By Hope Katz Gibbs
Editor & Publisher
Be Inkandescent Magazine
“I’m an idealist,” admits Wendy Smith, author of Give a Little: How Your Small Donations Can Transform Our World, whose goal is to change the way Americans think about charitable giving.
Her 345-page book, published last year by Hyperion, cuts through the hyperbolic language found in fundraising letters and focuses on the facts that will empower readers to make good philanthropic decisions.
“It’s not the size of the contribution that matters,” explains Smith, who for more than two decades has worked in the nonprofit world. “What matters are the outcomes your giving produces.”
Smith says her goal is to become your “personal giving advisor.”
“When wealthy folks want to make sustainable charitable donations, they often turn to professional donor advisers who help them define their philanthropic interests and the causes or organizations that match those interests,” she realizes. “But every donor deserves access to information that maximizes the meaning and effectiveness or his or her donations. That is where this book and I come in.”

Understanding how and why we give
Smith divides her book into six parts. In part one, “How and why we give,” she begins by discussing the difference between “Doers and Donors.”
“The vast majority of us will not quit our jobs, leave our careers, and risk all of our large or small fortunes to make a difference,” she explains. “It’s not that we’re not caring. Far from it! We would love to help make the world a better place. It’s simply that we aren’t all called to incubate and grow a new enterprise. But we can partner with those who do by contributing to their efforts financially.”
The four big secrets about giving
In chapter two of the book, Smith quotes Aristotle, who said: “To give away money is an easy matter and in any man’s power. But to decide to whom to give it, and how large, and when, and for what purpose and how, is neither in every man’s power nor an easy matter.”
Here’s what she wants you to know:
How to make a difference: hunger, health, and education
After making effective arguments for giving in these first two sections, Smith spends the remainder of the book helping readers understand the needs that small and large charities around the world are working to meet.
She outlines dozens of organizations helping to end hunger, improve health care, and educate the masses. Some include the Mobile C.A.R.E. Foundation, which provides free and comprehensive asthma care to children and their families in Chicago’s under-served communities, and World Bicycle Relief, which provided transportation needed to reconnect communication and commerce after the tsunami hit Sri Lanka in 2004.
Giving, lending, and clicking for good
In the final section, part six, Smith offers a handful of solutions to consider — including Chapter 14, which provides “16 more ways to make waves.”
Here, she lists more than a dozen organization that are making a difference, including The Hunger Project, Partners in Health,, and First Book.
Perhaps most importantly, in the appendix she provides an outline of a useful resource: A Charity Navigator’s Approach to Evaluating Nonprofit Financial Health.
Wendy Smith: On why she gives
My book explains how giving changes donors in positive ways just as it can change the world. Giving changed me when I was just 7 years old.
In honor of making my First Communion, my parents began sponsoring a little girl who lived in Cambodia. We put a picture of her on an end table in our family room. I looked at that picture so many times and so closely that I can still see it perfectly in my mind. She was my age, in 1st grade, wearing a white blouse that was part of her school uniform.
I noticed that the collar of her blouse was frayed and just a little bit dirty or stained, but it looked perfectly starched, as though great care had gone into making that blouse as presentable as possible. She had a beautiful unsmiling face with dark eyes and black hair cut in a traditional bob. I tried to imagine what her life was like. My family moved from Ohio to Michigan when I was in 5th grade, and I don’t remember her picture being on an end table in that house. I don’t remember her being part of our lives after that move.
What I’ve learned since is that the Khmer Rouge had taken siege of Cambodia and aid organizations were forced to leave. World Vision, which had a child sponsorship program in Cambodia at that time, was forced out in 1975.
I wonder now what happened to that little girl. Had she become a refugee as so many Cambodians did? My brother is married to a Cambodian woman whose family fled the Khmer Rouge on foot to a refugee camp in Thailand, but not before her father was killed and her uncle died of starvation, and not before she spent time in a child labor camp where she was separated from her family, worked in fields from dawn to dusk, and participated in “re-education” — a common practice of the Khmer Rouge, which believed that the notion of “family” was contrary to the good of the state.
Was this the fate of the little girl in the picture? Or, had my family’s sponsorship somehow helped spare her? My parents sent me a powerful message when I was 7: We are fortunate. Others are much less fortunate. We can help make their lives better, so we should do what we can. That message and the little girl in that picture have influenced my entire life.
Learn more here: www.givealittlenow.com.
Celebrate National Philanthropy Day: November 15, 2010
The purpose of this day is to recognize the great contributions of philanthropy — and those people active in the philanthropic community — to the enrichment of the world.
Sponsored by the Association of Fundraising Professionals, it provides an opportunity to reflect on the meaning of giving and all that it has made possible. First held in 1986, NPD celebrates the endless daily contributions individuals and organizations across the world make to countless causes and missions. Last year, more than 100 AFP chapters held NPD events and activities across North America.
Learn more here: www.afpnet.org.
Click here to return to the main Network Directory, or click here to go to the Host Directory.