it’s. A life experience and so that that’s what makes it worthwhile for us? We have to leave it there, gentlemen. Thank you very much. Casey golden is ceo of small act and mark davis is director of product marketing for blackbaud. Gentlemen. Thank you. Very much and yankee has been a real pleasure. Tony martignetti key influencers. Tony martignetti non-profit radio coverage. I’m gonna change the show of b become two thousand twelve. Uh, thank you very much for being with us. My thanks. Also to everybody at black bart, who helped me with the full day of podcasting at their bb con conference. Gotta send live listener love before we go to a break. Oh, my goodness! Los angeles, california. Littleton, colorado st petersburg, florida. New bern, north carolina. Live listener love also manila in the philippines. Taipei in taiwan. Shenzhen, china. Chung ching, china. And for those in taiwan and china. Ni hao, seoul, korea. Manu haserot, montgomery village, maryland. New york, new york hey, what you doing out there? Hello? Right now we take a break when we come back, it’s, tony’s, take two and then it’s amy sample ward and we keep talking about getting engaged this time talking about staffing for your social engagement and stay with me. I don’t think that’s a good ending. You’re listening to the talking alternative network duitz get him. Things. Hi, i’m donna and i’m done were certified mediators, and i am a family and couples licensed therapists and author of please don’t buy me ice cream are show new beginnings is about helping you and your family recover financially and emotionally and start the beginning of your life. We’ll answer your questions on divorce, family court, co parenting, personal development, new relationships, blending families and more dahna and i will bring you to a place of empowerment and belief that even though marriages may end, families are forever join us every monday, starting september tenth at ten a m on talking alternative dot com are you suffering from aches and pains? Has traditional medicine let you down? Are you tired of taking toxic medication? Then come to the double diamond wellness center and learn how our natural methods can help you to hell? Call us now at to one to seven to one eight one eight three that’s to one to seven to one eight one eight three or find us on the web at www dot double diamond wellness dot com way look forward to serving you. You’re listening to the talking alternative network. Duitz lively conversation. Top trends. Sound advice, that’s, tony martignetti non-profit radio. And i’m ken berger from charity navigator. Welcome back. Time for tony’s. Take two on my block this week is the charitable ira rollover revived this way of giving directly from your ira to a charity was part of the american taxpayer relief act of twenty twelve, which was passed last week, passed by congress, signed by president obama and what it actually is is a distribution technically it’s a distribution, not a roll over. So i call it a qualified charitable distribution because that’s the language in the in the act to do this, your donors have to be over seventy and a half. They have to use an ira or a traditional sorry, a traditional oer a roth ira. So the simple iras and the sep iras are not permitted has to be a traditional or roth you. Ah, each donor can do this up to one hundred thousand dollars per year. That does not have to be to the same charity. Khun b multiple ira’s khun b multiple charities, but the total is one hundred thousand dollars per ira owner on the distribution has to go directly from the i r a to the charity there’s, an advantage that you may want to capitalize. On in the month of january, if people make a qualified charitable distribution before february first, then they can count it toward two thousand twelve, so if they didn’t want to eat up there, two thousand thirteen hundred thousand dollar max, that could count gif ts that they do in january for last year on also if somebody took a distribution in december, if they were, whether they were required to or not. But if they just took a regular distribution from their ira meaning they took the money for themselves, and then they could use all or any part of that december distribution to be a qualified charitable distribution, they can convert it. So now why would you want to do that? What’s the what’s the advantage? They’re two advantages. First, all these qualified charitable distributions are exempt from federal income tax. They’re outside gross income, so not subject to federal income tax, and also they do count toward your donor’s required minimum distribution. A lot of people just refer the acronym r m d and for people who are required to take out more than they want from their ira or more than they need from, they are ira, this could be really advantageous because this gift to charity counts toward that our md that they’re having trouble using they’re forced to take it, but they don’t want to take it. They can use this, tio, eat some of that up. So those are some of the fine points of the ira charitable giving for two thousand thirteen and, um, there’s more on my blogged at tony martignetti dot com and as a special little extra. Benny, we have first guest who’s, part of tony’s take two it’s appropriate that that declare meyerhoff of course she’s, the creative producer of the show, and she’s, the principal of the plant e-giving agency specializing in marketing communications around planned e-giving. Claire meyerhoff. Welcome back. Thanks so much, tony it’s, great to have you have me here. Yes, well, i have you. You don’t have may let’s, not let’s. Let’s. Keep the roll straight. You’re my guest and i’m very happy to have you here. So what should charities do with this charitable ira? Roll over. Well, i really see this as a bonanza. Will the communications, marketing and promotional bonanza for savvy fund raisers or other people at your non-profit? Eso the first thing that i’d like to do is really think about this as a way to up your communications with your people. And how about a boardmember that you’ve been trying to kind of, you know, get on your side and do a little bit more fund-raising how about how does that sound? Tony used to get a fundraiser on board, use it for a boardmember so, avery, simple tip. Okay, how are we going toe simple like action steps? Because you and i are always talking about the value of news when you have something newsworthy. That’s a good time to communicate with your with your donors and prospects. Right? So this is news you can use to your advantage, and we get so little news in planned giving, so we may as well take advantage of it. Okay, way. Get so little news and fund-raising or any other kind of ways to communicate with our donor. So this is really great. Okay, what should we do? This is what i think someone should d’oh. They should take a look first at your database. Basically, who has been making these types of gifts in the left? Five. Years at your organization. Do you have one eye? Are a gift. Do you have ten? Do you have one hundred? So that’s the first thing take a look at what your history is so let’s say you have five gift in the last few years. This is the perfect opportunity to say thank you to those people and see if you can get them to make more of these kinds of gifts and now you have a reason to call them. So give this little task to that boardmember that you think is, you know, up for the for the challenge, and it gives you something to talk to them about. You could do in a casual way. Say, hey, you know what, here’s some good news for our organization. Thanks. Thanks to congress and talk about it a little bit and then ask them, what do you think about that? And then tell them the history. Say, you know, over the past five years, we’ve had four different people that have made this type of gift biggest gift was, you know, eighteen thousand in the smallest gift with one hundred dollars, and one lady did it three years. In a row, like, give him a little background and bring the men and say, you know, this is a really interesting way to give, don’t you think? And they’ll say, yeah, i didn’t even know about it, so now you kind of brought them in, and so what you do is just say, hey, could you, you know, call these people and have a conversation with him about it, and the first thing they want to do is you want to thank them, thank the donor for making this unique type of gift and then give them the news. I just wanted to let you know congress is past, you know, twenty twelve taxpayer relief act good news for our charity means people can make this kind of gift and that’s wonderful, because that helps us steve moore family is right now or something else that whatever it is you’re doing right now, save more dogs, feed more families, build more houses, and then you want your boardmember to listen to what the donor has to say just stopped talking after you say what your mission is on and listen and hear what they say and make them feel. Good about their gift, saying, you know what? That was a really smart thing for you to dio. How did you know to do that? And now the donor has to go. Well, you know what my advisor told mei or someone in your organization told may or i did it for some other organization ten years ago. So now you have more information from them and that’s. Great. So that gives you an opening to ask them for a gift for this year. Okay. Very simple action. Step from the principle of the plan. Giving agency clear, meyerhoff. Thank you very much. Thank you, tony. You’re the best. Thank you. A little more. Live listener. Love going out. College station, texas, brooklyn, new york. Troy, new york, tokyo, japan. Konnichiwa with me now is amy sample ward? You know her she’s, our social media scientist she’s a membership director. Hey, how are you? I’m okay. I wish that i was in the studio with you today, but i was feeling a bit contagious and so decided that maybe putting a phone line in between us would be better. All right, i appreciate that. And so does everyone here, amy. Of course, is the membership director at in ten non-profit technology network, and she is co author of social by social ah handbook on using social technologies for social impact, you’ll find her block at amy, sample ward, dot or ge and on twitter, you can follow her. She is a at amy r s ward what’s the r for amy r s ward it’s for rene. Amy renee alright, well, welcome back to the show. Thanks for having me great every month we have you, of course, and we’re talking. Yeah, i’m glad you think so. I do too. We’re getting engaged, getting engaged part for we’re talking about staffing this time. What? What? What is your advice for getting started on figuring out who should be staffing social engagement? Yeah, i mean, i it’s a question that i actually get asked all the time. You know, i think people have gotten somewhat used to at least aware of all the conversations happen about which tools and how you know how some organization is using their facebook page. Or you know how someone has run a contest on twitter that now a lot of the questions are more like so who who will do that who’s actually going to run our contest? Hundred er who’s goingto set up our facebook page and the there is kind of this general sense that because these air, newer tools we should have, you know, those really young people just out of college or, you know, the board members, kid or whatever, you know, they should be the ones doing it, but they’re just so naturally savvy, but at the end of the day, what you’re really saying is, you know, you want those most public, most social, most very personal channels with your donors here, supporters, your longtime activist to be managed by someone that isn’t connected to your mission that isn’t part of your staff that isn’t seen all the other work that you’re doing, because ultimately, that person that’s managing those social channels is also listening and is able to kind of, you know, tie things together across the organization because they could say, hey, it looks like a lot of our facebook fans are talking about this new programme and we haven’t even announced it, you know, on facebook properly, what should we do? They’re clearly excited and can go to those program staff, you know? And if that person that’s that’s managing those channels is really just a volunteer or a new intern or, you know, someone that isn’t fully in the organization, they’re also not in a position to make those connections, nor are, you know, is the organization setting them up to be out there, you know, connecting on behalf of them right now, let’s, let’s think of the smallest organization, maybe really just one or two people, the best they can probably do is hire somebody to be to do this part time, right? So part time would be okay for you. You wouldn’t object to that? No. You know, i don’t actually think i mean, sure, if you have ah, if you have the capacity to have someone managing all of your social activity full time, then you know, i’m not certainly going to say, don’t do that. I think that is terrific, but if you are one of those organizations, you know, you’re one full time person and then a part time person and, you know, you don’t really have a lot of capacity. That’s fine. You can still succeed. You can still valuable have valuable engagement with your community, even if you’re not doing it all day long, but again, it needs to be someone that is sitting in a staff meeting so that, you know, when they start tweeting about that program, they actually know what the program is, you know? Or, you know, conf feedback into what’s going on so it’s less about how much of the time you’re doing it and more that the person who ultimately is out there engaging in posting content is the rest of the time also, you know, involved with that, and that relates teo, a couple things that you and i have talked about in the past first, you know, going back a ways, you know, of course, every charity doesn’t need to be on every social network you use, the ones that are most valuable for you. And, you know, you and i have been through that and use the ones that you are going to be most effective at and have the time for. So, you know, we have to pick these things judiciously. Andi also relates to what you and i talked about last show on talking about engagement, which was december fourteenth that all this needs to be tied to your mission and basically you’re saying today that the person who’s managing this for you also needs to be tied into your mission because they’re actively involved in your office day today or on a part time basis exactly. I mean, when that person, you know, for example, posts on facebook, great, we have this new program and then immediately, you know, people that are in support of it but have questions about a bit are posting those questions on facebook that person can’t just say, well, i was just, you know, my job for today was just a pose, that announcement, you know, they need to be able to get in there like we’ve talked about in in previous shows, you know, tohave that rial time engagement to show publicly that they’re responding to those answers, and the only way they can do that is if they know more about that program than the announcement they were given, you know? Yep, yep. Okay. Now, if we are going to use an intern, i mean, we certainly could plug the intern into the day to day office work the way you’re describing, right? I mean, we wouldn’t want to turn down the intern. We just we wanted going to engage them the way you’re explaining. Yeah, and i, you know, i think that that’s a great point and i definitely agree i think that the question or the potential issue that comes up for organizations that do put some of that social channel management into the interns plate in addition, you know, to knowing about the programs and green involved with the rest of the staff, is that internship by their very nature are normally for a semester, you know? And so at the end of that semester is doing the next intern know what was going on? You know, planning for continuity in that voice online is much harder when you know, every three months there’s a different person behind it. So, you know, i think that’s more of a struggle for organizations than just having, you know, part of a staff person job to be that because there’s a bit more continuity there because that person doesn’t change. I hope that person is not changing out every three months. So part of that khun b documentation and making sure that whoever it is in turn or otherwise, who’s manages managing those channels, you can have some qualitative components to their weekly metrics or whatever they’re tracking that says, hey, i’ve noticed, what can i say? Things like this? I get a better result so that that new person that comes in just three months later doesn’t have to relearn the kind of, you know, words that the community were sandra, or the kinds of words that maybe they shouldn’t use. You know, some of that more qualitative. I’m sensing this there. I’ve noticed this so that it’s maur. Now i don’t want to use the word documented, but it’s well and there’s continuity transparent for other people, okay, yes, yeah, okay, all right, you’re right, important qualification around use of of interns or anybody that’s going to be limited time. We’re going to take a break and amy sample warden, i’m going to keep talking about getting engaged in around your staffing. Stay with us. You’re listening to the talking alternative network. Oppcoll are you stuck in your business or career trying to take your business to the next level, and it keeps hitting a wall? This is sam liebowitz, the conscious consultant. I will help you get to the root cause of your abundance issues and help move you forward in your life. Call me now and let’s. Create the future you dream of. Two, one, two, seven, two, one, eight, one, eight, three, that’s to one to seven to one, eight one eight three. The conscious consultant helping conscious people. Be better business people. Dahna have you ever considered consulting a road map when you feel you need help getting to your destination when the normal path seems blocked? A little help can come in handy when choosing an alternate route. Your natal chart is a map of your potentials. It addresses relationships, finance, business, health and, above all, creativity. Current planetary cycles can either support or challenge your objectives. I’m montgomery taylor. If you would like to explore the help of a private astrological reading, please contact me at monte at monty taylor dot. Com let’s monte m o nt y at monty taylor dot com. Talking alternative radio twenty four hours a day. Welcome back, more live listener love going, teo kind of god would japan konnichiwa monisha ali’s, columbia ola bueno start is on somewhere in the uk we can’t tell exactly where somewhere in there there’s someone listening and roseville, california power river, british columbia welcome all live listener love and, of course, there’s live listener love right here in the studio from altum pandu jersey, because my parents were here and from indianapolis, indiana, because my wife is here. So amy rene sample ward, we’re glad that you didn’t come with your sickness. Thank you. I am sad because i wanted to meet everyone know? Yes, we were looking forward to it, but we’ll arrange something else. Um, let’s, keep talking. Obviously about staffing. So we know way. Understand your ideas about who should be doing it. You and i have touched on this subject a little bit about policies, but not in a lot of detail. I’m sure there are policies around who owns the account. What types of things are appropriate? Why don’t you help us understand that? Yeah. I mean, i want to start at where we kind of left with the intern conversation. You know, if this is a really small organization, and you’re really just getting started. What happens most often is someone creates, you know, a twitter account, for example, i’m going to excuse myself so say i was a one and a half person organization, we were just getting off the ground, i just wanted to have a way to kind of create buzz and make sure i was listening to the community as we were starting our organization. Your this is your caligari ate my twitter account using my name and because that’s who i am and, you know, we don’t really have a lot figured out just yet, just getting off the ground and time passes, our organization grows, and now it may be a year later and i have staff and the staff are saying, great, we want to set up, you know, a twitter account, but now everyone is just following you as a person, which is fine, but, you know, then you don’t really have the framework remind, you know, in those channels to transition the community very easily and, you know, so i’ve seen organization struggle with that when they get to that point of, like, oh, gosh, everyone’s following this person. But, you know, we want to open the conversation up so it’s not just them, you know, tweeting during the day about work and then tweeting in the evening about the baseball game like, can we? You know, let’s transition to a formal organizational account? But how do we, you know, get those people over here without them just dropping off? So, again, some of that continuity planning has to happen in the beginning where, you know, where do we want to go? How do we want to set up these channels? And part of that is in the policy so that whatever policy you create when you first get started, you know, this is maybe just focused on twitter and facebook, but it’s set up so that, you know, the protocol of grated uses are, you know, funders of our logo and it has a photo of, you know, the staff page, maybe and whatever and that way, anytime in the future, when you add new channels or you want to try out a new channel that’s just, you know, magically appeared on the internet one day staff for you as that hit didi. And the baby can follow the same will know that you’re not setting it up to go in all different directions. So that’s one version of the policy, you know, if you’re a small organization, just setting up accounts at all on the other side of those organizations that have accounts already and have staff that are trying to use them. So what are those policies that support? Like we were talking about the continuity, but then also support staff knowing who uses these channels? Because if they feel like they’re supposed to be using them and they don’t want to, then you just create that animosity of hate twitter and i were apparently all supposed to use it. Normally you’re not awful, steve, you’re just, you know, need to have some resource is internally, so they know great. These are the people that tweet for this program, and this is the person who sends out, you know, the email promotions for this other program, and whenever i have content for them, i can go give it to them. But you’re not saying great now we have the social channels is an organization, and everyone has to use them, okay? Okay, what about let’s go further in these in these policies, working from home you as membership director of inten you do you work from home on ten is very distributed lots of organizations are what about policies around home usage and and using your home hardware? Yeah, so we have organizational policies about the, you know, actual, like computers and phones and printers and stuff that we have in distributed staff home, but when it comes to engaging online, if it can be helpful in a way, because our policies are that, you know, if it’s east coast time and i’m awake, even though i’m not the primary voice on our social channels, i watched that much more closely when i wake up in the morning because i know megan, who does support our social channels who’s in san francisco is not awake yet and because we serve members all across north america and all across the world, really, you know, we want to make sure that not that we’re saying everyone has to be plugged in twenty four seven checking, you know, checking twitter at eight a m on a sunday, but if it is a work day, and i’m already awake and working. I might as well have that window open so that i can make sure someone is being responsive and that you were there to answer questions. And once megan wakes up, we kind of hand the baton across the country, you know? And then she can take take it from there. All right? All right. We have just about, like, a minute and a half left or so how do we how do we predict? Ah, speaking of time, how much time this is going to take for the for the staff person? Yeah, i think that the best is to start small it’s also best, you know, i think we’ve said this on the show before, you know, don’t by listening, you know, service that is thousands of dollars. If you haven’t even started listening to free, you know, via free tools yet or, you know you haven’t investigated what’s even in your google analytics before you go, you know, try and buy some extra tools that the same is true with staffing, i think start small, especially if it is someone that’s already on staff, so you don’t have to go try. And hyre a new person when you don’t yet really know what you’re looking for. So even if it’s just thirty minutes a day, you know, five days a week that’s dedicated to that effort so that whatever staff person it is that’s doing that can can be active can be engaging the community, but can also be saying, hey, i think it really for our organisation and for the amount of community we have, i really think it needs to be two hours a day, and i can’t do that, or i’m fine half an hour a day or, you know, maybe hey, this thing’s full time, i you know, through doing it half an hour a day, i’ve seen all that we have going on, and this is i can help structure that job for this new hyre so i would say start small, even if it’s just thirty minutes to an hour a day with an existing staff person so that you, as an organization can say, great. This is really what we need this job to do because some organizations have, um, a staff person that manages the social channels as well as a program area. Okay, meantime, organizations have them, you know, they’re on the communications team, and they’re often doing some of the email marketing, but then also the social channels and the organization that is dedicated to those online profiles way have to stop. We have to stop there, amy cookie cutter the answer for organizations that they need to try it out internally just to figure out what their need is before they could fill it. We have to stop there, amy sorry, amy sample ward, you’ll find her blogger at amy sample ward, dot or ge, and on twitter she’s at amy rs ward amy run a sample ward. Thank you very much. Thanks tony. Next week, e-giving twenty twelve and a twenty thirteen forecast rob mitchell, ceo of atlas, of giving, returns to review last year’s fund-raising by sector and mission and state, and he’ll give us his forecast for twenty thirteen i’m pleading, can you please rate and review the show in itunes? I know you don’t have to go there anymore because you’re listening by podcast most of you, but if you could make the trip, i’d be grateful. Make the trip to itunes rate and review the show live listeners, please. When this show is over, open a window. Goto itunes rate in review give us a one through five star rating, please, wishing you good luck the way performers do around the world were still in serbia, bosnia herzegovina, montenegro and mathos. In serbian, the language of those countries break a leg is slow, may know goo. So, for this week, i’m wishing you slow me. Nobu. Our creative producer is claire meyerhoff. Key influencer tony martignetti. Sam liebowitz is our line producer, and the show’s social media is by regina walton of organic social media, the remote producer of tony martignetti non-profit radio is john federico of the new rules. Oh, i very much hope that you will be with me next week. Friday one to two p, m eastern on talking alternative broadcasting at talking alternative dot com. I didn’t think that shooting the ending. You’re listening to the talking, alternate network, waiting to get me anything. E-giving cubine hi, i’m donna and i’m done were certified mediators, and i am a family and couples licensed therapists and author of please don’t buy me ice cream are show new beginnings is about helping you and your family recover financially and emotionally and start the beginning of your life will answer your questions on divorce, family court, co, parenting, personal development, new relationships, blending families and more. Dahna and i will bring you to a place of empowerment and belief that even though marriages may end, families are forever join us every monday, starting september tenth at ten a m on talking alternative dot com are you suffering from aches and pains? Has traditional medicine let you down? Are you tired of taking toxic medications? Then come to the double diamond wellness center and learn how our natural methods can help you to hell? Call us now at to one to seven to one eight one eight three that’s to one to seven to one eight one eight three or find us on the web at www dot double diamond wellness dot com. We look forward to serving you. You’re listening to talking alternative network at www dot talking alternative dot com now broadcasting twenty four hours a day. Hey! This is tony martignetti aptly named host of tony martignetti non-profit radio. Big non-profit ideas for the other ninety five percent technology fund-raising compliance, social media, small and medium non-profits have needs in all these areas. My guests are expert in all these areas and mohr. Tony martignetti non-profit radio fridays, one to two eastern on talking alternative broadcasting are you fed up with talking points? Rhetoric everywhere you turn left or right? Spin ideology no reality, in fact, its ideology over intellect no more it’s, time for the truth. Join me. Larry shot a neo-sage tuesday nights nine to eleven easter for the isaac tower radio in the ivory tower will discuss what’s important to you. Society, politics, business it’s, provocative talk for the realist and the skeptic who want to know what’s. Really going on? What does it mean? What can be done about so gain special access to the ivory tower. Listen to me. Very sharp. Your neo-sage. Tuesday nights nine to eleven new york time go to ivory tower radio dot com for details. That’s, ivory tower radio dot com e every time i was a great place to visit for both entertainment and education listening. Tuesday nights, nine to eleven. It will make you smarter. Told you.

119: The Bequesting Brain and Donor Database Dungeon – Tony Martignetti Nonprofit Radio

Tony’s guests this week:

Russell James, Ph.D., associate professor and director of graduate studies in charitable financial planning at Texas Tech University

Scott Koegler, editor of Nonprofit Technology News

Read and watch more on Tony’s blog: http://tonymartignetti.com

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Hello and welcome to tony martignetti non-profit radio big non-profit ideas for the other ninety five percent. I’m your aptly named host. Oh, i very much hope that you were with me last week. It would cause me great distress. I couldn’t stand knowing that you had missed thirty four things to know about people. Andrea nierenberg, president of nuremberg consulting group, returned. She had so much simple and valuable easy relationship building advice from october fifth that i invited her back and the last show, which was, of course, two weeks ago, she had thirty four things to know and howto learn them how to preserve them and what to do with them, and her list of thirty for is now on the facebook page and are linked in group also get engaged to amy sample ward are regular social media scientist, social media contributor continued her siri’s on real engagement and building trust through the social networks. October was setting the tone this month. It’s your call to action. Amy is membership director for and ten the non-profit technology network and blog’s for the stanford social innovation review. I want to welcome new listeners. I need a big spike of listeners in october and i hope that you’re still with me in november hoped very much welcome. Welcome to the show this week, it’s, the big, questing brain professor russell james at texas tech university does neuroimaging research to see subjects brains light up when they elect to put a charitable gift in their will. This former plan giving fundraiser and director of the graduate certificate in charitable financial planning has research based advice for your cultivation and recognition of bequest, gift and donordigital baste dungeon scott koegler, the editor of non-profit technology news. Our regular tech contributor wants you to keep your donordigital base secure so nothing escapes. We’ll talk about inappropriate use sql sounds like jargon jail already inference and overloads between the guests on tony’s take to my block this week is charity registration matters. Why compliance with state charity solicitation registration laws is important? If you’re listening and you’re on twitter, you can use the hashtag non-profit radio to join the conversation with us there where monitoring that hashtag in the studio and i want to welcome my guest is russell james he’s, an attorney and phd he’s, an associate professor and the director. Of graduate studies in charitable financial planning at texas tech university, where he also supervises the graduate certificate and charitable financial planning. He has spoken at the f p international conference, the big twelve gift planters association and giving korea we have listeners from korea pretty regularly, actually, he’s presented his research at universities in the u s, spain, germany, the netherlands, ireland, scotland and england, but i noticed not whales, i guess the welsh don’t care for russell james for some reason, the welsh have not invited him, but the irish, scottish and english have he’s, a consultant to the south korean government, around their effort to adopt plant e-giving legislation, he’s been a plan e-giving fundraiser and a college president. Russell james, welcome to the show. Thanks so much, tony. Glad to be here. It’s a pleasure to have you. You’ve had a lot of jobs but a lawyer. Fundraiser, college president now, college professor, you’re you’re having trouble holding jobs? Yeah, that that is an issue. But hopefully i can. Okay, what’s next, the construction trades. Maybe. I don’t know. No, i’ve got ten years. I’m gonna stop. Okay. Well, that’s it you’re set. Okay. Um, our big questing brain. This is really very, very interesting to me. You do? Ah, neuroimaging research. Why did you decide to pursue this? Well, i’ve spent a lot of time in the area of fund-raising a particular plant giving, and there have been a handful of studies done on shared will get e-giving decision making in the scanner, but nothing had been done yet. Looking at decisions for request, a charitable giving. And so that was something new and something i was interested in. And after getting ten years gave me the opportunity to take about a year and a half or two years to learn how to do this neuroimaging so that we could proceed with finding out how the brain works. When you ask people questions about making charitable bequests, this is not a line of research that a non tenured professor would have the luxury of pursuing. Well, it it takes a long time. And since my original background is not in neuroimaging, it takes a fair amount of time to get up to speed with the process. And it helps having a little bit of job security before you start chasing rabbits like this. That’s one. Of the few jobs you have not held is neuroimaging scientist. Thank you. Um, and what was your methodology for this? So the approach was tio have people when they’re in the scanner, they can observe a computer screen, and we could ask them a variety of questions. And what we wanted to do here is we wanted to have questions that were identical but on lee different and whether we were talking about giving money or volunteering or leaving a bequest gift. And since we can’t actually enforce a bequest gift in the scanner, what we did is we ask them if you signed the will in the next three months, what’s the likelihood you might leave request gift to a particular organization. And we used about about twenty eight large charitable organizations on we also ask them about if they were asked in the next three months, what was the likelihood they might give, give money to the same organizations? Or that they might volunteer time to those organizations in the idea being here, we want to see what brain areas are engaged when people are thinking about the probability or thinking about this idea of, well, let’s. See if i was asked if i was finishing a will. How likely is it that i might do this? Okay, and you compare that with a current gift and volunteering, okay? And because you see those as as different methods of support. And so you thought there might be some different segments of the brain that are that are involved exactly. And also because we understand a lot more about current giving and volunteering because people engage in that behavior very frequently, we can observe it a lot. But the quest e-giving is something that people engaged in very rarely oh, and oftentimes not observed. And so we sort of want to compare with the thing that we know about better. Did the volunteer part did that involve boardmember ship buy-in a chance it did not. It was just a generic question of hey, if you were asked the next three months, right, your likelihood that you might volunteer time too. You know, the american cancer society, for example, okay? Because i think it was boardmember ship. I think their brains would have exploded inside your scanner. You have what we want to avoid. You’d have a mess, and plus you you have a dead subject. So it’s no, in these invalid research. Okay. Concerned with their safety. So that’s a that’s cool this other inside a scanner. And does this look like now? I’m just a little curious about the technology. Does this look like an emery that people slide into? And then the screen is above them? Or what does it look like? That’s? Exactly. Right? So they’re inside an m r i it’s a fairly large boardman sheen, but it still they’re sort of locked in there. And before they do this particular experiment, they get used to using the screen, have a couple of buttons that they can use on each hand to respond to questions on. So they sort of get used to and really, you know, they focus on the screen because there’s nothing else to look at. I mean, it’s fairly dark out there. And you have this projected image of the computer screen on that’s the process which seems very weird, but you actually get used to it pretty quickly. Is you’re going through these preliminary process? How did you get volunteers for to be subjects for research like this? Well, for this first for this first group, we just asked folks who were around the university campus so employees graduate students, that sort of thing in the future we’re looking at once we find the results to make sure that those results are also replicable when we are doing with other populations. Ok, i see grad students. I mean, they’re hungry. That right? So for twenty five bucks, they’ll do anything. You know what? They are paid. Yes. Ok. Eso what did you what did you find? I’m interested in what you found across the three different types of, of, of gift of a way of ways of supporting now also, russell, we just have two minutes before our first break. So just, like, sort of tease what? What you found what we found was two different areas that were much more strongly activated for bequest decisions. Van forgiving, volunteering decisions. Those two areas are the call once called the peculiar and once called the lingual gyrus. Now the brick union is something that’s engaged frequently. When people are taking an outside perspective on themselves, sometimes called it’s been called the mind’s eye. And the lingual gyrus is actually a visual or visual ization area. So when you’re dreaming, for example, you will engage the lingual gyrus, and if you have damage to that area, it can eliminate your ability to dream. So we saw these two areas and independently we’ve got some activity that involves people looking back on themselves from an outside perspective and also engaging in visual ization. But what was really exciting is what we found in other studies that simultaneous osili activated both of the same areas that i think is a lot more applicable to this situation where we’re looking at now so i can tell you about those way have time, or we’re going to take a break first. You said the lingual gyrus is the dream center. Is that right? It’s engaged in that engaged okay area. My lingual gyrus was was hyperactive last night, but you’re probably not into interpreting dreams out suppose you dont go that far do don’t go that far. All right, well, we’re going to end with you, then we’re done. No, russell, james will of course stay with us for this break. And i hope that you do too. Talking alternative radio twenty four hours a day. Are you stuck in your business or career trying to take your business to the next level, and it keeps hitting a wall? This is sam liebowitz, the conscious consultant. I will help you get to the root cause of your abundance issues and help move you forward in your life. Call me now and let’s. Create the future you dream of. Two, one, two, seven, two, one, eight, one, eight, three, that’s to one to seven to one, eight one eight three. The conscious consultant helping conscious people. Be better business people. Dahna are you concerned about the future of your business for career? Would you like it all to just be better? Well, the way to do that is to better communication, and the best way to do that is training from the team at improving communications. This is larry sharp, host of the ivory tower radio program and director at improving communications. Does your office needs better leadership, customer service sales, or maybe better writing, are speaking skills. Could they be better at dealing with confrontation conflicts, touchy subjects all are covered here at improving communications. If you’re in the new york city area, stop by one of our public classes, or get your human resource is in touch with us. The website is improving communications, dot com, that’s, improving communications, dot com, improve your professional environment, be more effective, be happier, and make more money improving communications. That’s. The answer. Hey, all you crazy listeners looking to boost your business? Why not advertise on talking alternative with very reasonable rates? Interested simply email at info at talking alternative dot com welcome back were with professor russell james from texas tech, and we’re talking about the requesting brain. We will not be analyzing my dreams. Sorry, but those were disappointed in that, but we will continue. Of course, this is conversation. So this is russell. This is what people sort of their self image and and what you call, sir there, their life story right in the reason we say, that is we looked at some other studies that engaged both of the same areas simultaneously. And one of them, for example, was where they i had older adults in the scanner in their sixties and seventies, and they were shown photographs from across their life from the the different ages of their life. And when they saw those photographs in the ones that they remembered what they were doing, they remembered exactly what was happening in these two areas were much more strongly engaged. And so the idea is that these are areas there is associated with what we would call visualized autobiography and there’s, a variety of other studies that also suggests that your reasonableness of this conclusion so the idea being that when people are thinking about making a charitable request decision they’re actually thinking about this concept of how does this fit in to my life story? It’s almost like they’re riding the final chapter of their autobiography and asking about whether or not this cause or this organization fits with that life story. And so it turns out those are very different questions than we might ask with, say, a current gift issues that are in other context, really important, like what’s the next big project, or how financially financially good is this organization, those things sort of fade into the background on this actually fits with some other research that was just finished last year in a phd dissertation by claire roundly and united kingdom, where she interviewed folks about why they had left money to the organizations that they had identified in their in their state plan. And it turns out that really it was all about their life story, it was about their connection with the cause, or with the organization because of something that had happened to them or to a family member that makes that that connection come together. So this it’s a little bit with an example, one of my friends who’s been planned e-giving after he graduated from law school and had this background training when he would go out and talk to people, he would see that they had all of these tremendous tax advantages that they could take advantage of. Maybe they’ve got qualified money that they want to make a gift and, you know, there’s, a state gift and there’s ways to do that, and he would start by talking about that. And he said i had to learn to stop doing that, that what i needed to do was to start by asking, how were they connected with the organization? What was their life story and how it was it was connected in on so that seems to fit with some of the things that we’re seeing in the scanner here, okay? And that’s pretty widely recognized, i think that it’s it’s, the love of the, the charitable work, whatever it might be feeding people, sheltering, education, spiritual, whatever it is, it’s, it’s, the love of the work that that moves people to include the charity in there in there will absolutely. And i think, it’s the issue here of you know, when we think about this sort of related into some psychology from fifty years ago that talks about how two people deal with it, reminders of their own mortality and a couple of things they do one they tend to avoid those reminders, but the other thing they tend to do is to seek what’s been called symbolic immortality, that’s that something about me that’s goingto live beyond me. So it must be, you know, my name or my values or my my family, and we tend to focus on those things mohr when we’re reminded of our of our own mortality. And so this links in with this old psychological research from for many years ago that talks about people’s desire for symbolic immortality, and it’s actually a form of to use another technical term, a form of autobiographical heroism where we wantto see ourselves as being a significant our lives is being meaningful. And so this, uh, psychological theory fits with what we’re seeing in the scanner, in the sense that people are engaging in this kind of autobiographical thinking when they’re making this kind of you did a very good job there of keeping yourself out of jargon jail by defining that very hard to do, but okay on dh this has some implications for recognition of gift, which will get recognition of gift by will, which will get through this thiss idea of immortality i have to send live listener love got tons of listeners today, it’s incredible! I’m going to recognize first. Seoul korea live listener loves seoul, korea my guest, russell james has consulted with your government as they were trying teo create plan giving legislation. Also in asia, we got tokyo and asahi, japan, and a masked listener in china. I don’t know there’s some kind of furtive activity or it’s blocked by someone else but got a mask listener in china here in the u s spearfish, south dakota. I love that welcome spearfish. You’re not you’re you’re hunting there, but you’re but you’re only hunting fish on dno. No big arms, i guess. Alexandria, louisiana, new bern, north carolina live listener love to all of you in asia and here in the u, s and there’s more to come. Um, visualized autobiography now. So this is russell. This is the way we were perceiving ourselves. This is not this is not rational, right? But this is our our our own self image of ourselves. Well, self image, the difference in an inactive activation here was not taking place in the in the number crunching part of the brain thing wasn’t the purely rational prefrontal cortex this is mme or the you know, the the imagery on the scene oneself and sort of your your own life story or or autobiography, you know, finding some support for some of this earlier research in psychology about people being reminded of their own death kind of lends support to certain results that we see in certain strategies that we see if somebody is pursuing consciously or unconsciously symbolic immortality as part of their estate planning problem that’s, symbolic and what i’d like to be symbolically immortal. Well, i would like to be a very good well, you know, let me tell you about some plan giving opportunities. They’re over there at texas tech and the graduate certificate and channel financial planning to wear. When we look at charities that receive a larger share of their income from the quest sources. Often times, you’ll see charities such as universities that are expected to be around for a very long time, especially giving things like a, uh, an endowed fellowship for a scholarship that that we expect to live on beyond us. And it may be one of the reasons why these organizations or other organizations focused on saving lives, whether finding new cures for for new diseases or other kinds of lifesaving approaches can sometimes be particularly attractive, and if you compare that to other organizations that don’t necessarily focus on raising funds for something that’s going to be permanent, but rather raising funds for something they’re going to do right now and spend right now that’s very attractive for current gifts, but it may not be particularly psychologically attractive force st gifts, because we don’t really want something that’s. Just all of the money is going to be used for a big bang immediately after we die. We’d rather have something that is going to last a long time that maybe our grandkids could come and and say, oh, yes, that’s something that my grandfather set up and still here today. But organizations that might have a more current mission could certainly create a fund or an endowment. Or maybe, ah, part of their mission, that is. Something that’s going to be that is everlasting exactly, and what i would encourage because i know there’s always a tension in those organizations if you set up something that’s permanent, those air funds that you can only use the interest off of, for example, endowment that income off. So what i would suggest is setting up these kinds of permanent giving opportunities exclusively for the quest donors on say, you know you can set up a permanent endowment, you nose let’s say it’s, an animal charity, a permanent endowment that will support, you know, one or two are five animals of whatever the interest of the charity is forever, but that this gift is on ly through request e-giving so you don’t have to worry about cannibalizing your current giving, but yet you give those kind of permanent opportunities that are more psychologically attractive when it comes to charitable bequests. Decisionmaking. Okay, i want to remind listeners. Russell james is an attorney, phd and his associate professor at texas tech university, where he supervises thie graduate certificate in charitable financial planning, and you’ll find information about that at encourage generosity dot com is there also, then the concern russell by the way, do people ever call you james russell? People mess that up all the time. I notice i have not done it once. I’m being scrupulous about not calling you james. I don’t get that with, you know, my name’s, it’s, not generally, not a problem, very black, but i will not. I’m being very careful not to make that mistake with you. Do do smaller organizations now, you think have have a little a bit of a challenge over larger, well established institutions that have been around for decades and generations? Yes, certainly, i think that’s a much bigger challenge when it comes to raising the quest dollars as opposed to raising current dollars, especially if we’ve got this connection where we want something that’s going to last a long time, then we sort of have to overcome that barrier if i’m not even sure the organization itself is going to last a long time. There are some ways to overcome that, though. I mean, you could certainly set up permanent endowments that were, you know, managed by a large corporate trust or bank or something like that so that you could give that that feeling, that sense of permanence that would be there regardless of the sea organization but it’s definitely a barrier. The other thing, though, is that people don’t necessarily have to be attached to a particular organization. They may be attached to a cause and it’s just a matter of finding those people who have that life story connection where it is attached to a cause, if that’s the same cause of your organization on dh trying to make that connection with the life story. And so how would a smaller or newer charity go about doing that? How do you make that connection with the with the person’s life story, based on what you’ve learned? Well, there’s, a couple of different ways to do it. One is obviously if you just know your donors and you know, those those connections and those stories, the other is to remind people of those possibilities by telling stories that give them examples, you know, telling the story about a person who has supported a particular cause been involved with the particular cause and ideally, if you have an example, this may be only for a little bit older organizations. But if you have an example of someone who has left money in a bequest that you could talk about how that person is still having an impact today, even though they passed away a number of talking about the deceased request donor zach plea because that’s that’s, the thing that’s really attractive is if i see that example, not only is an example to me in my behaviour, but it’s a signal that says, hey, these people are still being remembered, they’re still being talked about, and they’re still making an impact and that’s the real message that i think we want to get across. That’s, that’s, symbolic immortality, exactly, and that’s different than what we typically see, which is here’s a story about current donors who have made a plan now that’s fine, but that’s not the same thing as showing that we recognize people who are deceased in there, sir. Still having an impact because that’s, where we get that real example of the symbolic immortality. Excellent, i think that’s really that’s very concrete, valuable advice um, there’s also, you have some advice around recognition based on a person’s longevity of giving, irrespective of of the size of the gift. Certainly so if you think about the goal here, the goal is to make it obvious to the person that putting your organization in their state plan fits with their autobiography. It fits with their life story. So one of the ways that we can remind them of how much they fit their life story fits in with the organization is to consider giving recognition to people, not just for how much they gave this year, but recognition to people for their longevity and giving, especially your older donors who, you know, maybe financially, they have a lot of assets, but not a lot of income, and so they’re not giving us much currently, but recognize them for, you know, reaching a five year club, ten year club, twenty year club, you might even consider recognizing them for their lifetime, giving that this is some amount that you’ve given throughout the line throughout your life and the purpose there, you know, certainly if you’re recognizing him for longevity, that has a nice side benefit on current giving that, you know, you want to keep the street going, of course, but it also is a way of saying, you know, it’s, just like, you know, you get one of these credit cards, and it says members sense, you know what if i’ve got that member since nineteen seventy eight will you know, i’m going to stick with this organization because it’s, just part of who i am, you know, part of my my my autobiography in a sense well, i think charity’s aaron a much stronger place to be. Able to do that if they just remind people, you know, look at how long we’ve been together that that kind of idea, where it makes it clear that the organization that the cause is part of their life story and that that makes it fit in very well when they’re deciding which beneficiaries to use in an estate plan, excellent listeners, i hope you’re taking notes or you’re gonna have to go back and listen to this podcast again. Here i thought, russell james, you know, i figured academic is going to be stuffy, nothing is and nothing is going to apply it’s all going to be a theory, a land, and but we’ll have him on anyway. You know? I’ll make fun of him and things like that, but no, i mean the value, the advice is really valuable. No, i knew this is this is really valuable advice for forgetting bequests. And russell. I never thought you were stuffy. I’m just getting well, i can be if you want me to. Because i also presented academic conference. Yeah, no, i know i left that out of your bio now. No, no, we don’t we don’t want that. Don’t turn. Don’t start turning that on. Keep keep the charming side. All right, so also that this this idea that the organization is going to live beyond me, i know you touched on this a little bit, and i just want to i just wantto see if you have any more advice around how we can get people to recognise that this organization will will live beyond you when when they’re sort of a new organization, we just have about a minute left. Well, one thing to consider is this if we look at the strongest competition and our field for those charitable request dollars, the absolute strongest competition comes from private family foundations, and they’re psychologically very attractive because they have your name on it. They follow your rules, and they could live forever. But keep in mind these very attractive organizations are also new organizations. They’re ones that people create essentially for themselves. So it is possible to set up a scenario where you could emphasize that this fund, for example, is a permanent fund. And, you know, if you feel so compelled, you could even indicate that it’s administered by a, you know, by some other financial institutions or entity. Yet if you if you need to do that, but understand that is the gap. It is easier for a long time organizations, but there’s, some strategies that you can do, which will try teo bridge that gap a bit absolutely excellent. James russell no russell james on attorney, phd, professor at texas tech university and supervises the program and graduate certificate in charitable financial planning at texas tech, and you’ll find that at encouraged generosity. Dot com russell, thank you so much for being a guest. Thanks for having been my pleasure. Thank you, and right now we take a break when we return. It’s, tony’s, take two and then scott koegler, our regular tech contributors with me, with me for donordigital baste dungeon, and i hope you will be too co-branding dick, dick, tooting the good ending, you’re listening to the talking alternate network, waiting to get me thinking. Nothing. Cubine hi, i’m donna and i’m done were certified mediators, and i am a family and couples licensed therapists and author of please don’t buy me ice cream are show new beginnings is about helping you and your family recover financially and emotionally and start the beginning of your life. We’ll answer your questions on divorce, family court, co parenting, personal development, new relationships, blending families and more dahna and i will bring you to a place of empowerment and belief that even though marriages may end, families are forever join us every monday, starting september tenth at ten a m on talking alternative dot com are you suffering from aches and pains? Has traditional medicine let you down? Are you tired of taking toxic medications? Then come to the double diamond wellness center and learn how our natural methods can help you to hell? Call us now at to one to seven to one eight one eight three that’s to one to seven to one eight one eight three or find us on the web at www dot double diamond wellness dot com way look forward to serving you! You’re listening to the talking alternative network. Duitz if you have big ideas and an average budget, tune into the way above average. Tony martin. Any non-profit radio ideo. I’m jonah helper from next-gen charity. Welcome back, it’s, time for tony’s take two at roughly thirty two minutes into the hour. My block this week is charity registration matters. Part of my consulting work is doing charity registration, four charities that don’t want to do it themselves. This is registering in every state where you are soliciting donations so it could be a texas charity, and they may be sending email to wisconsin and paper us mail to pennsylvania and that texas charity needs to be registered in wisconsin and pennsylvania. I do that work, and i also wrote a book for charities that want to do it themselves and my block this week is just reminding charities that it’s important teo be in compliance for three reasons you could be embarrassed. There have been charities that are become public and in the headlines. Um for their failure to comply and have a couple examples on the block. Your board members are at risk because their fiduciary steer charity and if you’re not following laws, there’s potential for personal liability, actually among your board members and the irs inquires the year your annual form nine ninety has a couple of questions that i ask about your compliance with thes state laws and that’s a lot. My blogged the post is called charity registration matters. My block is that tony martignetti dot com and that is tony’s take two for friday, november thirtieth, the forty ninth show of the year. Oh, what a pleasure to welcome back scott koegler he’s, the editor of non-profit technology news, which you’ll find it n p tech news dot com he’s, our regular tech contributor. You can follow him on twitter at scott koegler konigstein and i saw today. Scott, you have a beautiful about paige at about dot com you’re in a desert scene there. Looks like you climbed a desert mountain or something. Is that is that photo shopped? That was actually in phoenix a couple years ago. Okay, it was i did. I did perform some photo shop on it, but nothing that you could notice. Hopefully. Really? Well, it looks very noticeable to me. Were you actually in that setting? Where? The photo that the photo purports tohave one that was sitting on that rock you were? I extracted the cactus songs, though, so that they wouldn’t show. Okay. Oh, i see. All right, they were stuck in your leg? Is that why? Okay, we’re talking this month about donordigital baste dungeon there’s a lot of sensitive data in people’s databases isn’t there there is and it’s one of those things that i think i think everybody kind of knows about it, but i think also that it’s it’s also something that is typically beyond the the the understanding of most folks who are engaged in managing a non-profit i mean, it’s pretty technical stuff, you know? Well, you’re going to break it down because you’re a former officers ceo, right? You’re a former chief information off, you’re going to break this down information off, okay, so we’re goingto this maybe typically outside people’s can, but we’re going to get it within their ken great, but what’s in their first of all what we need to be concerned about what kinds of data first? Well, typically it it could be any data. But the most sensitive, of course, is the information about your donors on a sensitive for a whole bunch of reasons one is you really don’t want that information being spread around, too, although we’re all friendly within the non-profit community let’s, face it. Everybody’s competing for the same funds. So you really don’t want that whole list of donors and their history, uh, kind of spread around to somebody else who may be able to make them, you know, make a better appeals, right? Right. So just just just not letting you get out of the bag the names, right? But then you might have ah, dates of birth. You most likely have addresses. Credit card. What? Right? I mean, well, sure, but right now i’m talking about just the competitive nature, but okay, okay. I’m getting getting someone’s eso security number, which i think typically is not part of a donor database, but definitely credit card information. A cz you said, probably date of birth. Certainly addresses. And those kind of things are pretty sensitive. Um, well, i just moved to south carolina, and just before i moved here. Thank goodness they had a break in of the south carolina, um, business and resident database. And there were literally millions of so security numbers and names. I just sucked out of the database and people around the world, man. Now, imagine if that was new york that that would actually have value. Terrible, right? But in north and south korea in south carolina, no that’s, terrible money, there’s. Nobody listening. I don’t think live listener loved, but nobody in south carolina today, so but i will send live. Loved out tio reston, virginia, forest hills, new york where i used to live. I used to live in a hundred street sixty seven thing i used to write. Buy-in forest hills high school and brooklyn, new york all right, we got some local of local live. Listen, love no. Alright that’s. A terrible new yorker joke. I’m sorry, south carolina. I apologized. No it’s critical. So so that’s that’s pretty embarrassing to the government to the state of the government. What they found out wass that if they had installed a twenty five thousand dollars update to their database, they would have they would have prevented the whole thing which cost them something like forty million dollars. Zoho and isn’t the security doesn’t cost anything it’s relative cost and the damage to your reputation and, you know not to mention the damage to your to your constituents. Financial, no stability and abilities, right? Identity theft is a huge issue. Okay, you haven’t ordered that one of the okay on, we’re going to talk through it. You have an article on this subject at p tech news. Dot com let’s talk about something that i’m not sure you can prevent this one, though inappropriate use right by people who are authorized to access data, right? Did you know tony? And you probably didn’t know this because you’re smart guy, that’s, ziga risk the security is not from outside the the organization, but from inside. Well, i can’t say i knew it, but it sounds intuitive because if somebody’s going to do bad acts, you can’t prevent that all the policies and all the procedures, if somebody wants to get around them and they ran inside are already they’re going, they’re going to do it right, right, it’s pretty easy to do. You put a thumb drive in your computer and you copy it out and there you go. Yeah, typically nobody knows who or what happened. Yeah, there are, by the way, uh, software and systems operating systems like windows. Mac. Um, i got tools that can that can actually prevent that. But again, you have to know about it. You have to know. Think about it, then you have to actually install it. Monitor so it’s not a story simple, but the point is that yes, it’s really possible and happens all the time that somebody within the organization absconds with your data and something they shouldn’t. Yeah, that seems like the toughest one because, like i said, if somebody really wants to get it and they’re inside already, i think they will what’s the physical damage is next what’s your concern that well, you know, physical damages is basically if your computer dies or if your hard drive, uh, you know, fails and he didn’t have been appropriate back-up of your data and again that’s one of those things that just happens all the time and people don’t really think too much about it. Everybody thinks about back-up, you know, you get a computer and set up your back-up hopefully, but unless it’s a an automatic function, unless you’re monitoring it and unless you actually test e-giving bringing your back-up data back from the world story asked the retrieval, right? Yeah, you never know if it really works and you know, the day comes when you really need it, you try it. For the very first time ever. And guess what, probably a thirty percent chance that it’s not gonna work, okay? And that and the back-up shouldn’t only be local shouldn’t only be in your office or even in your in your town. Geever right, absolutely should be. You should have in addition to your local back-up you should have offset back-up, and that could be if it’s physical you can have courier service, pick up a a thumb drive or or a hard drive or wherever and physically carry it off site, and they’re also more and more online back-up services that you simply connect to over the internet cloud, right when you and i have talked a lot about the cloud we have right sabat besides that, a lot of databases now are actually stored in the cloud, so you may not actually have a copy of it anywhere physically within your facility. Okay, so wait be sure you know where it is and where the copies are that you are able to get it back when one and if you need it, something that struck me as interesting you. The article talked about sql so well, i’ll give you a break and i’ll bring it up so you can avoid jargon. Jail? Explain what we’ll explain what sql is. Do you know what? I hope you know what sql stands for? I looked it up. Well, actually, it’s irrelevant, you know, it’s. Very relevant. Weary language structured clear language. Yes. Don’t say it’s irrelevant when you don’t know it’s and it’s enormously relevant. Oh, no, i do know, but the okay. All right. Well, it’s, what? Really right? See, what it stands for is the only thing i know about it that’s all i know that’s. So i’m trying to show off. That’s. The only thing is all i know is what the initials with the abbreviation stands for. Okay, what does west culwell metoo tony martignetti okay. Donordigital base. Which hopefully, in sum of money, what you’re actually doing is your you’re performing a sql query. You’re asking the database to find specific information and that, like that query language. You know something and actually in english, it says find data, like, quote tony martignetti in database a, b c that’s. How actually looks like. But those queries can do a lot of things besides find they can actually delete data. They can change day there, they can move data. And so i could perform equity that says, find all records that include tony martignetti and delete them. Okay, that’s so and there’s all kinds of other things. But you but how would somebody who doesn’t have access to the database this is an outsider now, right? How would somebody who doesn’t have access to the database execute thes sql queries? Well, that’s, that’s what hackers do they find vulnerable spots in certain systems on they just do it. Sometimes they just do it because they’re mean and nasty. And sometimes they do it because they want to move your data from where you have it to where they want it. All right, so so it can’t happen, but it’s basically can it comes up with the under the domain of hacking? Okay, i see you don’t visit, right? It’s, not just inside. I think i think to be more damage done to a database if the if the command was to add tony martignetti, that was probably more create more. That would be much more destructive. What we have just like a minute before before break. Or so ok, you have another interesting one inference. This was logical but interesting what’s what’s inference about in front er, otherwise known as social engineering. If i want to find had the president of a company, i’ll call in to just pick up a phone, call the front desk and say what’s the name of the president company and they’ll give it to me and then i can ask for not in the same phone call, okay, right, separate call or other information and over twenty calls, i’ll get everything that i want. Okay, so each individual bit is innocuous, but you put them all together some nefarious actor is doing, and you can have some really private information, right? Right. And it’s pretty easy to come by surprisingly, yeah, ok, well, yeah, because each little pieces is innocent. Okay, we’re going to take a break, and when we come back, scott and i will keep talking about how to keep your your database dungeon secure. You’re listening to the talking alternative network. Duitz lorts oppcoll are you stuck in your business or career trying to take your business to the next level, and it keeps hitting a wall? This is sam liebowitz, the conscious consultant. I will help you get to the root cause of your abundance issues and help move you forward in your life. Call me now and let’s. Create the future you dream of. Two, one, two, seven, two, one, eight, one, eight, three, that’s to one to seven to one, eight one eight three. The conscious consultant helping conscious people, better business people. Dahna have you ever considered consulting a road map when you feel you need help getting to your destination when the normal path seems blocked? A little help can come in handy when choosing an alternate route. Your natal chart is a map of your potentials. It addresses relationships, finance, business, health and, above all, creativity. Current planetary cycles can either support or challenge your objectives. I’m montgomery taylor. If you would like to explore the help of a private astrological reading, please contact me at monte at monty taylor dot. Com let’s monte m o nt y at monty taylor dot com. Talking alternative radio twenty four hours a day. Welcome back to big non-profit ideas for the other ninety five percent. All right, scott koegler we’ve laid out these problems and there’s even more in your article. Att n p tech news. Dot com what are some ways toe? Get around and prevent to really prevent these these problems? It really is tough, tony, because there are so many ways that things could go wrong. So the biggest, biggest thing to do is to make sure that you’re paying attention. Uh, number one, i know where your data is and know that it’s backed up half the fact that you have, uh, valid back-up so you can restore check? Uh, check your employees and your your people that are working and have access to the data. You really may not be able to actually prevent it, but no, i just talked to them about how sensitive this is. Be sure that anybody who has access to get to the data has not disclosure. Uh, language in whatever document signed with them, it won’t protect you won’t actually keep them from doing it. But for a lot of people, it may be enough of a, uh just a warning for them toe not go there. It just makes it a little bit tougher. Okay, what about having different access levels? Certainly. And fortunately, most of the applications that are for sale today for non-profits i already have those kind of things. So you have? Ah, user who is able to look up information and possibly key and donations, but they probably don’t have the ability to look into personal histories. They have the ability to delete records, those kind of things. So for the most part, what kind of function is is built into software that amount profits will will buy in order to run their operations. Okay, um, when? When you do buy software, aren’t there sort of default administrative ieds that hackers might be ableto exploit? Uh, yes. Absolutely. Good points a little about that. Would you please? Sure every application comes with the typically it’s the admin or administrator password with password? Password? Uh, absolute first thing you want to change that, uh, you may want to. If you’re actually in charge of setting it up, you may want to remove that that user after you’ve already set up a different one and also check the list. Of existing user accounts because sometimes there may be some in there that air again set up by default. Good remove any that you you don’t know what they are, you can do that also just kind of during your and during the course of using the system, check the usual to see who’s in there. You may have somebody who was registered inappropriately, either by accident or on purpose. They may have found some way to get into the system and register a high level access the count. There really shouldn’t be there. And the best thing to do is just either restrictor access or just delete them. If they are actually somebody that you want in there, go call you up and say, hey, what happened? And if they’re not good, okay, former employees to write, you might have old account old ieds for former employees, certainly, and that should be covered under the hr policies. And i know a lot of small organizations don’t actually have hr policies that goes along with the non disclosure agreement. The sooner someone is charlyne ated, actually, before they walk out the door before you terminate them, you should remove access. To any of the information that you hold right? Okay, so before you actually have the meeting where they’re ended, where they’re terminated, you wantto cut off their access so that they don’t go back to their office and do something mean, sure, because one of their going to do the most right after the meeting, not before yeah, okay, okay, now, i mean, it sounds underhanded, but its protection, i mean, it’s just basic risk management, okay, what about is this much of a deterrence? If if users know that all they’re i don’t know, maybe a keystroke, logging or all their activity with the databases being logged, is that a deterrent? Um, you know, it’s a return for somebody who thinks that they will be held accountable for somebody who who believed that they could get away with it, they don’t care. So it really comes right down to how trustworthy, ru employees and, you know, what kind of people do you have volunteering? And, um, yeah, it’s tough, and i’m not sure that those kind of things are are effective, but it’s, you know, it’s one of those things that also probably couldn’t hurt, right? Yeah, okay. I mean, it will keep the honest people from crossing the line, right? Like putting a lock on the glass door. Okay, okay, um, the thing i was thinking about is maybe this sort of suggests that doing background checks on employees is valuable. I know their their charities that object to doing that, but this is sort of suggesting that knowing the background of a potential employees could be could be helpful. Absolutely. And i think it depends on what’s at risk if you’re a small charity that, you know, has limited resources and limited funds. And, um and you know what, you’re actually what they’re actually what they have, that risk may not be all that much, and i don’t mean to say that you know, that there’s little at risk, but you made you may not really care about doing background checks, but if you’re a respected organization, i think anyone who is coming to volunteer there appreciates that kind of thing. Scott, we have to leave it. We have to leave it there. You can go. Thank you very much. You can follow him on twitter he’s at scott koegler. And that happens to be his name to another coincidence and he’s, the editor of non-profit technology news scott, thanks so much. Thanks my pleasure. Next week i’ll have one of my interviews from bb con, which was the blackbaud conference i was at about two months ago or so, and also maria simple will be back she’s, the prospect finder, our prospect research contributor. And she’ll be back with maria’s top ten the sights she uses most in her work she’s, our doi and of dirt cheap and free. So you know that you’re not gonna have to spend a lot of money to follow her advice today. There’s a new fund-raising fundamentals, which is my chronicle of philanthropy podcast its new out today the topic is year end fund-raising tips you’ll find it on the chronicle of philanthropy website. You’ll find it on itunes and again. It’s called fund-raising fundamentals. You can listen non-profit radio live our archive. Our archive is on itunes at non-profit radio dot net. From there you can subscribe and listen on the device of your choice at your leisure, wishing you good luck the way performers do around the world were still in czech republic and slovakia zoho mv us. Islam vous break a neck, so i wish you for the week. Islam vous. Our creative producer is claire meyerhoff. Sam liebowitz is our line producer, shows social media is by regina walton of organic social media, and the remote producer of tony martignetti non-profit radio is john federico of the new rules. Last minute live listener love out to mexico city, mexico. Thanks for joining us from there, and i hope that all of you will be with me next week at talking alternative dot com. You’ll listen on next friday, one to two p, m eastern. You didn’t think to get ending. You’re listening to the talking alternate network. Get him. Take it cubine hi, i’m donna and i’m done were certified mediators, and i am a family and couples licensed therapists and author of please don’t buy me ice cream. 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You’re listening to talking alternative network at www dot talking alternative dot com, now broadcasting twenty four hours a day. This is tony martignetti aptly named host of tony martignetti non-profit radio. Big non-profit ideas for the other ninety five percent technology fund-raising compliance, social media, small and medium non-profits have needs in all these areas. My guests are expert in all these areas and mohr. Tony martignetti non-profit radio friday’s one to two eastern on talking alternative broadcasting are you fed up with talking points, rhetoric everywhere you turn left or right? Spin ideology no reality, in fact, its ideology over intellect no more it’s time for action. Join me, larry. Shock a neo-sage tuesday nights nine to eleven easter for the ivory tower radio in the ivory tower will discuss what’s important to you society, politics, business and family. It’s provocative talk for the realist and the skeptic who want to know what’s. Really going on? 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