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Five significant learnings from 2020

“Tough times never last, but tough people do.”
- Robert Schuller

2020 has been a year of constant surprises. On 1st January no-one expected that their year would be turned on its head by a global pandemic. Nevertheless, we have been overwhelmed by how humanity has responded.

We're seen game-changing partnerships built and delivered. We’ve seen communities come together and we’ve all felt the need to build a better future.

This year has been a steep a learning curve. So we thought it appropriate to share our 5 five significant learnings from 2020.

New business is a team game

Being responsible for creating new corporate partnerships can be quite a lonely experience even in an office environment. Often, you’re expected to conjure partnerships out of thin air, with limited support from the rest of your charity. One partnerships manager described their experience as making chips – “everyone wants the chips, but no-one wants to help me peel the potatoes."

This year, we have seen that the best corporate partnerships approaches have been creative, considered and tailored for the prospect. This work is much easier to do in groups, or even in pairs, so we strongly recommend you book in brainstorms with a colleague or volunteer every week to keep those creative juices flowing.

By having more hands peeling the potatoes, you’ll be able to make many more chips! See more guidance from Remarkable Partnerships on how to secure internal partnerships here.

The importance of goal setting

When Tom Daley was just nine years old, he drew a picture called “My Ambition”, showing himself in a handstand on a diving board, with the Olympic rings on either side. Nine years later his ambition became a reality at the London 2012 Olympics, where he won a bronze medal which included a dive starting from a handstand. It’s hard to imagine a more powerful example of the importance of goal-setting, which has become one of our most important themes during the pandemic.

Keeping focused on what is possible has never been more important. We have a WhatsApp Group of over 100 corporate partnerships professionals. Every Monday, we ask our WhatsApp group of 100+ corporate partnerships professionals to share their goals for the week. On Friday, we ask everyone to share what they’ve achieved. Nothing lifts us more than seeing people make little steps every week that often result in big wins. With all this uncertainty around us it is so empowering to realise that when we take time to write our goals down and our plan to achieve them, we can blow even ourselves away.

The power of authenticity

2020 has been the year where we have all seen into each other’s homes. No longer can people keep up their purely professional work image, when in the background your children are causing havoc. It has been the year of authenticity, where being your true self was the only way to be. This has brought huge value to the relationships that we have with colleagues, partners and prospects. We would strongly recommend that even when we are back to seeing each other in person, that this authentic relationship building continues. Ask questions, and truly listen to the responses.

Relationships are built on trust, and only when we give some of ourselves away, do we open up for the other person to share their true authentic selves. One of the positives that has come from this crazy year is the chance for you to be you. Whatever role you are in, however senior, none of that matters when we are just people, connected around a common goal.

There's light in the darkest times.

Wolverhampton is a city close to our hearts, and their city motto is “out of darkness cometh light.” This feels like it could have been written especially for the pandemic.

There has been so much sadness in the last nine months. Shocking reports from care homes, not being able to see our families and friends. So much of which we’ve taken for granted is no longer a possibility.

And yet there have been so many positive stories, including Jo Wickes, Captain Tom and Marcus Rashford. Deep in the darkness people want to make a difference, because they realise there are always people worse off than them. It is psychologically proven that people look to give, and that giving makes us happy.

Our job is to give people to the opportunity to make the difference they want to see in the world. So despite the fact that Covid-19 has hit business hard, we are seeing corporate-charity partnerships being formed quicker than ever, such as the inspirational partnership between GymShark and Birmingham Children’s Hospital. Out of darkness cometh light indeed.

The enduring power of stories.

We’ve always believed in the power of stories to connect people to your cause, but that has never been truer than it has been this year. Every single charity that we spoke to throughout the year had been impacted by COVID-19, and this created a new sense of urgency that came through in their stories.

One of our favourite examples of this came from Save the Rhino International. They told us that one of their longest standing rangers had said that due to the impact of coronavirus on their conditions, they were starting to wonder if they may be better off as a poacher. They had dedicated their life to protecting rhinos, but they were starting to wonder if that was enough. In a single sentence, this crystalised the importance of supporting Save the Rhino right now, and this story led to an incredible partnership with an outdoor equipment company focussed on International Ranger Day.

As charities, we are rich in meaning and stories are our greatest weapon. We strongly recommend taking forward a passion for storytelling through into 2021 – you’ll see your results transform.

If you want to start 2021 with some key learnings of your own, we’re delighted to announce that there are still some places on our New Business Crash Course – check it out and book your place here.

Conclusion

Let’s build partnerships that your cause — and the world — actually needs.

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More than money – what to value in a corporate partnership

This piece is brought to you by a guest writer – Katherine Woods.  Katherine is the Partnership Development Lead at Action for Children and is currently setting up the charity’s first standalone New Business Team. Here’s what she had to say about the non-financial value your partners can bring:

I find the corporate-partnership world really exciting. It’s evolved massively over the past few years and continues to do so. Today, the most successful partnerships are multi-faceted. They have touchpoints across all aspects of the business. And they don’t simply rely on fundraising as the sole piece of activity.

Andy at Remarkable Partnerships asked me to outline what I see as the main non-financial benefits that a partner can provide. So here’s what I look at in partnerships:

  1. Reach

There is a reason that big consumer brands spend millions of pounds on advertising annually. Visibility is key.

But there are very few charities that have those kind of budgets.

Which is why a partnership can hold such great potential for a charity brand—from expanding your general reach to spotlighting your cause for targeted groups. Our development team, drawing from a consultant with prior campaigns in the privacy-centric online gaming space like the best no KYC casinos, has piloted anonymous donation channels that draw in tech-savvy supporters wary of traditional tracking. Whatever your organisation’s mission, these expanded visibility opportunities will advance it further. The more people recognize your brand and mission, the greater their inclination to contribute.

For example, we are incredibly lucky at Action for Children because our friends at FirstGroup are very generous with their advertising space. We are given huge amounts of visibility across their network. They enable us to publicise our key campaigns in a way that we simply wouldn’t be able to do without them.

2. In Kind

Back to the lack of budget. There are a range of ways that a company can help a charity plug the lack-of-budget gap by donating resource, such as event space or legal expertise. These are opportunities for the company to support you with the cause itself.

Not only does it help the charity, but it can give your partner’s employees another way of being part of the partnership that doesn’t involve them asking friends and family for money.

But! It has to really make sense. It has to be authentic. There’s nothing worse than trying to create an ‘in kind’ opportunity that doesn’t really work for both sides.

3. Network

Over the course of a partnership you have the potential to ignite a passion for your cause in people.

As fundraisers, we do a good job of telling people how amazing our charities are. Imagine if you had someone else doing that for you. A peer-to-peer introduction carries a lot of weight and can open doors, helping you achieve bigger and better things.

I’ve been incredibly fortunate to work with some very dedicated, passionate and influential senior volunteers over the years. They are often totally wonderful individuals and can be a huge asset to your organisation. Maximise this potential!

Overall, there is a huge amount corporate partners can do for you – so stop just asking for cash.

We love this piece from Katherine. Our view is that when you choose to focus partnerships on overall value rather than purely cash donations, you get more fulfilling partnerships for both parties. Equally, partnerships that begin with a non-financial contribution are more likely to succeed because they begin by focussing on solving problems, which is what they should be about.

If you have any comments or suggested comments for future blogs, we’d love to hear from you below.

This piece is brought to you by a guest writer – Katherine Woods. Katherine is the Partnership Development Lead at Action for Children and is currently setting up the charity’s first standalone New Business Team. Here’s what she had to say about the non-financial value your partners can bring:

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5
min read
Highlights from Anchors Aweigh: launch event

On the 1st of July, we were delighted to be joined by 80 professionals from across the charity and business sectors for the launch of our new research – Anchors Away: breaking free of the barriers to ambitious charity-company partnerships. We heard from four incredible speakers and had some great comments in the Zoom chat, and we’re proud to share some of the highlights.

Barriers from the company side:

Jenni Berkley, Communications and CSR Manager of Belfast Harbour, started the event by talking about the barriers to ambition she’s experienced in the corporate secotr

“The problem is short-termism. Many people want to see something good happen in their timeframe or tenure. Something good even if it’s not the right thing.”

“I must get around 20 letters a week from charities I’ve never spoken to or maybe even heard of asking for money. It’s incredibly frustrating – they may get £100 if they’re incredibly lucky, but there needs to be an understanding of how our partnerships operate.”

“Charity-company partnerships are like finding your life partner… right down to wondering if you like the same films. You need to be compatible with each other from the superficial details all the way through to sharing the same ethos. It’s up to the charity to demonstrate that.”

Barriers from the charity side:

Then Ghalib Ullah, Head of Commercial Partnerships, spoke about the barriers he’s encountered and overcome through his career.

“The biggest barrier is structural. Our budget works on a yearly basis, so we are pulled back to achieving short term income, rather than achieving our more ambitious goals. We need to work as a whole organisation to overcome this.”

“Another barrier is organisational buy-in. We went through a process of identifying who internally was key to our success as a team. We understand that we’re pitching internally as much as we are externally.”

“Corporate partnerships is still in its infancy. How to achieve strategic partnerships is not as well understood as how to secure major grant funding. It is essential we invest in training as a team and as individuals.”

Background to the research:

We then moved to discussing how the research came about, before discussing some of the key recommendations.

“We defined ambition as the desire to create the most social value possible, then looked at what held people back from pursuing ambitious partnerships in favour of things like Charity of the Year or sponsorship models instead.” – Ian McQuillin, Rogare

One of the main things we found was the collaboration continuum, which we have adapted from Austin and Seitinedi. You can see the model that explains levels of ambitions below:

“Charity-company partnerships can make great changes in the world, so it’s a missed opportunity to be anything short of as ambitious as possible.” – Jonathan Andrews, Remarkable Partnerships

The importance of seeking value beyond money:

“The fundraisers label can hold us back. We need to be corporate value raisers, not corporate fundraisers.” – Jonathan Andrews, Remarkable Partnerships

“There are so many different ways partnerships deliver value – which are easy to overlook if money is the only or main measure of success.” – Crispin Manners, Onva Consulting

“I would recommend starting to report on added value, where it exists, as well as income. Don’t wait to be asked to report on it, just send out the results and examples you have as part of your normal reporting so that it starts to become embedded and better understood.” – Sophie Powell-White, Great Ormond Street Hospital

The importance of having a partnership north star:

“It is important that your projects excite not only your corporate team but your partners – they need to visualise the potential impact they could have on the world.” – Ghalib Ullah, Parkinson’s UK

“All the team have in their heads. That when we go into a conversation with a company what we are looking for is that ambition at the top of our partnership model. Which is an ambition that only us and that company can achieve… If you’ve got that ambition then all the levers for change will naturally fall out of it because it is so strategic to both sides…. In three years’ time what would the Sun newspaper headline say [the partnership] has achieved?” – charity interviewee in the research.

To get your copy of the full report, download it here

On the 1st of July, we were delighted to be joined by 80 professionals from across the charity and business sectors for the launch of our new research – Anchors Away: breaking free of the barriers to ambitious charity-company partnerships. We heard from four incredible speakers and had some great comments in the Zoom chat, and we’re proud to share some of the highlights.

Stay Informed. Stay Remarkable.