Episode
Crisis, Clarity, and Capital Campaign Leadership: How Smart Donor Engagement Strengthens Decisions
- Published
- Feb 3, 2026
- Duration seconds
- 1317
- Processing state
not_requested
Actions
POST https://stenobird.com/v1/public/podcasts/all-about-capital-campaigns-nonprofits-fundraising-major-gifts-toolkit-2136244/episodes/crisis-clarity-and-capital-campaign-leadership-how-smart-donor-engagement-strengthens-decisions/transcription-requests
Idempotently request low-priority transcript generation for this episode.GET https://stenobird.com/podcast/all-about-capital-campaigns-nonprofits-fundraising-major-gifts-toolkit-2136244/crisis-clarity-and-capital-campaign-leadership-how-smart-donor-engagement-strengthens-decisions.md
Read the agent-friendly Markdown representation of this episode resource.
Summary
A snowstorm shuts down a city, a systems failure brings operations to a halt, or a major campaign gift suddenly falls apart. Moments like these reveal how strong a nonprofit’s donor relationships really are. In this episode of All About Capital Campaigns, host Amy Eisenstein is joined by Capital Campaign Pro co founder Andrea Kihlstedt to explore how nonprofit leaders can engage donors as true partners during moments of uncertainty, urgency, and high stakes decision making. Drawing from real world examples ranging from weather emergencies to immigration enforcement disruptions to internal system failures, Amy and Andrea share practical guidance on how leaders can communicate clearly, think strategically, and strengthen donor trust when circumstances change fast. The conversation begins with external crises that affect entire communities, such as severe weather events or sudden policy actions that disrupt daily life. Amy and Andrea discuss how these moments create natural opportunities to reach out to major donors with care, transparency, and purpose. They explain why timely phone calls often matter more than broad email messages, and how early communication helps donors feel informed, valued, and connected to the organization’s thinking. Listeners will hear how involving donors does not always mean asking for advice. Sometimes it means sharing decisions before they become public. Sometimes it means checking in personally to see how a donor is doing. Other times it means inviting a small group of trusted supporters to help think through options, risks, and tradeoffs. Amy and Andrea emphasize that discernment matters, since every donor plays a different role. The episode then turns to internal crises, including technology failures, data disruptions, leadership challenges…