Jim Collins didn’t write Good to Great for fundraisers. But he might as well have. While studying how companies move from average to remarkable — often quietly and against the odds — the principles he uncovered hold real value for those leading fundraising campaigns that aim to inspire, unify, and endure.
Strip away the corporate language, and you’ll find something deeply human: clarity, humility, discipline, and the courage to commit to what matters most. These aren’t just business values but the backbone of great campaign brands.
Here are three ideas from Good to Great that can reshape how we approach branding in fundraising.
1. The Hedgehog Concept: Find and stick to your core
Collins shares a simple parable: the fox knows many things, but the hedgehog knows one big thing. Great organizations succeed by identifying the intersection of three truths:
- What they’re deeply passionate about
- What can they be best in the world at
- What drives their economic engine
In campaign branding, this becomes your rallying point. Your campaign doesn’t need to say everything. It needs to say the right thing. The message becomes scattered when you try to include every program, audience, and need. People don’t know what to do with it. But people respond when you build a campaign around a core idea that lives at the center of your passion, strengths, and fundraising engine.
Think about campaigns that don’t just inform but invite. The ones that clarify why this moment matters, why your organization is uniquely positioned to lead, and why the donor has a role to play. That’s the Hedgehog Concept in action.
2. Level 5 Leadership: Let vision speak louder than ego
Collins defines Level 5 Leaders as those who blend deep personal humility with intense professional will. They care less about being the face of change and more about making lasting change happen.
In campaign branding, this kind of leadership shows up when the vision leads, not the individual. Great campaigns don’t revolve around a charismatic figurehead or a legacy narrative. They revolve around a clear, bold, and shared picture of the future. What are we building? Why now? What does success look like for the people and communities we serve?
When the campaign is fueled by vision rather than personality, it becomes bigger than any person or department. It invites donors, staff, and partners to see themselves in the future being shaped and to step into roles that matter.
This approach also builds trust. Donors don’t just want to hear what you’ve done. They want to know where you’re going. They want to see a thoughtful plan, anchored in reality and driven by ambition. A vision-forward campaign doesn’t just describe the work ahead. It frames it as a collective endeavor where everyone has a part to play.
Ego-centered campaigns fade. Vision-centered campaigns endure.
3. First who, then what: Build your brand from the inside out
One of Collins’ most important insights is this: great organizations don’t start with strategy. They start with people. First, they get the right people on the bus. Then they figure out where to drive it.
In fundraising campaigns, this means alignment starts internally. Your people must be on board before you finalize the case, design the logo, or launch the website. Your staff, board, volunteers, and most trusted partners are not just stakeholders. They’re your storytellers. If they don’t understand or believe in the campaign, they can’t champion it.
The strongest campaigns aren’t imposed. They’re co-created. When people inside your organization help shape the message, they feel a sense of ownership when they see their fingerprints on it. They spread the word. They reinforce the brand in every conversation, event, and email.
If the people closest to the work believe in the campaign, it has power. If they don’t, even the best tagline won’t matter.
The leap from good to great is a choice
Fundraising campaigns are full of pressure: tight timelines, big targets, high expectations. It’s easy to rush. To fall back on what worked last time. To move fast and adjust later. But the leap to greatness doesn’t happen by accident. It takes clarity, discipline, and a willingness to lead with focus instead of flash.
Let Good to Great remind us that greatness isn’t about being louder. It’s about being clearer, more consistent, and more honest.
The best campaigns don’t just raise money. They raise belief in the mission, each other, and what’s possible when we act together.
Featured image by Adobe Firefly + Tom Osborne