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From the issue dated April 28, 2005
Fund Raisers' Pay Hits New High, Compensation Survey FindsBy Debra E. Blum
The median salary of U.S. fund raisers jumped last year by more than 15 percent, to $72,050, or about $10,000 more than in 2003, according to a new survey by the
The top 25 percent of the survey respondents earned more than $98,360, while the bottom quartile earned $55,375 or less. The fund-raising association, in Alexandria, Va., surveyed its members in the United States and Canada about the compensation and benefits they receive, and based its findings on 919 respondents. The figures reported for 2003 were based on responses from about 1,400 association members. Fund raisers in Canada last year took home a median salary -- meaning that half made more and half made less -- of about $48,000 in U.S. dollars, the same as in 2003. Female fund raisers in the United States earned a median salary of $23,000 less per year than their male counterparts. In Canada, the salary gap was much more narrow, with the median salary for men outpacing women's earnings by less than $10,000 per year in U.S. dollars. Sixty-two percent of the association's more than 26,000 members are women, according to the group, as were 68 percent of the respondents to the survey. Sixty percent of the survey respondents were age 45 to 64, also reflecting the larger group's makeup, which is weighted "toward older practitioners," a report on the survey says. Like the association's broader membership, fewer than 10 percent of the respondents were members of a minority group. Among the survey's U.S. highlights:
The Association of Fundraising Professionals' "2005 Compensation and Benefits Study" is available free online in the Member Gateway section of the association's Web site, http://www.afpnet.org. Nonmembers may purchase a copy of the survey report for $65 from the association's professional advancement department. To order, contact Kijuana Wright at profadv@afpnet.org.
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