The Big Give
The Big Give is a non-profit, charitable website that enables donors to find and support charity projects in their field of interest. Its main activity is online match funding campaigns, where public donations are matched by donations from philanthropists. Since it began in 2008, the charity has raised over £129 million for thousands of charity projects, including over £2 million for those affected by the Grenfell Tower fire. It is registered with the Fundraising Regulator.
History
The Big Give was founded in October 2007 by Sir Alec Reed CBE. Reed is the founder of employment agency Reed along with several international charities. He is chairman of the Reed Foundation.Reed established the Big Give after growing frustrated at the process of finding and assessing charities of interest to him. He used his experience of compiling searchable websites to create an online database of charities, browsable by sector and including detailed information about their structure and accounts.
The organisation's initial aim was to connect charities with wealthy individuals seeking to donate £100,000 or more, but charities found that donors were deterred by the high minimum donation. After lobbying Reed for a smaller donation threshold, Reed decided to experiment with time-limited match funding, saying: "There is nothing like a deadline to bring out people's competitive nature."
In 2008, the Big Give ran the Christmas Challenge – its flagship online match funding campaign – for the first time. Reed put up £1 million of his own money in match funding. It was matched by other donors within 45 minutes. Since then the Christmas Challenge format has been refined and along with an increase in both the number of philanthropist 'Champions' and the amount of match funds available, it has become the UK's largest online match funding campaign.
Fundraising activities
The Big Give Christmas Challenge
The Big Give Christmas Challenge runs for seven days from #GivingTuesday, during which time donations to participating charities are doubled. The match funding used to double donations comes from both philanthropic partners of the Big Give and a charity's own major supporters. Champions include The Reed Foundation, The Childhood Trust, Candis, The Garfield Weston Foundation, The People's Postcode Lottery and The Waterloo Foundation.Each charity has a ring-fenced matching pot used to double public donations until the pot is empty or until the Christmas Challenge ends, whichever is sooner. The Big Give has run the Christmas Challenge every year since 2008. It provides special awards for the best performing charities; in 2017 the overall winner was Aurora Orchestra.
Year | Activities |
2008 | £2 million raised in 45 minutes for 240 charities. The Reed Foundation was given a Third Sector Award for Innovation in Fundraising in recognition of the success of this challenge. |
2009 | £8.5 million raised, beating a target of £6 million and benefiting 174 charities. Fundraising from the challenge period was doubled by a fund of £1.5 million from the Reed Foundation and additional funds from trustees and major donors. |
2010 | The Big Give hosted its launch party for the Christmas Challenge at Fortnum & Mason's London store. Attendees raised £80,000 in one night. £9.3 million was raised for 323 charities; donations from the public were doubled by a number of sponsors, including Arts & Business, Reed Specialist Recruitment, Reed Foundation, Garfield Weston Foundation, Candis Magazine and Ethiopiaid. |
2011 | £12 million raised for 424 charities |
2012 | Raised over £10 million for 350 charities, including £4 million raised in a two-hour period. |
2013 | £11 million raised for 387 charities. Online donations were processed at a peak of 390 transactions per minute. The UK Cabinet Office joined as a Charity Champion, alongside Reed Foundation, Candis Magazine, ICAP, Ethiopiaid and the Garfield Weston Foundation |
2014 | £11 million raised for 367 charities. The initiative was recognised at the UK Charity Awards, with the Big Give winning the Fundraising Technology Category. |
2015 | £7.1 million raised for 258 different charities, including 1,192 donations made in the first five minutes, worth £2.5 million. |
2016 | £7.2 million for 332 charities across 17,000 donations |
2017 | £11.3 million for 528 charities across 29,000 donations |
2018 | £13.3 million for 589 charities. The average donation was £175 and over 35,000 people donated. |
2019 | £15.6 million for 588 charities. |