By Robert Buchhaus
In the mid-1990s, when Face-to-Face (F2F) street fundraising first erupted in Austria and began its rapid trek across borders, I found myself in a peculiar role: the evangelist for a “crazy” idea. I remember standing at international conferences, explaining our methodology, only to be met with shaking heads.
“What? You stop strangers on the street, chat for a few minutes, and they just hand over their bank details to let you collect money again and again?” they would ask. “You crazy Austrians—it will never work in my country.” Even those who saw its early success were sceptical of its longevity. Three decades later, however, F2F has proven them all wrong, becoming the bedrock of global donor acquisition.
The Engine of Modern Acquisition
Today, we aren’t fighting for the survival of F2F; we are fighting to meet the overwhelming demand for it. In many markets, F2F is the primary tool capable of delivering the high volumes of regular donors that organizations need to survive. While traditional channels face diminishing returns and digital acquisition struggles to scale, F2F continues to deliver the human connection that translates into long-term commitment.
The current challenge isn’t a lack of interest from charities; it’s a capacity crisis. Agencies and in-house programs are struggling to find enough high-quality staff to fulfil this demand. But this success is not self-sustaining—it requires a deliberate focus on the people behind the clipboards.
The Antidote to the “AI Overflow”
Looking ahead, I am more confident in F2F today than I was years ago. We are entering an era where AI-generated content, visual fakes, and automated spam will overflow our digital lives. This “content pollution” will inevitably lead to widespread frustration and a profound crisis of trust.
In a world where you can’t be sure if the voice on the phone or the face in a video is real, the value of physical, human interaction sky-rockets. We might use AI behind the scenes to optimize campaigns, but it will never replace the fundraiser on the street or at the door. People will be relieved to have a real human interaction.
Protecting the Ecosystem
However, this future isn’t just going to “happen.” To keep F2F successful, we must move beyond viewing it as a mere “technique” and see it as a human ecosystem that requires constant reinvestment. Historically, agencies and dedicated in-house programs have been the “nurseries” of our industry—investing heavily in training and building the next generation of talent. If we stop investing in the “soil” and move toward purely transactional models, the harvest will eventually fail.
Caring for the Frontline
Maintaining quality starts with the well-being of our fundraisers. Our teams are on an “exhausted mission”—standing in the rain, facing rejection, and carrying the emotional weight of the world’s challenges. If we want them to inspire others, we must first inspire and support them through mentorship and stable structures.
This is where the strength of our global F2F community comes in. We are a unique breed—one that shares, cares, and learns across borders. By fostering this culture, we ensure our frontline heroes have the resilience to keep building those vital bridges. F2F hasn’t just survived the digital revolution—it is the tool that will thrive because of it.
Experience the spirit of collaboration
And it is exactly this spirit of collaboration and shared learning that continues to drive our sector forward. The 3rd International F2F Fundraising Congress bring together practitioners, innovators, and decision-makers from across the globe to exchange insights, challenge assumptions, and shape the future of face-to-face fundraising—together. Get your tickets now!
About the author

After completing his studies, Robert Buchhaus, who holds a doctorate in law, decided to pursue a career in fundraising to promote positive change in the world. Over the course of his diverse, decades-long career, he has personally asked over 50,000 people to provide regular support to a wide variety of organizations, worked as an internationally active fundraising consultant for various international NPOs, and established fundraising agencies (Global Fundraising Group) with partners in numerous countries; serves as managing director of agencies in Austria and Germany, and is a recognized speaker at international fundraising conferences as one of the leading specialists in face-to-face fundraising.
In 2014, he was the first in the German-speaking world to introduce tablet fundraising into face-to-face fundraising and serves on the board of the Austrian Fundraising Association.