We’re All Development Officers Now!

We’re All Development Officers Now!

 A post by James V. Toscano

A much emailed and referenced article from McKinsey Quarterly by Tom French, Laura LaBerge and Paul McGill, “We’re all marketers now,” stresses the need for commitment from everyone in an organization to fully engage customers.

The authors advocate a total organizational approach to marketing. Quoting the article: “…customers no longer separate marketing from the product—it is the product…In the era of engagement, marketing is the company.”

What about Nonprofits?

Do these seemingly all-encompassing concepts apply to development, broadly defined, in nonprofit organizations? I think they do in at least one aspect. We need everyone in a nonprofit organization to fully and positively engage constituents. It is no longer the responsibility of one department.

Development is, in fact, the attempt by an organization to engage and build constituency in all of its activities, often culminating in value exchanges that may entail services, products, experiences and…donations.

Such donations involve constituent values and priorities rewarded and enhanced through sharing of resources with the nonprofit. Engagement, reinforcement and successful impact lead to continuing support

We also know that anyone in the organization can turn off a constituent by rudeness, inattention and a whole array of real and imagined offenses. This is the first reason to instill in all the necessity for positive engagement in our product—often us!

Marketing and communication, audience development and ticket sales, membership and fund development, volunteer and board recruitment, training, engagement and empowerment of staff to focus on internal and external constituencies are all elements.  All are linked together to form the organization; all are focused on the achievement of mission. 

A Singular Focus

Certainly there are numerous other duties, services, responsibilities and products that comprise the central function of an organization. Given current conditions,they all must come together in the all-embracing concept of development of the nonprofit, if there is to be significant survival.

The ultimate test of a nonprofit’s constituency is its willingness to voluntarily support the organization in good times and bad.

The more positive engagement, the more organizational development, with  the resulting impact leading to better and more successful achievement of mission.

In this case, then, we all need to be development people. We all need to fully engage constituency in our mission, in our “product,” in our organization. Without that engagement, we will not maximize our potential, and we may, in fact, diminish our ability to sustain ourselves.

From Board to newly hired, constituency-centeredness, constituency development and engagement, are now the necessary requirements of all.

We are all development officers!

Copyright 2012 The Good Counsel, division of Toscano Advisors, LLC. May be duplicated with citation.



  1. Agree wholeheartedly.

  2. A key role for nonprofit development officers is to help community members and potential donors understand the important services their organization provides and the value they bring to the community. So absolutely yes – everyone in a nonprofit must be a development officer.

  3. Adam Real-Banas Says: March 19, 2012 at 3:57 pm

    I agree as well. Karl Speak’s article, “Becoming Marketing-Driven” argues that “marketing is everybody’s job”. Relationship building is a part of every staff members daily roles, and should be intentional.

  4. […] March 5 blog headline reads, “We’re all development officers now!”  As one who has worked in and with hundreds of nonprofits organizations over the past […]

  5. […] in-depth training, and, overall, a consensus that development is everyone’s job (See my previous article).    […]

  6. […] 1.  Ensure the head of development is a full and equal member of the executive team, acknowledged and respected by colleagues as the substantive expert in the nonprofit’s development efforts, for which everyone in the organization is responsible. Development is not a silo; it is part and parcel of everything a nonprofit does. (See We’re All Development Officers Now!) […]

  7. […] 3.  Creation of a culture of philanthropy, which includes a deep understanding of the nonprofit’s mission. Responsibility for development must permeate the entire board, staff and volunteers. Careful training, with built-in rewards, gradually builds this internal culture to the point that affects external constituency as well. (See We Are All Development Officers.) […]

  8. […] my posting, We’re All Development Officers Now  I attempt to convince the reader that everyone associated with a nonprofit needs to make a […]

Leave a Reply to Creating a Culture of Philanthropy | Toscano AdvisorsToscano Advisors Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *