Help! How would you enter these gifts?

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I've been trying to find an example of this but having trouble.


John Smith works for Pfizer and wants to contribute to my organization. He gives them a CC # to make a donation to us, He also signs up for a Matching Gift from Pfizer for his donation.


Pfizer uses YourCause to send the money. We get one check from YourCause for John Smith's donation to us (through the CC to Pfizer). We get another check from YourCause for the Matching Gift from Pfizer.


We enter gifts based on who the check comes from. So we;re entering the gifts as coming from Yourcause. My brain hurts trying to figure out who to soft credit, how to set up MG, how to show these gifts come through Pfizer.....


Thanks in advance for any ideas.

 

Comments

  • Elaine Tucker
    Elaine Tucker Community All-Star
    Ancient Membership 500 Likes 100 Comments Photogenic
    We like Karen Hartt‍ think of Yourcause as the conduit from the donor - we hard credit the donor and soft credit Yourcause (we have one for each company)  that way it's easy for us to see what came in via your cause.  When the company matches the your cause gift we enter the match on the donors gift and then apply the payment from the company to that matching gift pledge.
  • We would treat them as Karen Hartt suggested.  YourCause is the vehicle for how we get the gift.  The gift didn't actually come from them even though the check did.  Also, we don't get checks from YourCause any longer, they are direct debit into our bank account.  Much quicker to receive funds.
  • We give the hard credit to the actual donor (smith) and do not connect YourCause to the gift at all.  When the mg comes in, we hard credit that to Pfizer. 
  • We have received gifts through YourCause as well, and here is what their website says about tax receipts:

    "Does YourCause provide a tax receipt to the donor on our nonprofit's behalf?


    Yes, YourCause provides tax receipts through our CSRconnect platform. All donors can locate an official tax receipt by logging in to their employee accounts and accessing their 'My Giving' section."


    What I have been doing is receipting the gifts to the original donors and printing a receipt for our records, but I don't send the receipt to the donor since they have already been receipted. This way our donor's record is credited (we don't include soft credits in some of our reporting). I put a note in the record that the check came through YourCause. The only thing I would send to the original donor would be an acknowledgement letter to thank them for the gift. 
  • Dariel Dixon 2
    Dariel Dixon 2 Community All-Star
    1,500 Likes Seventh Anniversary 1000 Comments Photogenic
    This basically comes down to who you think the legal donor is.  Different organizations use YourCause in different ways.  It's important to note that in this situation, both the initial gift and the match came via YourCause.  This is not an example where Pfizer is just using YourCause for the matching portion.  Since both gifts came through this method, I believe that the legal donor is YourCause, even though John Smith is the catalyst, similar to how DAFs are handled.  If we received a gift from John Smith himself, and then a match from Pfizer via YourCause, then I would think that John was the legal donor, and issue a tax letter accordingly.  Either way, consistency is the key.


    I think organizations need to come up with a plan for how they steward those gifts however.  Recognition/soft credits are important here, but the tax portion is handled YourCause.
  • I do not use the soft credit feature in Raiser's Edge for these gifts or any gifts. Our organization credits the donor for the donation, John Smith, and then uses the name on check description to credit Your Cause. 
  • We book YourCause donations exactly like this. 

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