Fundraising overview
The Fundraising tab is home to all of your campaigns, funds, appeals, events, gifts (including in kind, soft credits, matching, in memory, and in honor of), pledges, installments, and goals (scheduled, pending, and declined asks).

Wow, that’s a lot of stuff! Before we get too deep into the details, let’s review those terms and what they mean within LGL.
Fundraising terminology
- Campaign: A campaign is typically the broadest category that can be assigned to a gift, serving as an umbrella or container for the purposes of tracking progress and reporting. Campaigns come in all shapes and sizes, but in our examples we have two general purpose campaigns (Operations and Endowment) and one capital campaign (Big Capital Campaign). In LGL, you can optionally have funds, appeals, and events that are directly connected to a specific campaign. Doing this can help to ensure that you have good categorization of gifts, because the gift entry form will restrict assignment based on the selected campaign.
- Fund: Funds provide you with a mechanism for describing how a specific donation should be used at your organization. In our examples, we have an Unrestricted Annual Fund (no campaign association), two funds that are tied to the Operations campaign, one for the Endowment campaign, and one Restricted fund for the Big Capital Campaign.
- Appeal: Appeals define a specific fundraising initiative (like a mailing). The most common use of an appeal is for an annual appeal of some kind or other, and in our examples we have two instances of the annual appeal, each of which is open (can be associated with any campaign or fund), and one that is directly connected to the Big Capital Campaign. In LGL, you can easily create the list of constituents you want to reach, generate segmented mailings or lists, and track how they respond.
- Event: Events can be fundraising dinners or any other gathering through which you hope to raise money. Events can also be tied to a specific campaign, if applicable. As with appeals, LGL allows you to easily create the list of constituents you want to invite, and to track their responses, including who RSVP’s and actually attends.
- Gift: Gifts are monetary donations (cash,
check, credit card, stock, etc.). Gifts can have several different
kinds of related gifts assigned to them, all of which are a kind of
soft credit, which is to say that they contribute to the
constituents’ giving history, but are easily kept out of your
standard gift reporting. Each gift can be assigned to one
Campaign,Fund, Appeal, and Event.
- Soft credit: A straight soft credit is useful for ensuring that every constituent responsible for a particular gift gets the proper attribution. For example, if a family foundation gives $10,000, it is common practice to attribute a soft credit to each constituent who is directly connected to that gift (in this case, the family members).
- Matching: Matching gifts typically stem from
corporate donations on behalf of their employees who have also
given, but they may also originate from a kind of matching promise
made by a major donor, like in cases where a person offers to match
every gift over $100 dollars given during a certain time
period.
In honor/memory of: It is also common for gifts to be made in honor or in memory of someone else. In these cases, a related gift In Honor of or In Memory of a related constituent can be added. - In kind: In kind donations can be used to track donations of goods and services that may or may not have monetary value.; for example, a constituent who donates 10 hours of consulting time that might be valued at $1,000 (assuming a normal consulting rate of $100 per hour) or who donates items for an auction or for some other purpose.
- Pledge: A pledge to contribute a certain
amount of money over time, or on a specific date. While adding or
editing a pledge, you can create installments for the pledge
payment schedule according to different schedules (one time,
weekly, monthly, quarterly, and yearly).
- Installment: An installment is a record that helps you keeps tabs on the money you can count on receiving from a particular pledge. For example, if someone pledges to donate $100 per month in 2010, you can create a $1,200 pledge with 12 $100 installments, scheduled monthly throughout the year (January 15, February 15, and so on). Installments do not automatically close but can be set to received, at which point they become gifts.
- Goals: Goals are useful for planning and tracking major gift requests (asks) and grant proposals. You can set a goal with a target ask amount and an expected amount.