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Fundraising Tuesday: Does Your Appeal Letter Stink?

July 21, 2020 by Dennis Fischman Leave a Comment

fresh fish sold hereThe fishmonger looked up proudly at his new hand-painted sign.  “Fresh fish sold here,” it proclaimed.

A friend tapped him on the shoulder. “Nice sign, but it shouldn’t say ‘fresh’”, he advised.  “That makes people think about the possibility that it…might not be.”

The fishmonger took his paintbrush and painted over the “fresh.”

Another friend asked, “Why does it say ‘here’?  Where else would you be selling it?”

The fishmonger painted out the word “here.”

“Sold?” asked a third friend.  “Does anybody think you give your fish for free?”

One more swipe of the brush removed the ‘sold.’

A fourth friend scoffed, “Why say ‘fish’?  You can smell them a mile away!”

With a sigh, the fishmonger raised his brush and painted out the last word.

This is what happens when you let people who don't know what they're doing edit your fundraising message. You end up saying nothing. And it stinks. Share on X

Does that mean you shouldn’t seek advice? Far from it!

  • Ask somebody outside the organization to read it, because they can tell you what you’re taking for granted and not explaining.
  • Ask your Executive Director to read it, because they are probably going to have to approve it anyway.
  • Ask someone with a fresh set of eyes to read it for spelling and grammar.

proofreaderBut when it comes to writing appeal letters, trust your development person. They know what they’re doing.

Some kinds of letters work, even if they seem ungrammatical, choppy, bold, and personal.

And by “work,” I mean get read and raise money.

 

 

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What You REALLY Do to See More Friends on Facebook

July 6, 2020 by Dennis Fischman Leave a Comment

facebook hoax
Perhaps you’ve seen this message circulating around Facebook before. Your friends might have posted it. Maybe you fell for it yourself?
Been wondering why I have a dwindled down to a small circle seeing my posts! Thanks for the tip to circumvent Facebook … it works!! I have a whole new profile. I see posts from people I didn’t see anymore. Facebook’s new algorithm picks the same people -m around 25-who will see your posts. Hold your finger anywhere in this post and click ” copy “. Go to your page where it says “What’s on your mind?” Tap your finger anywhere in the empty field. Click paste. This is going to circumvent the system
Hello new and old friends!
No, it doesn’t. This is a well-known hoax that has been circulating for years. Please do not spread it any further.
 

What to do instead on Facebook

If you want to see more from your friends, the simplest thing to do is to search for their names, go to their pages, and like, comment, and share their posts. That will signal to Facebook, “Show me more like this.”
 
A slightly more complicated but much more powerful method is to make some of your Facebook Friends as Close Friends and others as Acquaintances. You will see more from the first group and less (but still some) from the second. How do you do that?
  • To mark one person, go to their page and, at the bottom right of their profile picture, find the place where they are currently marked Friends. Click on the pull-down arrow next to that word. Choose Close Friends (to see more of what they post) or Acquaintances (to see less).
  •  To categorize your whole list of Facebook friends, go to your own home page and click on Friends. You’ll see everybody you’re Friends with on Faceboook–and each one will have a pull-down menu you can use to mark them Close Friends or Acquaintances.
  • If you leave them alone, you will see them just about as often as you do now.

Tell your organization’s Facebook followers about this nifty trick. They will thank you for it!

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Fundraising Tuesday: Appeal Letters, Easy to Read

June 30, 2020 by Dennis Fischman Leave a Comment

wall-of-text

Are your fundraising appeal letters easy to read? If not, all the work you put into choosing the right words may be wasted. (As in, tossed into the trash, unread.)

Let’s say you’ve done what it takes to persuade your potential donor to open the envelope. You’ve called them by the name they like to be called by, and you’ve written a P.S. that makes them want to go back and read your message. You’ve even included some excellent photos that go a long way toward telling the story.

And then they look at the language of your appeal letter, and it’s a solid wall of text. Into the trash it goes! (If they’re conscientious, into the recycling!)

What You Can Do to Make Letters Easy to Read

White space

white spaceBefore & After Magazine’s John McWade describes white space as no less than a “zone of silence”–and that’s a good thing!

White space gives your readers a break from the printed word, allowing them to rest their eyes, and making them more likely to continue reading. (And that’s what you want, right?)

Lisa Sargent gives five easy and powerful ways to use white space in your fundraising appeals:

  1. Use reasonable page margins (at least one inch, right and left).
  2. Write short, indented paragraphs and leave a blank line between them.
  3. Leave plenty of space for your signature.
  4. For longer letters, use subheads.
  5. Indent quotations.

Font

Why should you care about something seemingly trivial like the font your letter is printed in? Well, Colin Wheildon, author of Type & Layout: Are You Communicating or Just Making Pretty Shapes?, says:

It’s possible to blow away three-quarters of our readers simply by choosing the wrong [font]. If you rely on words to sell, that should concern you deeply.

Kathie Kramer Ryan of Arroyo Fundraising Fluency advises:

  • Use serif font for print and sans serif for online.
  • Use at least 12-point font for older eyes. (I would say 14!)
  • Don’t let designers dictate the look of your fundraising letter. Choose a font that invites your audience in.

Serif and sans serif fontsUnderlining, bold, and italics

The late, legendary fundraiser Mal Warwick counsels you:

Let’s assume you’ve decided that subheads are inappropriate for the appeal you’re writing… There’s still an easy way for you to accent the benefits offered in your appeal, answer readers’ unspoken questions, and make your letter easier to read: by underlining. Do it sparingly. Choose only a few key words and phrases. But, if possible, choose them before you write the body of the letter!

Why should you choose the words to emphasize even before you write the letter?

Because it helps you decide what the letter is really about.

Because it helps you remember what the letter is really about.

Because it helps you communicate what the letter is really about to your donors–and it forces you to ask, “And why does that matter to the person I’m asking to give?”

You should pay attention to white space, font size and shape, underlining, bold, and italics for the same reason you pay attention to your donors. Share on X

By making your appeal letters easy to read, you show them you care–and make it easy for them to see why they should give.

 

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