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How Companies Can Make In-Kind Donations to Local Nonprofits
Why corporate in-kind giving is growing — and how to build a program your employees will actually use.

Givelink Team |

How Companies Can Make In-Kind Donations to Local Nonprofits
Corporate Social Responsibility budgets are shifting. The era of the annual check to a national charity is giving way to something more intentional — in-kind giving programs that connect employees directly to community impact.
For Bay Area companies especially, the opportunity is significant. The region has a high concentration of nonprofits, a high-earning workforce that wants to give, and a growing expectation from employees that their company reflects community values.
Here's how to build a corporate in-kind giving program that works.
Why In-Kind Over Cash for Corporate Giving
Higher employee engagement: Employees who select and donate a specific item feel more connected to the cause than those who approve a budget line.
Faster impact: Products ship within 48 hours. Checks take weeks to allocate.
Better optics: Photographable, shareable, tangible giving creates better CSR content than a donation receipt.
Tax advantages: Corporate in-kind donations of inventory are deductible at fair market value. For companies with surplus product, this is particularly valuable.
Nonprofit preference: For frontline organizations, specific goods are often more useful than unrestricted cash — especially for immediate operational needs.
3 Corporate In-Kind Giving Models
Model 1: Employee Giving Campaigns
Set up a company-wide campaign where employees each choose one item to donate from a nonprofit's wishlist. Budget: $25–50 per employee. Duration: 1–2 weeks.
Example: A 50-person startup allocates $1,500 to a quarterly giving campaign. Each employee picks one item for a local food bank from Givelink's catalog. 50 items ship within 48 hours.
Best for: Companies building culture around community engagement
Model 2: Surplus Inventory Donation
Companies with physical products (retail, consumer goods, tech hardware) donate surplus, returned, or end-of-line inventory directly to nonprofits.
Example: A hardware company donates 200 refurbished laptops to schools and job training programs.
Best for: Companies with physical product inventory looking for tax-efficient disposition
Model 3: Matching Programs
The company matches every employee's personal in-kind donation dollar-for-dollar. Creates double the impact, drives personal giving, and builds employee loyalty.
Example: Employee donates $50 of hygiene products to a shelter. Company matches with an additional $50 donation to the same nonprofit. Total impact: $100.
Best for: Companies wanting to amplify personal employee giving
How to Launch a Corporate In-Kind Program in 30 Days
Week 1: Select Your Nonprofit Partners
- Choose 2–3 local nonprofits aligned with your company values
- Verify their 501(c)(3) status
- Browse their current needs on Givelink
Week 2: Set Your Budget and Structure
- Determine per-employee giving budget
- Decide: one-time campaign or quarterly program
- Set matching policy if applicable
Week 3: Launch Internally
- Email company-wide announcement
- Host a 15-minute all-hands intro
- Share Givelink catalog link with designated nonprofit wishlists
Week 4: Execute and Document
- Employees select and donate items
- Givelink routes all donations to nonprofit
- Collect delivery confirmations and impact photos
Post-campaign:
- Share impact report with employees (items donated, nonprofits supported, impact photos)
- Post on LinkedIn and social media
- Plan next campaign
Bay Area Companies Already Doing This
The Bay Area tech ecosystem is increasingly building in-kind giving into its culture:
- Early-stage startups using quarterly product donation campaigns as team-building events
- Scale-ups building annual in-kind programs as part of their DEI and community commitments
- Enterprise companies running employee giving weeks with product matching
The common thread: companies that use Givelink's platform report higher employee participation rates than traditional cash donation campaigns, because the act of selecting a physical item is more engaging than clicking a donate button.
The Tax Angle
Under IRS guidelines, corporate donations of inventory to qualifying nonprofits can be deducted at:
- Cost basis (minimum)
- Fair market value (for C-Corporations donating to food banks, up to twice cost basis under IRC Section 170(e)(3))
Consult your tax advisor for specifics — but in-kind giving is often more tax-efficient than cash for companies with inventory.
Getting Started With Givelink for Business
Givelink offers a dedicated corporate giving portal that includes:
- Access to verified Bay Area nonprofit catalog
- Bulk donation management
- Employee participation tracking
- Impact reporting for CSR documentation
- Automatic tax receipts for each transaction
Set up your company's giving account on Givelink →
Frequently Asked Questions
Can small companies (under 20 employees) run an in-kind program? Absolutely. Even a $500 team campaign can deliver 20–30 meaningful items to a local nonprofit. Small is not a barrier.
How do we choose which nonprofits to support? Givelink's verified catalog is a good starting point. Filter by location, cause area, and current needs.
Do we need a formal CSR policy to start? No. A simple email campaign with a budget and a nonprofit partner is enough to start. Formalize the policy after your first campaign.
Can we track which employees donated and what they gave? Yes. Givelink's corporate dashboard provides per-employee donation tracking with privacy controls.
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