Saturday, May 18, 2024
40.0°F

MSU fundraising campaign tops $413 million

by MSU News Service
| January 29, 2019 7:06 PM

BOZEMAN — Montana State University’s comprehensive fundraising campaign, “What It Takes,” raised more than $413 million for the university’s people, places and programs, MSU officials announced Tuesday, making it the most successful fundraising campaign in Montana’s history.

The total is also well above the campaign’s original $300 million goal, which was met in October 2016, more than two years before the scheduled conclusion of the campaign. “What It Takes” was MSU’s first comprehensive fundraising campaign.

“We at Montana State University are overcome with gratitude for the many, many supporters who invested in our university,” MSU President Waded Cruzado said. “These generous donors pushed our campaign beyond all expectations and are helping to create a vibrant, sustainable and successful future for our campus.”

The campaign was publicly launched on Sept. 25, 2015, signaling the transition from what fundraisers call the quiet phase – which had started on July 1, 2010 – to the public phase. The campaign officially concluded on Dec. 31, 2018.

“The success of this campaign and the fruit it is bearing every day is a testament to just how critical private philanthropy is to the health and vitality of Montana State University and our land-grant mission,” said Chris Murray, president and chief executive officer of the MSU Alumni Foundation. “It also powerfully illustrates that every gift, no matter how large or small, makes a difference, and how people, when inspired, will give their time, talent and treasure for the greater good. We are forever grateful for each and every one of them.”

The campaign focused on three areas: people, places and programs.

Funds raised through the “people” part of the campaign are for scholarships and fellowships to increase access to a wider and more diverse range of students, Murray said. Those funds will also provide resources to help students academically once they arrive on campus with tutoring, mentoring, internships and other programs. Additionally, funds will help MSU recruit and retain the best faculty for its students and for its research and outreach mission.

The “places” part of the campaign focused on funds for classroom, laboratory and student support spaces needed to address the university’s record enrollment, as well as funds to support new teaching methods and technologies. When the campaign began its silent phase in 2010, MSU’s fall enrollment was 13,559. By fall 2018, when the campaign concluded, enrollment had grown to 16,902, marking 11 straight years of enrollment growth for the Bozeman campus.

The “programs” part of the campaign focused on funds to help students have more service-learning experiences and more community engagement and international education opportunities, with the aim of building student leadership skills while benefiting state, national and international communities.