Nonprofit Fundraising Registration
Registration 101:
State Charitable Registration
Essentials
Thursday, August 21, 2014
1:00pm Eastern Time;
10:00am Pacific Time
Approximately 50 minutes including Q & A
Every registrant receives FREE access to download
the PowerPoint handout and MP3 recording of the seminar. |
FREE
Recording
Click Here To
Register and Download
|
Only Available Through Affinity Seminars
Led by:
Marc Lee, CFRE, President FundraisingRegistration.com
Thousands and thousands of nonprofits have registered
to solicit funds.
Do registration requirements extend to your organization?
Get FREE information not found in any book or web-site.
This special webinar, "Registration 101", will look
at the essentials of fundraising registration and go beyond
the basics.
We'll answer the question, Should your organization register
nationwide if you have a Donate
button on your website?
Get the crucial details you need to raise funds legally in any
state.
From this webinar you will:
- Know whether you need to get registered and in what states.
- Get key information about possible exemptions.
- Learn how to get started and what it will take.
- Discover where you may be subject to fines and penalties.
- Find out if your Donate button triggers registration requirements.
- Learn how to explain registration requirements to your board.
Who should attend:
COOs, CFOs, Executive Directors, CFOs,
Controllers, Board Members and Development Directors.
Applies to all nonprofit organizations with total annual
revenue of $25,000 or more.
REGISTER
HERE
About Marc Lee:
Marc Lee, a former CFRE, has worked as an independent
fundraising consultant for over 15 years and is the founding President
of FundraisingRegistration.com.
While in staff positions, Marc personally did the leg work for
registering the organization he worked for. He counseled and assisted
his first nonprofit with nationwide registration in 2000. Marc
works daily with nonprofits of all sizes around their state registration
needs. He speaks with state charity officials at least weekly.
More . . .
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