Over the past several years, advancement teams have worked harder than ever—under more pressure, with fewer resources, and less recognition. And more recently, amid unprecedented federal research funding freezes and institutional belt-tightening… yet they continue to build the belonging, trust, and investment that keep our institutions alive. In this moment, they not only carry the load, but are uniquely positioned to steward the value of higher education on their own campuses and champion its public good beyond.
This message — this mantra, this set of affirmations — is for them, and for all of us who believe advancement isn’t transactional, but transformational.
No. 1: Advancement is more than fundraising; it activates belief.
- We don’t just tell the story. We shape how people feel about it.
- We don’t just secure gifts. We create the conditions that move people to act.
- We don’t just support a campaign. We give it life.
People may question higher education’s value, but they still believe in someone. Often, that someone is us—those who show up, build bridges, and remind others what our institutions stand for, especially when those values are under threat. When research dollars stall or disappear, the mission doesn’t pause… students, labs, and community partnerships still require continuity and care.
No. 2: In a time of mistrust and misinformation, advancement professionals hold one of the most critical roles in higher education:
- We build trust through relationships.
- We invite people into belonging.
- We turn purpose into progress.
Advancement belongs at strategy tables—plural. Not only the president’s cabinet, and not only for fundraising, but also the rooms where alumni programming is planned with schools and colleges, where brand and reputation are stewarded with Central MarCom, and where ad-hoc committees convene around institutional priorities. We are not an island. We partner to create opportunities that inspire action and reinforce the mission. In moments of financial shock, we help administrators, deans, and research leaders plan scenarios, establish relief funds, and mobilize advocates to keep essential work moving.
No. 3: Great advancement teams think beyond silos.
We don’t just amplify initiatives; we architect them—ensuring communications, engagement, and fundraising align from the start:
- Linking storytelling to strategy.
- Connecting donor insight and passion to institutional priorities.
- Leading with empathy, urgency, and imagination.
We must shape not just stories but systems: retire vanity projects, reinvent programs to best serve the mission, share insights across teams, and help senior leaders and gift officers turn data into dialogue.
This work isn’t easy, but it’s needed—and it’s never mattered more.
We are the memory-keepers.
We are the bridge-builders.
We are the trust-carriers.
We are the strategic accelerators.
We are advancement.
If you work in advancement, I hope you see yourself in this. What you do—building belonging, trust, and transformation—is more vital than ever.
Make it matter.


