The Blackbaud Institute Releases The State of the Social Sector: Navigating in a Time of Uncertainty

The Blackbaud Institute, a research division of Blackbaud, the world’s leading cloud software company powering social good, releases The State of the Social Sector: Navigating in a Time of Uncertainty, a series of reports which seeks to help social good organizations interpret the rapidly changing landscape of 2020 and plan for a resilient future by applying lessons learned from past giving data and trends.

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“From recessions to significant natural disasters to political campaigns and social upheavals, looking back allows us to understand how philanthropy follows and often aligns with major events,” said Managing Director of the Blackbaud Institute Ashley Thompson. “In examining these trends, we can identify the core practices that have enabled organizations to weather past challenges and allow social good organizations to forge a path forward in the ever-changing 2020. While much remains uncertain, we can expect the events of 2020 to shake up charitable behavior across the sector.”

The Blackbaud Institute’s The State of the Social Sector report coincides with the release of its quarterly charitable giving index, The Blackbaud Institute Index, and provides additional context into the potential long-term impacts of 2020 and how organizations can use these insights to plan and adapt for the future. In addition to this report, the Blackbaud Institute is also launching a sector-specific series to help organizations across the social good space make informed, data-driven decisions about how to navigate these times of uncertainty.

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Key insights from the report include:

  • Though 2020 will be marked as a time of widespread change, the overarching trends in philanthropy are positive: individuals, companies and groups continue to invest in the causes they care about. Giving by individuals remains the largest contributor to overall giving year over year. And, overall giving in June increased by 1.2% for the last 12-months compared to the same months ending in June 2019.
  • Major events and social movements have the power to temporarily attract attention toward specific causes. In 2017, for example, a multitude of circumstances motivated Americans to engage socially and politically1. In the immediate aftermath, organizations saw significant rises in households making new gifts. While organizations did not retain all those new donors, the spotlights shone on their causes provided a renewed interest in giving.
  • History—specifically the 1970s and 80s—demonstrates that while social and political movements do not directly benefit all charitable subsectors, expanding the population of donors inevitably benefits all types of organizations. So far, 2020 has felt an unforeseeable convergence of similar influences, which will likely impact 2020’s climate of giving.

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