Great Fundraising Organizations, by Alan Clayton. Book cover.

Obituary: Tony Elischer

Howard Lake | 14 January 2016 | News

Tony Elischer, fundraising thinker, practitioner and adviser, has died following a battle with cancer. 
His death on 12 January was announced today via THINK Consulting Solutions, the agency he founded in 2001. The Institute of Fundraising, of which he was a Fellow, paid tribute to him not just for what he had achieved for charities in the UK and around the world but for his contribution to the development of the fundraising profession.
 
Tony Elischer - fundraising is about dialogue, not monologue.
 
Peter Lewis, CEO of the Institute said:

“It is hard to imagine the fundraising world without Tony. His enormous warmth and personality filled any room; his endless passion to make the world a better placed flowed into those around him; and he never ceased wanting to innovate and do things better.”

He described him as:

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“A friend to many of us, a true friend to the Institute over many many years, and one of the leaders of the fundraising sector around the world”.

He added:

“It is very difficult to put into words how much he will be missed both here and abroad”.

Richard Taylor, Chair of the Institute, and Director of Marketing and Fundraising at Macmillan Cancer Support said:

“Tony was a true pioneer of fundraising as we know it today. In his early career as a practitioner he paved the way for the future success of the charities he worked for, including what is now Cancer Research UK. He was a truly inspiring fundraising Director. His extraordinary personality enabled him to inspire fundraisers young and old throughout his career. As a personal friend I will miss him enormously but it’s his impact across the entire sector where he was so admired and loved that he will be so missed.”

 
Tony Elischer at Ireland Fundraising Conference 2011   
 
Elischer worked for Help the Aged (now Age UK) and the Imperial Cancer Research Fund (now Cancer Research UK). He developed a particular interest in the near future of fundraising – what technology, research or business practice could help transform fundraising further?

Supporter and defender of fundraising

Elischer was an active supporter of the fundraising profession and its professional membership body in the UK, the Institute of Fundraising – or the Institute of Charity Fundraising Managers as it was originally named. He was recognised for his service by being elected a Fellow of the Institute. Peter Lewis paid tribute to this support, saying:

“He never ceased to be a true friend to the Institute of Fundraising… over the whole of its history, whether fronting inspiring plenary sessions at Convention, supporting young and up-and-coming fundraisers; or simply acting as a wise counsel and mentor to many that met him, with his unique style of encouragement and enthusiasm.”

He worked with charities in many countries, and was a popular speaker at fundraising conferences around the world, from the International Fundraising Congress in Holland to the AFP Conferences in the USA and Canada.    
 
The IFC painting at Noordwijkerhout
Elischer is included among fundraising pioneers on this mural marking the achievements of the Resource Alliance.  
 
He channelled some of his agency’s income to help develop the fundraising profession. He established the THINK Foundation to support the understanding and development of fundraising skills in the not for profit sector around the world.

Elischer in action

Here is Tony delivering the plenary at the 2013 National Fundraising Convention in London.
 
[youtube height=”450″ width=”800″]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NR-Ngjmzjd4[/youtube]
 
 
 

Tributes to  Tony Elischer

The warmth and respect felt towards Elischer is demonstrated by comments, tweets and blog posts from fundraisers around the world.
The Resource Alliance devoted the front page of their website to him:
 

Resource Alliance front page featuring Tony Elischer, 14 January 2016

The Resource Alliance pays tribute to Tony Elischer


 


 


 


 


 
https://twitter.com/Gav_McLellan/status/687684737419337730
 
https://twitter.com/mbtmbtmbt/status/687640384290177024
 


 
https://twitter.com/AstaritaMark/status/687664552440393728
 


 


 


 
https://twitter.com/tanialittle/status/687778891734228993
 


 


 


 
https://twitter.com/RoxyMartinique/status/687623205549391872
 


 


 


 


 


 
https://twitter.com/MarkFlannCEO/status/687655887381643268
 


 


 


 


 
https://twitter.com/DavidHLove/status/687652573365547008
 
 

 

Tremendously saddened to hear of the loss of sector giant + guru Tony Elischer. Your huge brain, insights + humour + kindness will be missed #RIP Sending condolences to his family and the THINK team.
Posted by Tania Little on Thursday, 14 January 2016

 

 

In a week when we’ve lost Bowie, and on the day we lost Rickman, this is a relatively small event, but for me and my…
Posted by Gerry Beldon on Thursday, 14 January 2016

 
A month or so before his death, the quirky @TheNiceBot tweeted appropriately:


 

He was forever curious, constantly striving for the best for the fundraising profession and the sector as whole and very, very genuinely cared for the people who worked in our great profession. For all his well deserved “international guru” status it was often Tony that helped make sure some poor lost soul who had several more than one too many at event like the IFC got taken care of”.
Daryl Upsall

 

Tony was an amazing fundraiser, dedicated and inspirational.  We grew up together in this profession and worked together from the start of our careers – he at Help the Aged and me at The Spastics Society.  This is such a loss and a struggle to accept”.
Bill Bruty

 

“In my books Tony was the number one fundraiser in this world. I had the pleasure working with Tony to bring fundraising knowledge to thousands of fundraisers at Resource Alliance events in Africa, Asia, Latin America and Europe. Tony did so brilliantly in his own inimitable and enthusiastic style.  Harold Sumption taught us that “fundraising is a warmhearted affair”. Tony brought that message to life and pushed us to reinvent fundraising. All of us fundraisers in this world of ours owe Tony a great dept of thanks”.
Per Stenbeck

 

“It must have been around 25 years ago that Tony and I sat in a room together and wrote the first ever CFR course for the then ICFM. Realising how much of his input still stands as best practice in the 2016 programme was rather fitting – his legacy will live through so much of our day to day fundraising in not just the years ahead but decades”.
Valerie Morton

 

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