About the University |
Western Washington University, with over 15,000 students in seven colleges and the graduate school, is nationally recognized for its educational programs, students and faculty. The campus is located in Bellingham, Washington, a coastal community of 90,000 overlooking Bellingham Bay, the San Juan Islands and the North Cascades Mountain range. The city lies 90 miles north of Seattle and 60 miles south of Vancouver, British Columbia. Western has additional sites in Anacortes, Bremerton, Everett, Port Angeles, and Poulsbo. Western is recognized nationally for its successes, such as being named one of the top public master's-granting institutions in the Pacific Northwest for 25 years in a row by U.S. News & World Report.
Western Washington University is committed to achieving excellence through advancing inclusive success, increasing our Washington impact, and focusing on transformational education grounded in the liberal arts and sciences and based on innovative scholarship, research, and creative activity. Western's greatest strength is the outstanding students, faculty, staff, and alumni/ae who make up its community. Western supports an inclusive governance structure for all and provides a learning and working environment in which everyone can thrive. In pursuit of this excellence, individual employees are expected to establish and maintain productive and effective inclusive working relationships amongst diverse populations including staff, faculty, administration, student, and external constituents. Further, individual employees are expected to have the ability to operationalize sustainability concepts (economic, societal, environmental) into all aspects of performing their job duties.
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About the Department |
The University Advancement Department supports Western's mission, which states that together with our students, staff, and faculty, we are committed to making a positive impact in the state and the world with a shared focus on academic excellence and inclusive achievement. We encourage applications from women, people of color, people with disabilities, veterans, and other candidates from underrepresented backgrounds and with diverse experiences interested in this opportunity.
The mission of University Advancement is to build relationships through meaningful engagements that foster pride, encourage advocacy, and promote private support for Western Washington University. |
About the Position |
Serving as a lead development officer, this position is charged with creating and implementing a comprehensive development program to engage and solicit alumni, parents, friends, community members, business, and civic leaders to achieve the fundraising goals for Western. The Director of Development is personally responsible for soliciting and closing major gifts of $25,000 or more.
This is a full-time position reporting to the Senior Director of Development, Major Gifts, in University Advancement. Annual success metrics are determined from both the activities associated with fundraising and the actual donation results. The Director of Development is responsible for the discovery, cultivation, solicitation, and stewardship of Western donors. In this ever-changing profession, multiple channels are utilized to connect with and cultivate donors, including face-to-face, phone and video, with a key success metric focused on substantial contacts. This position requires travel in and out of state with a heavy focus on the Puget Sound area.
Serving as a lead development officer, this position is charged with creating and implementing a comprehensive development program to engage and solicit alumni, parents, friends, community members, business, and civic leaders to achieve the fundraising goals for Western. The Director of Development is personally responsible for soliciting and closing major gifts of $25,000 or more.
This is a full-time position reporting to the Senior Director of Development, Major Gifts, in University Advancement. Annual success metrics are determined from both the activities associated with fundraising and the actual donation results. The Director of Development is responsible for the discovery, cultivation, solicitation, and stewardship of Western donors. In this ever-changing profession, multiple channels are utilized to connect with and cultivate donors, including face-to-face, phone and video, with a key success metric focused on substantial contacts. This position requires travel in and out of state with a heavy focus on the Puget Sound area.
Position Duties and Responsibilities
70% Fundraising
- Focus on strategically identifying, engaging, qualifying, cultivating prospects and then soliciting major gifts of $25,000 or more.
- Travel regionally and nationally to connect personally with constituents.
- Complete 70-125 substantial contacts and 18-24 major gift solicitations per year.
- Prepare written proposals, background reports, and other development materials for use during donor cultivation, solicitation, and stewardship activities.
- One Team, Our Team. Work collaboratively with members of the Annual Giving, Corporations and Foundation Relations, Donor Relations, Alumni Engagement, Communications, and Special Events teams in order to further the fundraising goals for the University.
- Design and implement a comprehensive development plan to increase philanthropic support for funding priorities established by the University and Academic Partners.
- Develop effective fundraising strategies in coordination and collaboration with the Senior Director of Development and members of the University Advancement team.
- Follow up with donors and prospects in a timely manner.
- Cultivate relationships with diverse communities and individuals that have not otherwise been approached.
- Steward donors by consistently and thoughtfully reporting on impact in creative and meaningful ways.
20% Prospect Management
- In collaboration with the Director of Prospect Research, build, develop, and manage a portfolio of 100-150 major and principal gift prospects.
- Execute timely contact reports. Consistently record and track all activity using the University’s prospect management and tracking system. Prioritize reporting activities and recording asks in the database.
- Follow up with donors and prospects in a timely manner.
10% Leadership, Philanthropic Strategy, and Planning
- Collaborate with staff who provide support to college and department development efforts.
- Collaborate with other unit-based gift officers, the Corporate Relations and Foundations team and Director of Planned Giving to enrich the fundraising team, build cross-unit partnerships, and bring in multi-disciplinary gifts.
- Take time to continue to learn the fundraising profession, benchmark, and make professional connections.
- Utilize current engagement opportunities presented by the Alumni Engagement team, and in collaboration, create new engagement opportunities for constituents.
- Participate in and collaborate with the Alumni Association, Foundation, and unit -based Advancement Boards.
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