| Wall Street exports
the art of giving
The American Ireland Fund is changing the way
the wealthy
choose to donate their fortunes, says David Wighton of the
Financial Times.
Some
of Wall Street’s top executives will meet tomorrow
night
in New York’s Waldorf Astoria to discuss matters of mutual interest.
Philip Purcell, chairman and chief executive of Morgan Stanley, will be there,
as will
Bob McCann, vice-chairman
of Merrill Lynch’s wealth
management business, and
Christopher “Kip” Condron, head of Axa Financial, the US arm of
the French insurer. But they will not be
debating the future of the New York
Stock
Exchange or the management turmoil at Morgan Stanley.
They and other senior
executives will be dis cussing homelessness in Gal way, integrated schooling
in Belfast and cultural develop ment in Tipperary. The occasion is the annual
New York Dinner Gala of The Ireland Funds, a philanthropic organisation that
has raised more than $100m from wealthy Americans to support
social, educational and
cultural projects in Ireland.
Formed in 1976 by Sir
Anthony O’Reilly, an Irish businessman, and Dan Rooney, owner of the
Pittsburg Steelers football team, the Fund has been so successful that other
countries
are seeking to emulate it. A group of Scottish business men and politicians
is trying to set up a body, modelled on the Ireland Funds, to tap the generosity
of Americans with Scottish ancestry.
Yet, while the mood of the dinner will
be
celebratory, the Fund has real challenges. In particular, it faces the
task of persuading Americans to send money to a country
with a booming economy
where huge private wealth has been generated over the past few years.
So its new
strategy
includes taking a lead in the broader efforts to export the American
model of philanthropy to Europe and Asia.
The importance
of philanthropy is one
of the
striking features of business life in the US. It is almost expected for
wealthy business people
to devote large amounts of
time and money to good
causes. “For me, it is a very
important part of who I am,” says Mr McCann. It is not just, or
even mainly, altruism that leads some people to get involved. Mr McCann
signed
up for the
Fund because Mr Condron, who was an important
client, asked him to do so. “I did it for the most commercial
- and most New York -
of all reasons. Then the
oddest thing happened. I
started to care.” It was odd because, although Irish by descent,
Mr McCann did not feel
Irish. “When I was growing
up, we never talked about
being Irish - never.”
One of the most generous supporters of the
Fund is not Irish at all. Lew Glucksman, a Hungarian Jew who became
co-chief executive
of Lehman Brothers, fell in love with Ireland through its literature.
He founded, with his wife, an Irish studies cen tre at New York University.
Loretta Brennan
Glucksman , who has been chairman of the American Fund for almost
15 years,
says: “ People can love Ireland
without being Irish.” The Fund got off to a slow start. Like
many Irish charities, the Fund had to work hard to reassure donors
that the
money would
not find its way into the hands of paramilitaries.
Mrs Glucksman says
that thanks to the
efforts of the team in Ireland “ we can prove we have never
supported anything but peace, culture, charity
and education”. The annual dinners in cities around the US,
which are the core of the Fundraising effort, soon became important
fixtures
on the
social calendar. “Our dinner is the most important night of
the year in Boston, regardless of your ethnic
heritage,” says Mr Condron. “ If you want to see anyone
who is anyone in Boston,
you go to The Ireland Funds
event.” Although the Irish Americans have been successful,
Mr Condron says that the real leaders in philanthropy are Jewish
Americans
- not least
because giving has such an
important place in Jewish
culture. “Its not indigenous
among the Irish Americans
to be philanthropic,” he
explains. “It’s a learned
behaviour.” He recalls watching his mother put a $5 bill in
the church collection basket with one hand while carefully picking
out
four ones with
the other. When it comes to learning the behaviour, the social side
is undeniably important and the Fund shamelessly exploits the
celebrity of its supporters.
Mr McCann, who is a fervent Pittsburg Steelers fan, recalls
being
persuaded, rather against his will, to become chairman
of the New York dinner com mittee
by Mr Rooney, the
team’s owner. “Little boys
from Pittsburg don’t say no to Dan Rooney when he asks you
a favour. It would have
been easier to say no to the
Pope.” In terms of new recruits, the strategy is to get people
to come to the party and then convert them to the mission. According
to Mrs Glucksman,
the Fund’s best sales tool is to get people to see projects
it supports on
the ground in Ireland. “If we can show them what has been
done with the money,
they sign up.”
In the past few years, the Fund has tended
to focus more on getting supporters involved in individual pro
jects
rather than
asking them
to give generically to Ireland. Mrs Glucksman says that this
has helped main tain the flow of Funds in spite of the
recent economic
success
of Ireland.
Increasing affluence does
not eliminate need, says Mr
Condron. “I can go 40 blocks
from here and find incredi
ble poverty,” he says, speak ing in his mid-town Manhat
tan office. The same is true in Ireland, where there is an increasing
gulf between
the poor
and the new rich, and growing social problems such as the sharp
rise in the suicide
rate among young men.
But Mr McCann admits that the new affluence
of Ireland is a “significant challenge” for the
Funds. He is also concerned about the business model of the
Funds,
which spends what it raises
every year. “Any business that has you starting at zero
each year is a tough
business.” He argues that the Funds need to establish
an
endow ment that will provide some financial permanence,
particularly when
the time
comes to
hand over the running
of the Funds to a new
generation.
The Fund’s response is, among other things, to export
its model of philan thropy back to Ireland. According to Kingsley
Aik ins,
chief executive
of The
American Ireland Fund: “There are now 500 people in
Ireland with a net worth of
more than S100m ($128m at time of press)
and a lot of them are saying
they don’t want to leave it
all to their children.“
We believe that Ireland can
be a world class philanthropy centre. The ingredients are
there,
the
resources
are there.
We just need
to apply the American
process.” If Ireland, for so long a recipient of charity,
were to become a donor nation, it could be seen as the ultimate
achievement
for The Ireland
Funds. And certainly the cause for another celebration.
HOW TO COAX OUT THE CHEQUE BOOKS
Find the right cause “There is a mystique about Ireland,
a pride about Ireland. People who are successful in America
want to make a difference in Ireland,” says Kip Condron,
head of Axa Financial.
Keep it focused. Donors are increasingly
giving to issues not organisations. Get them out to meet
the people on the ground and let them identify with a particular
project Engage and involve donors “ Strangers don’t give,” says Kingsley Aikins,
chief executive of The American Ireland Fund. “ You
can’t milk a cow by sending it a letter”
Don’t
forget the fun. People come for the party and
the opportunity to network. Once they have their glasses
full, you can convert
them to the mission.“ The social side is so important,” says
Loretta Brennan Glucksman. “ People like to have
fun and want to meet other interesting people that want
to have
fun.”
Be professional. Doing
good is good for business. “The events we’ve
done have become events that important people want to be
at,” says Mr Condron.
© David Wighton, Financial Times, May 4, 2005. www.ft.com |