
The Association of Corporate Contributions Professionals (ACCP) is an advocacy, information and continuing education organization open to corporate contributions, community relations and employee volunteerism professionals. It is not affiliated or aligned with any other institution.
ACCP was founded in 2004 to respond to a growing need to provide professional education and guidance to corporations committed to exemplary corporate citizenship. In light of new regulations such as Sarbanes-Oxley and the Patriot Act, and continued interest from legislators and the IRS, philanthropy has become one of the most complicated corporate fields. Corporations are challenged to ensure compliance while continuing their philanthropic objectives to reach underserved and needy individuals and families in their communities. ACCP helps corporations identify and adopt best practices and provides training for contributions professionals so they can effectively navigate the ever-changing dynamics of corporate philanthropy.
Click here for a full list of benefits.
The annual fee is $6,000, which includes one complimentary seat at the Annual Conference on Corporate Contributions, plus deep tuition discounts for other attendees to the Annual Conference and Management Forum. Click here for a full list of benefits.
Membership dues range up to $12,500 a year, and some are open only to companies that pay even higher membership fees to institutions that sponsor corporate contributions activities. ACCP’s fee is largely offset by complimentary and discounted tuitions.
ACCP is a stand-alone, independent association. Its policies, objectives and services are determined exclusively by its members. The above-mentioned councils and centers offer helpful information, but each is embedded in a larger organization. Because ACCP is independent and member-driven, it is able to address cutting-edge, sometimes controversial issues in a timely manner.
CECP is an important national forum of business CEOs and chairpersons. Like other councils and centers, it also puts the spotlight on corporate social responsibility. However, its main audience of chief executives vastly differs from ACCP’s membership.
ACCP’s objective is to become the primary voice and the main service provider for the corporate contributions, community relations and employee volunteerism fields. However, it recognizes that other organizations can play a valuable role in meeting the different needs of its members. ACCP will continue to partner with these organizations and will encourage member participation in other effective programs.
A 501( c )(6) nonprofit tax status is the same as professional associations like the Chamber of Commerce. Membership dues to ACCP give corporations the same tax write-off advantage as a business donation to a 501( c )(3) nonprofit. ACCP is able to take vitally needed strong positions on behalf of the profession and return benefits to members without jeopardizing its tax standing.
Yes. The four-day Forum, the corporate contributions “mini-MBA program,” has been consistently rated the best entry-level and refresher program in the field. Its new title is the ACCP Contributions Academy Forum.
Yes, but they will pay substantially higher tuition fees. They are not eligible for the members-only ACCP Manager’s Toolkit or ACCP’s Webinars. They also are excluded from the annual Delegate Assembly meeting held at the close of the Annual Conference.
Delegate Assembly (comprised of one voting member of each company) sets broad policy for ACCP, including ACCP position on legislative issues, determining standards in the profession, etc.
Board of Directors enacts the policies set by the delegates.
Executive director and staff carry out the mandates of the delegates and directors.
The Association of Corporate
Contributions Professionals (ACCP)
1150 Hungryneck Blvd., Mt. Pleasant, SC 29464
T: 843-216-3442 F: 843-216-3396
E: mail@accprof.org
