
Memorial Gift Donor Walls: How to Recognize Gifts Made in Honor or Memory of Someone
A memorial gift donor wall lists gifts made in memory or honor of a specific person — an alumnus, faculty member, coach, or community member — alongside the name of the donor who gave the gift. The standard convention is to display the tribute subject’s name as the primary label (“In Memory of James R. Kowalski ‘72”) with the giving donor’s name on a secondary line, both appearing at the recognition tier that corresponds to the gift amount received.
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How to Recognize Matching Gift Donors on Your Donor Wall (Without Double-Counting)
Every development officer has faced the dilemma: a loyal donor submits a $2,500 gift, and six weeks later her employer’s matching gift program contributes another $2,500. Your total raised is $5,000. But whose name goes on the donor wall — hers, her company’s, or both? And if you list both at the $2,500 level, does the donor feel shortchanged when she personally gave half? If you credit either party at the full $5,000, have you misrepresented one contribution at the expense of the other?
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Memorial Bench Donor Recognition: Ideas Beyond Plaques for Schools and Campuses
A memorial bench with a small dedication plaque is one of the most recognizable gifts a donor can give a school or campus. The form has endured for generations: a durable seat in a courtyard, a small plaque with the honoree’s name, and a quiet invitation for passersby to pause and remember. But what happens when the 25th bench goes in? Or the 50th? Most campuses don’t have unlimited green space, maintenance budgets don’t grow linearly with bronze hardware, and a donor who gave $5,000 deserves recognition that more than a handful of people walking past will ever notice.
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