Burnout Is a Fundraising Risk
Can a capital campaign succeed if an organization is already exhausted?
n this episode of OFS Insights, Mickey Desai is joined by Dave Paule and Ailena Parramore of Our Fundraising Search to discuss a critical but often overlooked fundraising risk: burnout.
While nonprofits routinely evaluate donor readiness, financial capacity, and campaign goals, they frequently fail to assess whether their leadership, staff, board, and systems have the capacity to sustain a multi-year fundraising effort.
The conversation examines how “hero culture” and over-functioning leaders can mask deeper organizational weaknesses, why burnout is a strategic fundraising risk rather than a personal failing, and how capital campaigns often expose existing capacity issues rather than create them. The team also discusses the critical role of feasibility studies, campaign planning, and organizational assessments in preventing burnout and building stronger, more sustainable nonprofits.
Among the things we discuss:
- Why burnout is an organizational issue, not just a personal one
- How over-functioning can look like leadership but actually mask capacity problems
- The warning signs that an organization is not ready for a capital campaign
- Why feasibility studies should assess organizational capacity, not just fundraising potential
- How a well-run campaign can strengthen donor relationships, board engagement, and overall organizational health
Key takeaway:
A successful capital campaign is not powered by heroic effort alone. It depends on a healthy organization with the systems, leadership, and capacity to sustain the work over time.
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