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by simonk 3213 days ago
The Charity Water is just a marketing gimmick the money they get from "private donors" would of just gone to the cause then. There are real fees from the credit card company to absorb and it seems like they are doing a lot of work in looking into what charities to work with and making sure its not a scam.
1 comments

It's not really a gimmick.

They actually do make sure all those donations that people give to different fundraisers go directly to the things they donated to.

They do specific fundraisers to handle admin/office costs, but those aren't conflated with the actual donations they solicit on a per-project basis.

The point is that they actually raise 105% of the funds rather than just 95% of them. I don't think that qualifies as a "gimmick."

But what does that achieve overall? They still have to raise the extra "admin" funds from donors just the same.

Same net donation is made to the charity and same net fees are paid.

The only difference is that they can make the donors for individual charity projects feel like more of their money is going to the cause.

So it's a marketing gimmick.

Maybe. Maybe not.

Admin costs + charity projects are actually separate bank accounts. You can see their financials on their site[1], but part of their angle is that you can actually see where the money is going. It's not just ethereal, it's where their money is actually going.

Half of what this post is about is The Red Cross not being trust-worthy because of their lack of transparency in where funds go + are allocated to projects.

It might be marketing - just as knowing your funds are secure in a bank - or your overall brand reputation is marketing - but it's not a gimmick.

[1]https://www.charitywater.org/about/financials.php

They raise 100% of what they raise. And 5% of what they raise goes to fees. Just like every other charity.

The people who are paying 5% of their fundraising are still just donating the Charity Water.

But it's clear communication. People are missing that.

Small donors like to see their money go directly to projects + don't understand overall operating costs (on the whole).

Larger donors tend to see the overall operation and can fund that directly.

Most of the problems people have with the Red Cross are that 100% of the money doesn't go directly to the fund they donated to (which is fixed in this model).

This creates more goodwill and more trust, which brings in more donations. Net win for the charity. I don't see why more don't do this...

But that model still can't be entirely correct. If you raise enough at your high-rollers gala to cover the 3% costs of processing $100,000 in credit card payments, and you receive $150,000 in payments, you're going to need to spend an additional $1500 to cover that. There's no way around it. And you can't say "well, these donations were covered, but these other ones weren't." How do you select which ones are covered? It's all fungible, and it's all going in the same pot.

It's simply more honest to say that everybody is donating into the pot, and that there's overhead on everyone's payments. (And almost all overhead costs, even "fixed" costs, tend to rise with the amount donated.) That's the truth of it, and trust should be earned by telling the truth. Donors should by now understand that.

As for Red Cross's problems, it's much more to do with the fact that they constantly bungle their mission, clashing directly with local aid workers and not getting aid to the people in need. The fact that 26% goes to marketing, much higher than most other charities, is just the icing on the cake (and can't just be solved by shoving piles of money in different pots and claiming that the high-rollers pay for the marketing).

For charity water's accounts - they specifically take all public donations in one account + all admin costs in another.

https://www.charitywater.org/content/site/assets/files/2091/...

But it's still just creative accounting. If your administrative costs are $1M and your program costs are $9M, you could either

1. Ask Joe BigBucks to donate $1M, put that in one account, and ask the public to donate $9M and put it in another, and tell the public "all your funds are going to projects," or

2. Ask Joe BigBucks to donate $1M, put that in your account, ask the public to donate $9M and put it in the same account, and take $1M out of the account for administration and $9M for projects. Now you tell everyone that 10% of their donations go to administration.

The only difference is what you tell people. You still wine-and-dine your high rollers to get them to donate $1M. You're still doing the exact same amount of fund raising. Your still spending the money on the exact same things.

I don't care that they're "audited separately" -- your administrative and program spending would also get audited if they were in one pot, like every other charity.

It's just creative accounting to make donors feel better. The "private donors" (aren't we all?) realize this, so they're happy to label their donations "administrative" to continue this charade. They get that $1M in that pot means $1M more to spend on programs, otherwise they wouldn't fund it.

You mean 105.3% right?