From Treading Water to Building a Legacy:

The Infrastructure That Funds Black Church Community Programs for the Next 20 Years

Your congregation is generous. Your programs are impactful. But every year the funding stays roughly the same, while the need around you keeps growing. This webinar is about what changes when you stop running campaigns and start running a system.

Picture of Paul Hosch

Paul Hosch

Founder & CEO of Nonprofit Fundraising Management (NFM), 30-Year Fundraising Expert, Over $50M Raised

Details

Most Black church and nonprofit leaders running active community programs are leaving $200,000 to $500,000 in accessible funding uncaptured every year. Not because the money is not there. Because the infrastructure to reach it consistently has never been built.

This is not a webinar about running better campaigns. It is a conversation about what a permanently funded community program operation actually looks like — the system behind it, why it works when everything else has not, and what it has produced for a real organization that was doing everything right and still could not break through the ceiling.

This was built specifically for Black church and nonprofit leaders who are actively running community programs and whose funding has not kept up with the size of their vision.

What You'll Learn

Wednesday, June 3 · 12 PM – 1 PM EST

Reserve My Spot — It's Free

Online · Limited Spots

Why This Cannot Wait

The funding landscape is shifting right now. Here is what that means for your organization.

The Trump administration has proposed and in many cases executed cuts to the programs directly funding Black church community work.

Community Development Block Grants — cuts in motion Title XX Social Services Block Grants — funding reduced AmeriCorps — programs eliminated HUD Community Development Programs — restructured and reduced DEI Executive Orders — federal grant recipients directed to eliminate DEI programming as a condition of continued funding Philanthropic pullback — major foundations and corporate giving programs reducing racial equity-focused funding in response to political pressure

The organizations weathering this moment built diversified development infrastructure before it arrived. The ones that did not are scrambling.

This is not a political statement. It is our reality.

Every month without a diversified development infrastructure is a month of increased vulnerability. The organizations that move in the next 90 days will be in a fundamentally different position by this time next year. The ones that wait will still be running the same campaigns into a funding environment that is becoming less forgiving every month.

Real Results from Our Partners

How Churches Like Yours Are Getting Funded

NFM provided strategic guidance to ITC’s administration and governing board to support this pivotal shift in the 60-year old strategic direction. At the height of the pandemic NFM helped ITC begin to course correct on inherited challenges and build institutional capacity for significant fundraising

The Interdenominational Theological Center (ITC) Matthew W

NFM assisted us in a space that churches often misuse—statistics. NFM showed us that measuring was a tool of evaluation for growth, not to be punitive. We looked at people, money, gifts, timing and more. All these were measures used now to see where we came up short in order to build up

The Emory Fellowship Joe D

NFM introduced us to an innovative funding model that’s set to revolutionize our financial sustainability and future growth."

Michael B. Strengthening the Black Church for the 21st Century

Thanks to NFM, I’ve become a more effective fundraiser, significantly enhancing our ability to expand programs on a global scale."

Romal T. TMS Global

Learning from NFM, amid a pandemic, congregational fundraising increased three consecutive years!"

Vance R. Central United Methodist Church
paul-addressing
Founder & CEO of nonprofit fundraising management (NFM)

Paul Hosch

Almost 30 years ago, I started helping churches raise money—not just for buildings, but for the work that really matters: feeding families, supporting youth, creating jobs, showing up for the community.

Most churches were stuck in the same cycle: pass the plate, pray it’s enough, repeat. I knew there was a better way. So I built one.

Since then, I’ve helped churches raise over $50 million, create repeatable donor pipelines, and fully fund the programs they were called to lead. Now I teach that exact method to leaders like you.