College Fundraising at a Crossroads
        
        
        
			- By Brian C. Mitchell
 - 01/25/16
 
		
        The results of a recent report on the fundraising achievements of the top 10 public  and private colleges and universities in America are sobering and instructive.
The top recipients of private donations are all major research universities with  clear global brands, comprehensive university-sized scale and well-established  giving networks. Harvard University topped this group with more than $1 billion,  to lead the pack. The report notes that giving to private colleges has grown by  more than 70 percent since 1990, rising to about $12 billion annually in 2014  dollars.
On the public side, the results are similar. The largest recipients, led by The  University of Texas, were typically great public land-grant universities  outside the Boston-to-Washington corridor, where many of the most distinguished  private universities are located. Giving to public colleges and universities  has more than doubled since 1990, rising to a level approaching that for the  private universities.
On the surface, these conclusions are expected. Together, these 20 private and  public colleges and universities are among the largest higher education  institutions in America. It seems to suggest that a university can win a  fictitious national fundraising award by some combination of scale, identity  and strategy. But it is a very small club, with an admission standard that  self-selects and predicts the outcome.
The Value of  Philanthropy
We can debate the value of philanthropy, the reasons behind large donations, the  tax implications and the presumed bloat in the administration of large  university fundraising machines. Setting aside the stereotypes, there are  legitimate cases to be made on all counts. It is beneficial to America,  however, to have universities operate as major economic and social engines  fueled in part by private philanthropy. It is certainly an offset to much  greater reliance on government funding, broadens a case for access and choice,  funds important research critical to America’s well being and global policy  concerns, and increases these universities’ economic and social impact at  almost every level.
It’s  not a perfect world. While the motivation may be questionable with some  donations, the results outweigh these concerns.
But, the larger problem is already embedded in these results. The fact is that  beyond this group of elite fundraising machines most American colleges and  universities cannot raise enough money at a fast enough pace to even run in  place. The elite fundraising group may be as high as 50 colleges and universities,  but the use of fundraising to account for key college-wide strategies on an  annual basis among the rest is limited at best.
The Continuous  Campaign
Most  colleges and universities are in a continuous campaign mode. Further, most run  comprehensive campaigns that include subsets of fundraising incorporating as  examples their annual funds, parents’ funds and athletic fundraising. These  annual mini-campaigns help offset college expenses and disguise new  initiatives, alleviating pressure on operating and capital budgets. Yet they  often fail to provide the continuing support to maintain the new facility or  pay the full cost of the tenure line or new administrative position.  Fundraising can jump-start momentum but it often fails to provide a level of sustainability  to keep the momentum going.
For  most colleges, fundraising is not a solution or a way to meet key strategic  goals. This can only come from planning and a redesign of how a college  operates, where it locates and grows its sources of revenue, and how its  strategy intersects with the complex relationship among people, programs and  facilities. Colleges can fundraise for the sake of fundraising, under pressure  from potential donors with pet projects who promise future gifts, or because  poorly defined strategic plans, antiquated campus master plans and ineffective  leadership can impact a college’s direction.
A Look at the  Purpose of Fundraising
Let’s  presume that the “big 20” public and private university fundraisers can take  care of themselves. And let’s assume that philanthropy directed to them does  more good than harm. Is it time for the rest of the American higher education  sector to examine the purpose of their fundraising and do a cost/benefit  analysis on the return on investment? 
The  options are narrowing. There is vocal consumer price sensitivity to a $65,000  tuition sticker price, despite the offset of financial and merit aid that most  families do not fully comprehend. The U.S. Department of Education and many  state governments are explicitly linking college cost to post-graduation career  employment. And colleges and universities have grown into a larger footprint  than they can support and maintain.
The  solution for most will not be larger capital campaigns to plug holes in the  dike as the water seeps through.
Instead,  America’s colleges and universities must move quickly to re-define how they  intend to stay in the business of education, support a robust and  “best-in-class” faculty, and create a seamless education pathway for students. 
Colleges  and universities must ask how they can best support what they do. What are the  college program, real estate and infrastructure assets that connect faculty and  students? How can they protect the history, integrity and quality of an  institution? If the footprint is too large, what are the core academic assets  that must be protected? 
Time is running out. The worst  alternative is to allow erosion in academic quality, a weakened faculty, a  collapsing physical plant and an American public that finds cheaper alternatives  and no longer cares.
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            
        
        
                
                    About the Author
                    
                
                    
                    Brian C. Mitchell formerly served as president of Bucknell University and Washington & Jefferson College. He currently serves as the president of Brian Mitchell Associates and a director of the Edvance Foundation.