| Intro: The 10x Fundraising Shift
Nonprofits often equate growth with doing more. More campaigns, more messages, more urgency. Yet lasting growth rarely comes from addition. More often, it stems from a lack of focus. Inspired by 10x Is Easier Than 2x by Dan Sullivan and Benjamin Hardy, this two-part series explores how nonprofits can elevate their impact through clarity, intention, and trust. Part I, “Do Less, Better,” examines how focusing on simplicity can refine your brand and fortify your fundraising foundation. Together, they redefine how growth occurs through meaning, alignment, and a belief in what’s possible. |
Fundraising often feels like a race to do more: more appeals, more campaigns, more outreach. Yet doubling effort rarely doubles results.
In 10x Is Easier Than 2x, Dan Sullivan and Benjamin Hardy describe a different kind of growth. They argue that lasting progress comes from focusing on fewer things with greater excellence and intention. When applied to branding and fundraising, this mindset shifts the goal from raising money to raising meaning. The result is a deeper connection between your cause and the people who believe in it.
What Got You Here Won’t Get You There
Many organizations try to grow by increasing activity. The instinct makes sense, but it eventually reaches a limit. Volume alone can’t sustain momentum. Real growth requires a different mindset, one that values clarity over busyness.
This is the essence of 10x thinking: simplifying, refining, and concentrating effort where it has the greatest impact.
From Quantity to Quality
“Quality over quantity” is easy to say and hard to practice. A 2x mindset asks, How can we do more? A 10x mindset asks, What truly matters, and how can we make it exceptional?
In fundraising, this might mean running fewer initiatives but giving each one greater craft and focus. Storytelling becomes sharper. Visuals carry more weight. Every touchpoint feels considered rather than routine.
The outcome is stronger engagement and deeper trust.
| 2x Approach | 10x Approach | |
| Goal Setting | Add more donors and dollars | Multiply impact through focus |
| Strategy | Add more tactics | Strengthen what works |
| Storytelling | Emphasize urgency | Emphasize purpose |
| Donor Experience | Short-term interaction | Long-term participation |
| Motivation | Driven by fear of loss | Guided by shared belief |
| Measurement | Count activity | Measure alignment and progress |
| Brand Role | Marketing tool | Movement catalyst |
From Need to Want
Sullivan and Hardy draw a clear distinction between operating from need and operating from want. When an organization communicates from a position of need, it reacts to pressure and scarcity. When it communicates from want, it moves with intention and clarity.
Messages rooted in need sound like survival: We need your help. We need to raise $100,000. We need to continue our programs. Messages rooted in want sound like possibility: We want to expand what’s possible for our community. We want to protect what’s sacred. We want to build what’s next.
This shift changes how donors perceive your mission. It moves energy from obligation to invitation.
Abundance Thinking
Scarcity-focused appeals can produce short bursts of giving, but they can be a disservice. Over time, they teach audiences to see your organization as always in crisis.
Abundance shifts that story. It acknowledges need while emphasizing momentum and hope. For example, This is our moment carries a very different tone than We’re running out of time.
The Giving USA 2025 report from The Giving Institute found that charitable giving in the United States reached $592.5 billion in 2024, a 6.3 percent increase over the previous year. Even amid economic uncertainty, people continue to give when they believe their contributions lead to meaningful progress.
Generosity grows where optimism lives.
Freedom To, Not Freedom From
Most fundraising teams crave fewer deadlines and fewer emergencies. Sullivan reframes freedom as a goal to strive for: the freedom to think clearly, plan effectively, and create with purpose.
He outlines three kinds of days that support this rhythm:
- Free Days for rest and renewal.
- Focus Days for creative, high-value work.
- Buffer Days for preparation and follow-up.
This structure protects energy and makes space for original thinking. Fundraising teams that embrace it work with steadiness rather than strain.
Do Less, Better
Fundraising grows stronger through simplicity. When the story is clear and the purpose steady, every action carries more meaning. When teams move in alignment, the work gains weight and focus.
Remove the excess, and what remains has power. That is where doing less, better begins.
Once an organization learns to focus its energy, the next step is sustaining that clarity in how it builds relationships.












