Getting Better Fundraising Results Easily
Advanced Fundraising With NLP
by Mary-Jane Hilton
Insanity, according to American inventor and philosopher Benjamin Franklin, is
doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results. For many years, my approach to
fundraising teetered on the edge of ‘insanity’ – I kept doing the same things over and over again and expecting to
get different results.
I wanted to raise well in excess of my capital campaign targets, upgrade annual
giving programmes; increase my direct mail responses; improve my telemarketing appeals and bequest programmes;
identify many more new benefactors and upgrade the giving levels of existing benefactors. And when I didn’t reach
my ambitious goals, I thought the problem was due to some external event (the vagaries of the economy, negative
media reports, or even the result of decisions made by the rest of the management team). Because I didn’t know any
better, I continued to repeat the same development methods and foolishly believed that the results would improve
sooner or later. They didn’t.
Then I was introduced to Neuro Linguistic Programming (NLP) and learnt
techniques (that I am about to share with you) that enabled me to apply new improved methods to my fundraising. At
long last, I began to achieve profoundly better results.
By now you’re probably wondering what this mysterious NLP is, how it works and
how quickly you can get some of it yourself!
NLP is essentially a study of personal excellence. It’s concerned with how top
people in different fields get outstanding results and how their thinking and behaviour patterns can be copied by
anyone to achieve the same level of results. It also allows us to understand our behaviour and the behaviour of
others so that our communication improves.
One of the most precise definitions of NLP that I have found comes from Dr
Harry Alder, author of ‘NLP – The New Art And Science Of Getting What You Want.’ He says, “It [NLP] is
concerned with what happens when we think, and the effect of our thinking on our behaviour and the behaviour of
others. ... NLP teaches us how to communicate, inwardly and outwardly, in a way that can make the difference
between mediocrity and excellence.”
Two men, Richard Bandler and John Grinder, founded NLP in the early 1970s in
California. Bandler, a mathmetician, computer expert and psychotherapist had been editing transcripts of Gestalt
Therapy. As he edited the transcripts, Bandler began to notice that there was an underlying structure or pattern to
what the therapist was doing in his very successful work with clients. Until Bandler mentioned this, the therapist
had no conscious awareness of it.
Shortly afterwards, Bandler met John Grinder, an Associate Professor of
Linguistics at the University who was carrying out research into the hidden grammar of thought and action. They
decided to combine their talents to explore the underlying structures used by successful people.
They began by studying three outstanding therapeutic communicators: Fritz
Perls, Virginia Satir and Dr Milton H. Erikson, who was believed to be one of the 6 greatest hypnotherapists of all
time. All three had reputations for helping their clients make dramatic and lasting changes in their
lives.
Bandler and Grinder were able to discover and identify the underlying
structures or patterns used by each of these people to achieve their consistent and outstanding results. Following
their observation of Virginia Satir’s work they were able to replicate the patterns she used to produce
relationship resolutions for her clients, and teach those patterns to their students. The students applied the
patterns to their own clients and were able to produce the same quality of results despite their relative
inexperience.
Bandler and Grinder went on to work with people from many different areas of
life including the sporting world; major corporations; the US military and the US government. They were interested
in what structures were being used both internally and externally in an individual when they achieved excellence.
They discovered that they could study successful people in any area and identify these underlying structures that
guaranteed a successful result.
They were then able to teach these structures to other people by offering a way
of understanding how each individual operates mentally, physically and emotionally, and how they make sense of
their experiences and interact with others.
As Bandler and Grinder’s research expanded they began seeking a name that would
encompass the discoveries they were making in their studies of how an individual structures their subjective
experiences; creates their different emotional states and is influenced by their values and beliefs.
The name they chose was Neuro Linguistic Programming (NLP), which brings the
three areas of their studies together:
- Neurology deals with the mind and our thinking
processes and gives an awareness of how we use our five senses to understand what is happening around
us.
- Linguistics refers to the words and phrases we
use; how we put them into action and the way they indicate our mental states. Linguistic also deals with our
non-verbal language including movements, gestures and habits which in turn reveal our thinking patterns, values
and beliefs.
- Programming is simply a number of steps designed
to bring about a certain outcome. The outcomes we achieve and the effects we create in ourselves and other
people are the results of our personal programmes.
There is a sequence of behaviour and thinking patterns that result in our
experiences. An awareness of these sequences can help us identify the structure of our own and other people’s
experience.
So we can say that NLP deals with how people relate and communicate, how they
make decisions, and how they prefer to be influenced. Once we have this information about a person we are then able
to match their representations of the world; in other words we can build instant rapport with them. A tool beyond
measure for fundraisers!
Copyright 2007 Mary-Jane
Hilton
Mary-Jane Hilton
has worked as a professional
fundraiser for over 20 years on 3 continents and offers consultations, coaching
and training in all aspects of fundraising, capital campaigns, and direct development work
-- specialising in fundraising for schools, charities and professional
orchestras.
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For Fundraising Consultations or Coaching...
Contact: Mary-Jane Hilton

Email: maryjanehilton[at]maryjanehilton.com
Tel: (+44) 01789 205139
MaryJaneHilton.com
Apple Tree Cottage, Church Road, Wilmcote,
Stratford-upon-Avon
Warwickshire, United Kingdom.
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