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Summary

Grassroots fundraising is the practice of funding a campaign from many small individual donations rather than a few large ones — the financial backbone of small-dollar, distributed campaigns and a power-building strategy, not just a revenue strategy.

Body

Grassroots fundraising covers acquisition (the first-donation ask), retention (recurring-donor programmes), upgrade (moving donors from small to mid-tier), and stewardship (impact reporting). The Commons Library publishes a fundraising module covering the mechanics — donor pyramids, ask ladders, and the recurring-vs-one-off tradeoff [source: commons-library]. MobLab covers fundraising in the distributed-organising context — peer-to-peer fundraising pages where supporters fundraise on the campaign’s behalf [source: moblab]. Action Network’s tools and blog are US practitioner references for small-donor digital fundraising [source: action-network]. Campact’s model in Germany is the European reference for mass-membership online fundraising — the Fördermitglied (sustaining member) program has built a multi-million-euro base from small monthly donations [source: campact]. The politics of grassroots fundraising: it is not just a revenue strategy — it is a power-building strategy. A campaign funded by 100,000 small donors has a constituency that can be re-mobilised; a campaign funded by 5 foundations has a constituency of 5.

Kim Klein and Ben Roth’s Grassroots Fundraising practitioner materials (free templates + ARR books) provide the most-used working documents for small-budget, individual-donor, social-justice fundraising. The corpus is organised around a fundraising-readiness assessment (a 20-question self-audit), a strategy-choice grid (event vs. major-donor ask vs. small-donor ask vs. house party vs. planned giving), sample ask letters at three donation levels, a donor-acknowledgement protocol, and a board-giving template. Klein’s signature contribution is the discipline of the mid-level ask: the second gift is the gift that determines whether the donor becomes a recurring supporter or a one-time giver, and the second ask must be calibrated to the first response. [source: klein-roth-grassroots-fundraising] The corpus sits alongside the existing Commons Library and MobLab references and gives the practitioner a usable set of templates rather than the strategic framing. Kim Klein’s Fundraising for Social Change is link-only (book is ARR; cross-link only, no source page per T1 partition) and folds into the existing concept bibliography as further reading rather than primary reference.

Use it for

Designing a small-donor programme; setting a fundraising target; structuring a recurring-donor ask.

Worked examples

  • case-studies/campact-model

Examples

None yet.

Open Questions

None yet.

Sources & verification

Verified 2026-07-02 by llm-qc.