The Quest for Belonging: How the Most Effective Nonprofit Leaders Understand the Psychology of Giving
By (Author) Jeremy Beer
Post Hill Press
Post Hill Press
18th September 2024
29th August 2024
United States
General
Non Fiction
Charities, voluntary services and philanthropy
Hardback
200
Width 152mm, Height 229mm, Spine 20mm
352g
Discover the deepest reasons people give to nonprofitsand how fundraisers can tap into donors most potent motivations.
In The Quest for Belonging: How the Most Effective Nonprofit Leaders Understand the Psychology of Giving, Jeremy Beer draws from the latest social science to explain the primacy of identitythe need to know and affirm who we areand belongingthe need to belong to something bigger than ourselvesas motivations for giving.
Beer argues that the better a nonprofit organization can speak to donors needs to construct and maintain an identity and to belong to something larger than themselves, the more successful the nonprofit will be in attracting supporters to its mission. He explains how nonprofit executives and fundraisers can effectively engage a donors identity and provide a sense of belonging in three powerful ways: by telling stories, by building genuine relationships, and by giving donors positive experiences with the organization and with one another.
The Quest for Belonging is packed with trenchant, useful, and sometimes surprising observations gleaned from Beers interviews with highly successful fundraisers, scholars, writers, and nonprofit leaders. This book is a trove of practical advice as well as a paradigm-shifting work on the psychology of giving and the art and craft of fundraising.
Jeremy Beer is the cofounder and executive chairman of AmPhil, one of the fastest growing and most respected providers of professional services in the nonprofit sector. His previous books include The Philanthropic Revolution: An Alternative History of American Charity and The Forgotten Foundations of Fundraising: Practical Advice and Contrarian Wisdom for Nonprofit Leaders. He hosts a podcast called Givers, Doers, and Thinkers, and his writing on philanthropy, fundraising, society, and culture has appeared in the Washington Post, First Things, National Review, the Utne Reader, and HistPhil, among other venues. Beer holds a doctorate in psychology from the University of Texas at Austin. He lives in Phoenix, Arizona, with his wife, Kara.