Joe Saxton

Joe Saxton

Driver of ideas, nfpSynergy

Joe Saxton is driver of ideas at nfpSynergy, an organisation which conducts market research on behalf of the non-profit sector.

He first became involved with the sector at the age of 14 by volunteering for Save the Whales and got his first paid role as a co-ordinator for the Harambee Centre for Development and Education, Cambridge, before joining Oxfam as a fundraiser in 1988.

In the early 90s he divided his time between the charity sector and the private sector, as a trustee for the RSPCA and an account director at marketing agency EHS Brann. In 1997, the RNID hired Saxton to be its director of communications. He finished there in 2000, and moved on to the Future Foundation, a think-tank that specialises in consumer and business trends.

In 2003, he launched nfpSynergy as a subsidiary of the Future Foundation, and later led a management buyout.

From 2005 to 2008 Saxton chaired the Institute of Fundraising and since 2005 he has been chair of student campaign body People & Planet.  In 2007 he founded CharityComms, a membership body for communications professionals working in the sector.  He is also a member of the Office of the Third Sector Advisory Group.

Saxton has a zoology degree and a Masters in development from UEA.

He has published a number of books; Its Competition, But Not As We Know It? (1997), What Are Charities For? (1998), Polishing the Diamond (2002), Mission Impossible (2004), The 21st Century Volunteer (2005), The 21st Century Donor (2007).

 

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Public thinks volunteers more worthy of honours than charity professionals

New research released by nfpSynergy claims that almost half the British public think that voluntary sector workers do not get the credit they deserve.

Over half of public have not heard of Charity Commission, survey finds

Only 43 per cent of the public surveyed by nfpSynergy think that they have heard of the Charity Commission, the research consultancy has revealed.

Majority of the public supports relaxing rules on charity lotteries

New research indicates that the public supports a relaxation of the regulations governing charity lotteries that prevent them from competing with the National Lottery.

A solution to regulating society lotteries

Inspired by a debate between Joe Saxton and an employee of the Gambling Commission, David Philpott devises his own solution to who is best placed to regulate society lotteries.

This is exactly the reason that I am a development director, not a fund raiser, and why I try to get volunteers to do my fundraising where possible. I can never change the perception that I am the hired help because, guess what, I am - even though I'm a donor and a legacy pledger, too.

» Public thinks volunteers more worthy of honours than charity professionals

Consultation on charity lottery regulation reform launched

Current lottery regulations are holding charities back from raising more money according to a consultation document which will form the basis of a campaign to push for lottery regulation reform.

First-class travel for charities frowned upon by public, finds survey

The issue that concerns the British public the most about whether a charity is applying donations prudently is whether members of staff travel first class, according to research by nfpSynergy.

Saxton spearheads lobby effort for lottery reform

A group of charity and lottery company representatives have agreed to work on a plan to push for reform of what they argue are burdensome regulations on charity lotteries and raffles.

Trust in charities almost as volatile as trust in banks, survey finds

Public trust in charities has rebounded since January this year but still remains over 10 percentage points lower than just before the last general election, new research from nfpSynergy suggests.

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