If a street fundraiser is a ‘chugger’, what do you call other types of fundraisers?

Submitted by ianmacquillin on 19 March, 2008 - 16:41.

I was in the PFRA’s offices a couple of weeks ago catching up with Mick Aldridge (as I still get excited about F2F fundraising). We were discussing the term ‘chugger’ and Mick asked me if I knew the term for a door-to-door fundraiser.

“Yes,” I proudly – and rather knowingly – replied, “it’s churglar – charity burglar.”

Mick then said that PRFA committee member Nick Henry had coined the term.

“No he bloody didn’t,” I shot back indignantly. “I did. We did a whole Raizer piece in Professional Fundraising on ‘ch…’ names for different types of fundraisers and ‘churglar’ was one of those.”

So I went home to find the list of alternative fundraising appellations and guess what: ‘churglar’ isn’t among them. So fair dos to Nick.

However, dating from May 2004, I hereby claim retrospective intellectual property rights to the following terms, none of which, alas, is as good as ‘churglar’.

Direct markerters – chunkers (charity junk mail)
Consultants and agencies – charasites (charity parasites)
Legacy fundraisers – chultures (charity vultures)
Major donor fundraisers – chuckers (charity sucker-uppers)
Event fundraisers – chappers (charity kidnappers)
Merchandsing/trading – charitalists (charity capitalists)
Charity shops – chawkers (charity hawkers)
Corporate fundraisers – chats (charity fat cats)
Celebrity fundraisers – chatarazzi (charity paparazzi)
Street collectors – cheggars (charity beggars) or chattlers (charity tin rattlers)

Didn’t do one for email/digital/new media/online fundraising at time, while telephone fundraisers are still short of a name too (the name I came up with was a bit poor and not worth repeating). And we just could not think of anything to call trust fundraisers as it’s so difficult to imagine a trust fundraiser ever getting up anyone’s nose. Anyone got any suggestions?

So of course, this is all a bit of a laugh. But there was a serious point I made at the time this piece first ran.

‘Chugger’ has just about become an acceptable term now. But how would fundraisers react if the press and indeed people within the sector began to adopt any of these other names? Suppose Precision Marketing or Third Sector habitually referred to charity DM as ‘chunk’ – such as “the average household receives 13 pieces of chunk each month?”

Or if a tabloid suddenly took an exception to volunteer tin rattlers (for whatever reason – it’s not totally implausible that they wouldn’t) and began calling them ‘cheggars’.

I think there would be storms of outraged protest. So why was the fundraising sector so complicit in the adoption of the contraction of ‘charity mugger’? That’s not a rhetorical question by the way: who's got an opinion?

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Churglar gets Wikipedia mention

Churglar gets wikipedia mention:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Street_fundraiser

chustafrians...

...inspired!

Charigrants, on the other hand...

- Environmental Charity

- Environmental Charity Fundraisers: "Huggers"
- Fundraisers that work for high-profile organisations: "Lucky ****ers"
- Those that don't:"Sloggers"
- Major Donor Fundraisers: "Chatta-uppers"

Oh and Trust fundraisers...

...have to be 'chustafarians', don't they?

A

Adrian Salmon
Annual Fund Manager
University of Leeds

Telephone fundraisers...

...are obviously 'chatters' except that there's no obvious undercurrent of insult in that - maybe someone can suggest one to go with it.

...and in answer to the serious point, I think it has to do with on the one hand, a sort of embarrassment at using the technique/particular charities wanting to disassociate themselves from those who do, or if you're looking for a more positive spin on it, the healthy reclaiming of discriminatory language in the same way that the BEM and gay communities have spearheaded. I'd rather go for the latter, myself.

Adrian Salmon
Annual Fund Manager
University of Leeds

Churnalists

I remember contributing to your Raizer piece on this in PF Ian. I came up with an alternative name for third sector journalists: Churnalists.

What about trying to come up with a name for political party fundraisers? "Chequers", perhaps?

Who's next?

Thanks for reminding us of those words - the red tops in the newspaper industry should salute you for opening up such a wide range of options for whichever fundraising discipline becomes their next bete noire.

For trust fundraisers I can only think of "charigrants" (Cary Grant, geddit?) but I'm sure others could improve on that.

For charity shop volunteers you could have 'choppers', although that's more appropriate for the people that visit charity shops.

"Charnobyls" (charity nobblers) is my suggestion for an alternative to chuggers.

Red tops

As if a journo at the Mirror or Sun avidly reads my blog.

Let's see

We'll know that they do when we start seeing some of these neologisms appearing in their headlines...

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