Fundraising as an Expression of Leadership and Mission

Many nonprofit leaders assume fundraising is primarily the responsibility of the development team. But in organizations with strong fundraising programs, the reality looks very different.

The most successful fundraising organizations have executive directors who understand that fundraising is ultimately a leadership function.

Development teams build systems and support donor relationships, but the executive director shapes the vision, culture, and trust that make philanthropy possible. In other words, fundraising strength is rarely a development issue, it’s a leadership issue.

At Contour Strategies, we often say that fundraising follows vision. And that vision begins with the executive director.

Fundraising Begins with Vision

Before donors invest in an organization, they invest in its direction. A compelling vision provides clarity about why the work matters and where the organization is headed.

The executive director is responsible for articulating that vision and ensuring it is shared across the organization. This means developing a clear strategic direction and aligning both the board and staff around a shared understanding of the organization’s future.

When an organization has a clear and compelling vision, fundraising becomes a natural extension of the mission. Donors are not simply responding to a need, they are joining a vision for impact.

Creating a Climate Where Donors Want to Give

Beyond vision, executive directors shape the overall fundraising climate of the organization.

Donors are drawn to organizations where leadership demonstrates trust, authenticity, and accountability. The executive director sets the tone for this culture.

This begins with modeling authentic relationships with donors. Rather than viewing fundraising as transactional, strong leaders treat donors as partners in the mission and key stakeholders in the organization’s work.

Creating a healthy fundraising climate means:

  • Inviting donors into ownership of the mission

  • Communicating meaningful results and impact

  • Maintaining strong accountability for outcomes

  • Challenging donors to participate in the organization’s journey through authentic relationship building 

When donors feel connected to the mission and confident in the leadership, generosity grows naturally.

In many ways, the executive director’s greatest fundraising responsibility is building what we often call a culture of philanthropy: an environment where everyone in the organization understands that fundraising advances the mission.

The Executive Director’s Direct Role in Major Gifts

While culture and vision are essential, the executive director also plays a direct and practical role in fundraising.

As a general guideline, executive directors should expect to spend approximately 30% of their time focused on major gift fundraising.

Major donors want access to the leader who has the greatest influence on the organization’s future. When donors consider making a significant investment, they want the opportunity to ask questions, hear directly from leadership, and understand how their gift will help move the mission forward.

Because of this, the executive director must be willing to sit across the table from donors and invite them to partner in the work.

There is no substitute for this role. Organizations that build strong major gift programs consistently have executive directors who embrace this responsibility.

Carrying a Portfolio of Key Donors

Executive directors should also carry a portfolio of important donor relationships.

While development staff may help manage systems, track engagement, and coordinate communication, the executive director should remain the primary relationship builder for the organization’s most significant supporters.

This portfolio often includes:

  • Long-term major donors

  • Prospective transformational investors

  • Community leaders and influencers

In many cases, the executive director is uniquely positioned to deepen these relationships because they can connect the donor directly to the organization’s vision and impact.

Building a Culture, Not a Silo

Finally, executive directors must ensure that fundraising does not become siloed within the development department.

Fundraising is most effective when it becomes part of the organization’s broader culture. Staff, board members, and volunteers all play a role in sharing the mission and engaging supporters.

The executive director’s leadership helps create this shared responsibility by encouraging board engagement, celebrating philanthropy across the organization, and reinforcing that fundraising advances the mission.

When this culture is in place, fundraising shifts from being a task assigned to a department to a collective effort to expand the organization’s impact.

Leadership That Inspires Generosity

Strong fundraising programs are not built simply through better strategies or more sophisticated campaigns. They are built through leadership. When executive directors cast a clear vision, cultivate a culture of philanthropy, and personally engage donors, they create the conditions where generosity naturally grows. In the healthiest organizations, fundraising is not confined to a department—it becomes an expression of leadership and mission. And that work begins with the executive director.


Lou Bruggman

Lou brings fifteen years of nonprofit experience to the Contour Strategies team and has developed a robust depository of fundraising tools based on direct nonprofit fundraising experience and consulting with non-profit organizations serving various geographies and missions, providing each with customized coaching in capital campaigns, annual fund, major gifts, mass strategy, foundations, corporate partnerships, and planned giving.

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