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Fundraising Tuesday: I Got Your Letter. Phone Me!

December 12, 2017 by Dennis Fischman Leave a Comment

Waiting for the mailYou’ve written the best fundraising letter you can: maybe, the ideal appeal letter.

It’s in the mail. The donors received it last week.

Now what? Is there anything you can do besides waiting for the return mail? (Or the online payments, of course.)

Yes! There are three ways you can follow up on that fundraising letter: by phone, by email, and by social media.

Follow Up with a Phone Call

Even a polite voicemail message greatly increases the chances that your donors will renew their support for you this year. A personal conversation increases them even more! But there are worse and better ways to make that phone call.

The worst thing you can do is to call someone who doesn’t want to hear from you by phone. My wife and I tell everyone who calls us, “We prefer not to give over the phone. Mail us.” If they call again, we send our donations somewhere else. And there are lots of people like us!

A good way to reach out is by having a well-trained volunteer call and start by thanking the donor for their past support. Give the donor a sense of accomplishment: “Thanks to you, twenty children had lunch every day this school year.” Tell them, “Your help is still needed.” Ask for a specific amount.

It’s even better if the caller is a donor like them. “Thank you. Here’s what we did together.” Better still if the caller is a donor AND a board member. You’re complimenting your donor by letting them know they’re worth the board’s attention and time.

The best, the absolute best thing you can do? Find a friend of that donor to make the call. Someone who knows them well and can speak to them from the heart about how much they appreciate the donor’s gift. When your friend is grateful for your donation, of course you have to renew!

ET, Phone from Home?

phone bankNow, to my mind it’s a real toss-up whether it’s better to ask your volunteers to call from their homes or get them together for a “phone bank.”

  • Ask them to call from home and it’s more convenient for them, but they may forget… and you may have to work harder to find out who they reached and who they didn’t.
  • Invite them to call together and you create camaraderie among those who show up, and you can be on hand to answer any questions, live…but fewer people will volunteer in the first place.

There’s no one-size-fits-all answer to this question. Do what fits your organization the best.


Those are the whys and hows of picking up the phone to boost your December donations. We talked about using email to follow up your fundraising letter already this season. Next week, we’ll talk about using social media.

Use as many of these approaches as you can to make sure your end-of-year appeal touches your donors’ hearts.

 

 

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Nonprofit Writing: Follow the Golden Rule

December 11, 2017 by Dennis Fischman Leave a Comment

Golden Rule

You know it and I know it: a lot of nonprofit writing is just painful to read.

We donate to our favorite causes. In return, we get newsletters full of jargon, emails full of typos, fundraising letters that sound like they’re written in French–because the organization says “We, we, we.”

As people who work for nonprofits, and to ensure their success, we can and should do something about this! Make sure your organization asks itself these five tough questions:

1. Are you listening long enough before you write?

2. Do you think longer and more complicated is more impressive? (Your readers don’t!)

3. Are you writing memos when you should be telling stories?

4. Are you burying the lead? (Does the reader know from the start why he or she should read on?)

5. Are You as Good a Communicator as Shakespeare’s Fools? (Will people invite you to speak truth fearlessly to them because you leaven it with humor?)

None of us wants to cause pain to our supporters. But that means we must think what our supporters want to read! The golden rule of writing is to write unto others the way you wish they wrote unto to you.

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TY Thursday: Send the Ideal Thank-You Today!

December 7, 2017 by Dennis Fischman Leave a Comment

The absolute all-time favorite post on this blog is called “The Ideal Thank-You Letter Went Out Today.” It’s one of my favorites, too, because it will help your nonprofit get donations this year AND in the future. Here it is–and please read to the bottom for the 2017 updates.

I have seen the ideal appeal letter.  I haven’t yet seen the ideal thank-you letter.  But it went out today.  Did you send it?

Thanks in many languages

Write the ideal thank-you letter

If you wrote the ideal thank-you letter, you:

  • Called me by name.
  • Confirmed how much I gave you.
  • Told me how my gift would make a difference.
  • Illustrated my impact with a story.  (Not the one you told me to persuade me to give.  Another story.  You have more than one, right?)
  • Included a photo or image to make my impact real.
  • Told me about how else I can help: by volunteering, or liking you on Facebook, or spreading the word to my friends.
  • Signed it by hand, and wrote something just for me.

Most important: it’s the ideal thank-you letter because it went out today. 

The sooner you acknowledge my gift, the more likely I am to remember it, and give again. Within 24 hours of your receiving my check is ideal.  Within a week is acceptable.  But no matter how long it’s been, don’t put it off any longer.  Send that letter today.

Thank-You 2017 Updates!

Nothing beats a really good thank-you letter, but you can thank your donors in many other ways, too. Here are the most popular articles from my Thank-You Thursday series.

  1. 20 Ways to Thank Your Donors Throughout the Year
  2. TY Thursday: Steal from the Best
  3. TY Thursday: Your Checklist for the Ideal Thank-You Letter
  4. Thank-You Thursday: Pick Up the Phone
  5. TY Thursday: Your Donor Told Me You Should Hear This

One more thing. I really love Ann Green’s idea that you should go beyond thank-you ideas and have a thank-you plan. How are you going to thank your donors in January? In March? In June? How will you put video into the mix? When will you reach out and help the donor who’s going through a rough patch?

That would be a good resolution for 2018: Plan to express your gratitude to the donors with at least as much care as you plan to ask for money. And you can start with the ideal thank-you letter.

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