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How to Succeed as a New Manager
Article
New managers can excel from day one by taking cues from their bosses and being respectful to their employees, says a leadership expert.
Talking Points: On Unequal Footing
CURRENTS Article
While a degree improves earnings considerably for college graduates, women often do not reap the same financial rewards that men do from their degrees. A 2012 report from the American Association of University Women found that U.S. women working full time one year after college graduation were paid 82 cents for every dollar paid to men in their graduating class. The government, employers, and college women need to take action to bridge this gender gap.
How to Manage a Team of Former Peers
Article
Transitioning from peer to boss needn't be awkward, says a leadership expert.
Be a Creative Problem Solver
Article
Creative people aren’t born; they’re made, says an executive coach.
Speak Up for Your Work
Article
Managers shouldn’t always believe the old adage that good work will speak for itself, says a leadership coach.
Confidence is Key to Career Success
Article
A new study suggests that the biggest predictor of career success is confidence—not talent, hard work or education.
Follow These Essential LinkedIn Etiquette Rules
Article
To avoid LinkedIn faux pas, “tailor your message, customize your posts and nurture relationships with people you know,” says one social media maven.
Boost Your Mental Toughness
Article
An executive coach says that having the right mentalattitude will lead to better leadership decisions.
Face-to-Face Bests Social Networking
Article
A communication expert says that leaders who focus solely on e-networking can hurt their chances to advance their careers and impair their social skills.
Understanding Advancement Leadership: Developing Your Potential as a Chief Advancement Officer
Product
Authors of a book profiling 10 advancement leaders discuss important points and themes that emerged from the interviews and outline practical applications for developing current and future chief advancement officers. This multimedia file is a recording of a webinar originally presented April 25, 2012. The webinar is part 1 of a three-part Advancement Staffing Webinars series.
What Makes Chief Advancement Officers Tick?
Article
Self-awareness is one of 14 competencies that successful chief advancement officers have in common, according to two fundraising experts who will share their research findings in an upcoming CASE Online Speaker Series.
Social Media Faux Pas to Avoid
Article
Making sure you tweet, post or blog appropriate content on social networks takes time and consideration. However, the extra effort is well worth it as the wrong post could get you or your organization in trouble.
Negotiate Your Way to Management Success
Article
Doing a good job and accomplishing goals and objectives aren’t enough, a management expert told attendees at this month’s CASE Summer Institute in Advancement Services. To achieve professional success, she said, managers need to actively participate in “office politics.”
How to Manage Luck
Article
Are great organizations and their leaders just luckier than the rest? A new study finds it’s actually what they do with the luck they get that helps explain their success.
The Leadership Ladder
CURRENTS Article
How will you acquire the skills necessary to be a leader in our profession or a leader on your current team? An alumni relations leader reflects on the experiences that prepared her for leadership.
Research Shows Growing Link between Education, Employment
Article
New analysis by the Brookings Institution shows a growing employment disparity between individuals in the United States with a post-secondary degree and those without one.
At the Fundraising Core: Strategic Public Relations in Fundraising Practice
White Paper
This CASE white paper reports on a study exploring the views of chief fundraising executives about the relationship between public relations and fundraising. The research focused on how chief fundraisers define public relations; how they use public relations tactics and strategies in fundraising; and what they identify as the essential skills, training or academic degrees a fundraiser needs to be successful.
Learning to Love the Politics: How to Develop Institutional Support for Advancement
Product
This book offers practical, seasoned advice on how to incorporate politics as another skill in an advancement professional’s toolkit and how to use political tools to promote advancement on campus.
Destination: Alumni Relations
CURRENTS Article
Historically, within advancement there has been a view that alumni relations is a good starting point—a place to cut your teeth before you move on to the “real” work of development or communications. Of course, that’s not true, either now or in the past. Increasingly today, with the growing and sophisticated skill set alumni professionals need to get the job done, alumni relations has become a destination career rather than a stop along the way.
Considering a Job in Fund Raising?
Jeffrey A. Schoenherr
Article
This article, from the Nov. 20, 2009 Chronicle of Higher Education, discusses the outlook for jobs in educational fundraising and provides tips for those interested in entering the field. CASE shares this article with permission from the author.
Screen Tests
CURRENTS Article
Conferences and colleagues can provide some guidance, but sometimes it’s best to turn to that age-old source of truth and wisdom—television. Alumni professionals might be surprised at the lessons they can learn from reality television and game shows.
Career Path: Acting Your Age
CURRENTS Article
A young fundraiser discusses what life is like as a development professional. Once you know the challenges a young person faces, perhaps you can encourage your own employees.
Directory of Continuing and Graduate Education for Advancement Professionals
This directory is maintained by the CASE InfoCenter to help advancement professionals and those interested in the field locate potential certificate and graduate degree programs. The directory links to more than 430 advanced-study opportunities for advancement professionals in countries around the world, as well as online-only programs.
A Growing Field
CURRENTS Article
As demand increases for experienced advancement professionals, recruiters in the UK have looked to North America to fill the gap. Some have made a successful transition overseas; others have not.
Career Path: Admiring the 'View
CURRENTS Article
Interviewing for a job is an inevitable part of the professional world. However, what happens when the interview doesn't land a job? You may be surprised to find that it can still lead to positive results.
Career Path: Familiar Places
CURRENTS Article
A former alumni association executive director was promoted to the ranks of advancement leadership. While the scope of the current work is broader, the basic job functions are similar to her job in alumni relations.
Work in Progress: Passing Up a Promotion
CURRENTS Article
Turning down an opportunity to move up in the organization doesn't have to end your career. How you say no is crucial. This article has suggestions for making the decision and delivering it to your boss. You can still contribute, still grow.
Career Path: Perception Versus Reality
CURRENTS Article
The author of this column sees a lot of people come to higher education fundraising from other careers. Frequently they initially have mistaken ideas of what the job will be like.
Career Path: Exiting Center Stage
CURRENTS Article
How do you make the transition from volunteer fund raiser and school trustee to director of the new advancement department that supervises the development department you used to support? How do you introduce ways to improve the department? The answer, I have found, is cautiously, delicately, constructively, and, most of all, respectfully.
Career Path: Give Piece a Chance
CURRENTS Article
Regardless of how you came to the advancement profession, career advancement requires identifying the skills you have and looking for opportunities to acquire the skills you need. Whether it's seeking more responsibilities in your current job, getting training, or finding a new position that will offer growth opportunities, piece by piece your career picture will take shape.
Career Path: Open Mouth, Insert Foot
CURRENTS Article
Advancement work is hard enough without having to sidestep the landmines your CEO puts in your path through his or her inappropriate words or actions. As columnist Betty H. Meehan rightly (and wryly) observes, learning how to prevent such situations not only makes advancement professionals more successful, it also keeps them sane. This column suggests strategies for making such success possible.
Career Path: Branded for Life
CURRENTS Article
It's important to pay attention to--and to shape, as best you can--others' perceptions of your reputation, character, and personality in the same way companies manage their products' identities. This column discusses why managing your personal brand is so important and offers tips to advancement officers who want to build their own brands.
Career Path: Assessing the Assessments
CURRENTS Article
Will knowing that you are an ENTP, an Idealist, or a Rock Star really affect your job or career search? Jennifer Rodgers, a certified administrator of the Myers-Briggs Type Indicator, examines the usefulness of personality tests in assessing the match between personality type and advancement position. She argues that the tests' greatest value lies in the awareness they generate--"awareness of what makes you happy and productive … and of when the label fits or is best left behind." Tests examined include the MBTI; the Keirsey Temperament Sorter; Right Job, Wrong Job; the Strong Interest Inventory; and the Ultimate Personality Test.
Career Path: Right Profession, Wrong Discipline?
CURRENTS Article
Advancement professionals who are dissatisfied with their work and considering a different career should give advancement another look, says the author. Davis argues that "chucking" years of practical experience and a Rolodex full of valued contacts can be terrifying--and is not necessarily the right move.
Career Path: Memoirs of a Moonlighter
CURRENTS Article
In spring 2002, Tom Stamp, director of public affairs at Kenyon College, was "itching for a change." The institution had been struggling to fill the vacant director of development position, so Stamp volunteered to step in as acting director for one year. This column documents Stamp’s 18-month experience in the role--the challenges, the successes and failures, and the lessons learned.
Career Path: The Tortoise and the Hare
CURRENTS Article
Every professional will change jobs countless times in his or her career, but making the most of those changes requires careful planning. The author, a career services counselor, suggests that every professional can build a path to career success by developing a strategic plan, setting goals, embracing change, fostering professional connections, diversifying career goals, seeking the advice of trusted colleagues, building transferable skills, leveraging opportunities, and thinking creatively.
Career Path: When the Clock Winds Down
CURRENTS Article
Every professional has a career clock that tells him or her when it is time to move on to the next challenge. It is important to formulate and follow a long-term career plan, refining it where necessary. Understanding career goals and objectives, inventorying skills and experiences, and researching available opportunities are just some of the ways to ensure that your next position is the right one.
Career Path: Making the Switch
CURRENTS Article
Today's advancement professionals should not feel restricted to working in one discipline. Many, in fact, jump from development to alumni relations or communications (or vice versa) with relative ease. The key to success is conducting an honest self-assessment of needs and desires before making the switch.
Career Path: Dreamy or Dreary?
CURRENTS Article
Advancement officers who may want to switch to consulting should first consider a number of factors, including whether they have marketable experience, a strong network, and realistic salary expectations. They also have to take into account the state of the economy and whether they’re temperamentally suited to an entrepreneurial career. This Career Path column is of interest to fund-raising, communications, advancement services, and alumni officers.
Career Path: Counter Measures
CURRENTS Article
More nonprofits are making counteroffers to avoid losing good workers who are considering new jobs. For advancement officers receiving counteroffers, this article includes strategies for weighing the pros and cons, deciding expeditiously, and accepting or declining counteroffers diplomatically. This Career Path column is of interest to advancement managers and job hunters.
Advancing as an Advancement Officer
CURRENTS Article
Nearly 100 U.S. colleges and universities offer graduate programs with a concentration in nonprofit management. Other advancement-oriented programs stem from higher education administration, public administration, or business administration fields. This article includes a list of graduate and certificate programs to help you take the next step along your career path.
Jack of All Trades
CURRENTS Article
The success of your transition will rest on your ability to educate yourself and others about what marketing is and how it can work with public relations to benefit your institution. With education and persistence, people from traditional PR backgrounds can be well-positioned to lead the marketing discussion.
A Surprisingly Good Fit
CURRENTS Article
Changes in the characteristics of corporate leadership, as well as in management styles in higher education, have wrought a different path to higher education leadership than formerly. Search committees now look for many of the skills a chief advancement officer possesses; seeking the campus presidency may now be a logical next step in a CAO’s career. But beware of the cultural obstacles that can lie in wait.
It's a Matter of Trust
CURRENTS Article
The working relationship between the president and the chief advancement officer is one of the closest on campus. A CEO and CAO must develop together a shared, behind-the-scenes perspective to enjoy each other's company and the tasks they undertake together. The keys to a successful working relationship are respect, trust, and a common understanding.
Workshop: New Kid On the Block?
CURRENTS Article
The author offers valuable tips for first-time development officers. Visiting recent donors, reviewing your institution’s files on major gift donors, and making the easy ask first are just a few of the pointers offered.
In Advance: Is Your Job on the Line?
CURRENTS Article
Seven signs for CDOs that it's time for a change.
In Advance: Hail to the Chief
CURRENTS Article
The book, "The Advancement President and the Academy" by Mary Kay Murphy is reviewed.
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