Fundraising is funny sometimes.
A few years ago, someone asked me if fundraising was basically “just asking rich people for money.” I laughed and said, “If that were true, every nonprofit would be fully funded and every board member would sleep peacefully at night.”
The truth is, fundraising is so much deeper than the ask.
And honestly? Some of the strongest fundraising lessons come from understanding what fundraising is NOT.
5 Things Fundraising Is Not
Fundraising is not begging.
Nonprofits are not asking for pity. We are inviting people into impact. Giving people an opportunity to change lives is not charity in the shallow sense — it is partnership.
Fundraising is not magic.
A gala, grant, or social media post will not fix weak systems. Sustainable fundraising grows from strong foundations: clear mission, financial transparency, community trust, and consistent communication.
Fundraising is not only the Executive Director’s job.
Healthy organizations build a culture of philanthropy. Board members, staff, volunteers, and supporters all help tell the story and build relationships.
Fundraising is not about money first.
It starts with people. Relationships. Listening. Trust. Long before someone gives, they want to know they matter and that the mission is real.
Fundraising is not separate from the mission.
Too many organizations treat fundraising like an uncomfortable side task. But fundraising is ministry. It is advocacy. It is community-building. It allows the mission to breathe and grow.
At the core, nonprofits need the fundamentals in place before chasing dollars: a clear vision, a fundable mission/case statement, measurable impact, strong leadership, healthy governance, and authentic storytelling. Without those basics, fundraising becomes exhausting instead of effective.
The organizations that thrive are usually not the loudest.
They are the clearest.
They know who they are, who they serve, and why their work matters.
And people give to that clarity.
I always remind nonprofit leaders: donors are not investing in perfection. They are investing in purpose, trust, and possibility.
“Fundraising is not about asking people for money. It’s about inviting people to be part of something meaningful.”
Come learn about nonprofits and fundraising at my upcoming classes on May 15 and May 30.
Register at estheramunga.com
“Fundraising is not about asking people for money. It’s about inviting people to be part of something meaningful.”
Anonymous

𝐇𝐢, 𝐈’𝐦 𝐄𝐬𝐭𝐡𝐞𝐫.
𝑰 𝒘𝒐𝒖𝒍𝒅 𝒍𝒐𝒗𝒆 𝒕𝒐 𝒄𝒐𝒏𝒏𝒆𝒄𝒕 𝒘𝒊𝒕𝒉 𝒚𝒐𝒖!
Helping nonprofits turn vision into sustainable impact through clear strategy, powerful storytelling, and intentional visibility—minus the jargon.
Esther Amunga, MNA, ACNP, CNP, GradPR, Nu Lambda Mu
- Conference Moderator & Keynote Speaker.
- Master Trainer.
- Board Member/ Fundraising Advisor (DMYS).
- Nonprofit and Fundraising Consultant/Coach.
- Published Author & PR Professional of the Year Award Winner.
- Nu Lambda Mu – Lifetime Member (The Nonprofit Academic Centers Council established this international honor society to recognize students dedicated to the study of nonprofit management, philanthropy, and social entrepreneurship/enterprise.)
Make your life count for something GREAT!
Upcoming Classes in Spring



Module 4: Introduction to the World of Marketing, Copyrights, and Patents
Module Overview
This module introduces students to the fundamentals of marketing and the legal protections that support personal brands and creative work. Students will learn how to promote themselves or their ideas while protecting their intellectual property.
Learning Objectives
By the end of this module, students will be able to:
- Understand the basics of marketing and personal branding
- Identify key marketing strategies and tools
- Explain the difference between copyrights, trademarks, and patents
- Recognize the importance of protecting intellectual property
- Apply introductory concepts to their own personal brand
Lesson Breakdown
Lesson 1: What is Marketing?
Topics Covered:
- Definition of marketing
- Why marketing matters for personal branding
- The 4 Ps of Marketing (Product, Price, Place, Promotion)
- Examples of marketing in everyday life
Activity:
- Analyze a popular brand or influencer and identify how they market themselves
Lesson 2: Building Your Personal Brand Through Marketing
Exercise in class:
- What is a personal brand? (Recap from previous sessions)
- Share what you identified as your unique strengths, skills, and values
- Target audience: Who are you trying to reach?
- Introduction to social media marketing (more will be covered in Module 5)
Activity:
- Students write and share a short personal brand statement (Who they are + what they offer)
Lesson 3: Introduction to Copyrights
Topics Covered:
- What is copyright?
- What types of work are protected (music, art, writing, videos)
- Ownership and rights of creators
- Examples of copyright in real life (YouTube, music industry)
Activity:
- Identify whether different works are protected by copyright
Lesson 4: Introduction to Patents and Trademarks
Topics Covered:
- What is a patent? (inventions, processes)
- What is a trademark? (logos, names, slogans)
- Differences between copyrights, patents, and trademarks
- Why these protections matter in business and branding
Activity:
- Matching exercise: classify items as copyright, patent, or trademark
Lesson 5: Protecting Your Personal Brand
Topics Covered:
- Why protecting your ideas and brand matters
- Basic steps to protect intellectual property
- Ethical use of other people’s work (plagiarism vs. inspiration)
- Digital safety and branding
Activity:
- Case study: What went wrong? (example of stolen content or brand misuse)
Lesson 6: Wrap-Up Class and Project assigned
Final Project: Students create a simple Personal Brand Starter Kit, including:
- Personal brand statement
- Target audience description
- One marketing idea (social media post, flyer, or slogan)
- Identification of what part of their work could be protected (copyright, trademark, etc.)
Presentation if we have time:
- Students present their branding concept to the class
Required
- Participation in discussions and activities
- Final Personal Brand Starter Kit project
Build a Personal Brand That Speaks for You—Even When You’re Not in the Room
A 7Module Personal Branding Cohort for Women in Leadership
Your personal brand isn’t your logo, website, or Instagram bio. It’s the reputation attached to your name! Whether you’re a corporate leader, entrepreneur, or nonprofit founder, people are already talking about you.
The question is: Are you shaping the story—or leaving it to chance?
This Course Is for You If You:
• Struggle to clearly articulate what you do and why it matters
• Feel invisible, underestimated, or overlooked in leadership spaces
• Know you’re called to more—but your brand doesn’t reflect it yet
• Want to show up with confidence, clarity, and consistency
What You’ll Gain
A clear and authentic leadership brand
A powerful brand message you can confidently communicate
Tools to align your online presence with your impact
Practical frameworks—not theory—to use immediately
Confidence to be visible without shrinking or overexplaining
The Esther’s Personal Branding Cohort
This 7module experience combines strategy, reflection, and realworld application—designed specifically for women leaders.
Course Modules
Module 1: Branding Basics & Your Personal Branding Toolkit
Module 2: Discover Your Leadership Brand Foundation
Module 3: Define Your Brand Message + Maximize AI & Tech Tools
Module 4: Marketing 101, Brand Positioning, Copyright & Patents
Module 5: Align Your Online Presence & Visibility Strategy
Module 6: Confidence, Consistency & Saying No to Imposter Syndrome
Module 7: Bring It All Together – Practical Branding Retreat(**cost of retreat not included in the package)
Investment **SPECIAL INTRO PRICES FOR THIS FIRST COHORT***
• $92 per module (Regular intro price: $180)
• $600 for the full course (Regular intro price: $1,260)
Limited slots for the cohort. Intentional community. Real transformation.
“Your brand is what people say about you when you’re not in the room.” — Jeff Bezos
Ready to own your story and lead with clarity?
Enroll Now! Comment BRAND or DM me for registration details.
About the Master Trainer – Esther
Esther’s work reflects a powerful belief: challenges are not roadblocks—they are opportunities to innovate, grow, and create meaningful change. Known as a warm listener, thoughtful coach, and trusted consultant, she partners with organizations of all sizes to build customized strategies that deliver both immediate results and long‑term sustainability.
An entrepreneur at heart, Esther launched her first business while still in high school and went on to found an events company shortly after graduating from college.
Highly accomplished and deeply committed to excellence, Esther is both an Advanced Certified Nonprofit Professional (ACNP) and a Certified Nonprofit Professional (CNP). She holds a Master’s degree in Nonprofit Administration (Distinction), along with graduate certificates in Nonprofit Management, Board Governance, and Church Administration. Her expertise spans strategic planning, fundraising, grant writing, marketing, board governance, CSR, sustainability, and communications. Esther has a One Year Graduate degree in Public Relations and studied with the Chartered Institute of Marketing (UK)- this is where she discovered her love for branding.
A lifelong learner, Esther is a proud Lilly Scholar, Alford Scholar, and two‑time Blackbaud Scholar. She is currently pursuing her CFRE. She is also a Nu Lambda Mu – Lifetime Member (This international honor society was established by the Nonprofit Academic Centers Council to recognize students dedicated to the study of nonprofit management, philanthropy, and social entrepreneurship/enterprise.)
During her tenure at the Memorial Trust, Esther hosted high‑profile global leaders, including two U.S. presidents, secretaries of state, celebrities, and renowned authors such as Stephen Covey. She has organized high‑caliber corporate and diplomatic events and has been nationally recognized as Public Relations Professional of the Year by PRSK in Kenya.
