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Reuse, Recycle Your Nonprofit Communications

August 7, 2017 by Dennis Fischman Leave a Comment

reduce, reuse, recycle

Nonprofits make communications hard.

We think that every time we write a blog entry, or send direct mail, or post to social media, we have to come up with a new idea.

Instead, remember the old mantra, “Reduce, reuse, recycle.”

REDUCE the time and effort it takes to communicate with your donors. It’s not a bad thing for your donors to hear the same message again and again: it’s a good thing! As Marc A. Pitman has said on a post about the myth of donor fatigue:

The ad guru David Ogilvy is supposed to have said that it takes a person hearing the same message seven times before they take action. So make sure to tell the stories seven times.

REUSE content in the same communication channel. Yes, you can use the same content with only minor tweaks.

  • You wrote a great blog entry for back-to-school 2016? Update it and republish it in September 2017.
  • You posted a link on Facebook that got a lot of attention?
    • Post the photo from the linked article, with a caption.
    • Post a quote from the article and ask for comments.
    • Take the idea of the article and turn it into a poll.
  • You tweeted a message? Tweet it at different times, every day, for a week. Different people are going to see it each time.

RECYCLE content in different channels. That blog entry could be an article in your newsletter, or a great op-ed in the local paper. The video clip on your website could be included in your thank-you email.

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Let the Client Write Your Fundraising Letter

July 17, 2017 by Dennis Fischman Leave a Comment

You have probably sent your donors dozens or hundreds of fundraising letters for your nonprofit. But have they ever seen a letter from a satisfied client?

Stephanie’s Story

InterfaithFamily clientMy friend Carol Reiman sent me a letter she received by email from the nonprofit organization InterfaithFamily.

“Dear Carol,” it began (a good start, calling the donor by name):

Confused. The best adjective I can use to describe how I felt about planning my interfaith wedding before learning about InterfaithFamily.

The writer, Stephanie Radowitz, says she grew up Catholic and knew nothing about planning a wedding with her Jewish spouse. She was afraid she’d create hard feelings on what should be one of the happiest days of a couple’s life. Then, a co-worker connected her with an organization for people like her and her husband.

Not only did Stephanie learn enough from InterfaithFamily to plan the wedding–she found the rabbi she would trust to conduct the ceremony!

I cannot thank IFF enough for providing me with abundant resources, new friends and experiences. It is why I continue to stay connected to IFF and why I am giving back to help other couples who are navigating their own interfaith path. I hope you will consider joining me by making a gift to InterfaithFamily today and turning the confusion for so many couples like us into possibilities.

What the Client Did Right

There are so many things to love about this appeal letter!

  • The subject line is “Happily ever after starts here.” Who wouldn’t open that email, to find out where you can find “happily ever after?” (If it were postal mail, she could have used that line on the envelope.)
  • Stephanie tells a story. It has a narrative structure: heroine, challenge, helpers, solution. She doesn’t just tell us that the nonprofit helped her. She shows us how.
  • It uses “engaging” photos. (Pardon the pun!)
  • It has a warm, personal voice.
  • It smoothly directs readers to where they can find out more about the organization.
  • It asks for money. (Yes, you have to ask! And look how effortlessly Stephanie slips from her story to “And that is why” she’s supporting IFF.
  • It uses a postscript to make giving urgent. P.S. An anonymous donor has agreed to match all new and increased donations. Make a gift today and double your impact!

Okay, Maybe the Client Had Help

Stephanie’s letter is better than the vast majority of appeals I see written by paid staff at nonprofit organizations. Maybe she’s just an exceptional writer and intuitive fundraiser. Chances are, however, she had help.

Who is the Stephanie in your nonprofit organization: the client with a great story to tell? Can you interview her and write it up in her voice? Or can you share a template with her to make it easier for her to write the letter? Either way, it will ring true and make your donors want to give.

As long as the love rings true.

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Who’s That, Asking about Your Nonprofit? How to Find Out

July 10, 2017 by Dennis Fischman Leave a Comment

who are you speaking with

Why should this specific person care about your nonprofit? Here’s how to figure it out.

You’re having a conversation, at a party or business networking event, and you mention that you’re on the Board of Good Cause Inc.

“Oh, that’s interesting,” someone in the room says. “What is Good Cause Inc.? What does it do?”

It’s natural if your first response is to think hard about what you should be telling them about your organization.

(And in the last couple of weeks, we’ve talked about how to give an elevator pitch that invites more questions–and how to get out of the question-and-answer format and have a real conversation.)

But really, what you should be telling them is less important than what you should be finding out.

Two BIG Reasons to Ask More, Tell Less

Finding out who you’re talking with is just as important as actually answering their question, for two reasons.

beautiful friendshipOne: This could be the beginning of a beautiful friendship. If you succeed at having a real conversation, then pretty soon you’ll want to invite that person to an event, send them information that’s useful to then, or ask them to give time or money.

Any of those “asks” will go better if you’ve done your homework first. Start your prospect research now.

Two: Answer the question they’re really asking right now. Every time a person asks, “So, what do you do?”, the underlying question is “Why should I care?” And the key word there is “I.”

Different people care about what you do for their own specific reasons. Think about the supporters you already have. Different issues, different populations, even different service delivery methods get some of your people excited…and leave others cold.

The person who is asking about your nonprofit for the first time might fit into any one of those categories of supporters. But which? It’s up to you to find out, so you can address exactly the thing that matters to them the most.

Using Donor Personas to Figure It Out

You can’t read the mind of the person who asked you about your nonprofit. True. And you aren’t going to get to know them intimately all in one conversation, either. But there’s a shortcut you can use when you’re figuring out how to answer their question.

Donor personas are portraits of the typical supporters of your organization. (Some people call these “marketing profiles,” but the idea is the same.)

Most organizations will find their supporters falling into at least two different profiles.

For example, if you’re a community-based environmental organization:

personas

  • Jan might thrill to the way you get her grandson involved in after-school activities for a good cause.
  • Keri might think of you as the place that runs the community garden where she spends all her time.

As you start answering their question, remember that you have a mystery to solve: Is that new person you’re talking to a “Jan” or a “Keri”?

Finding that out won’t tell you precisely who that is, asking about your nonprofit. But it’s a really good step in the right direction.

 


Do you need help creating donor personas for your nonprofit? Could you use expert assistance crafting the questions that will tell you who you’re talking to?

At Communicate! Consulting, we help your nonprofit win loyal friends–starting with the first conversation! Email us to get started.

 

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