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Fundraising Tuesday: Clear Communications Matter

September 20, 2016 by Dennis Fischman Leave a Comment

two types

Which type of communicator did you hire?

So  your nonprofit organization has hired a communications consultant, or maybe even a Director of Communications.  But what do you really want from them?

Do you want them to help you raise funds?  Or to engage the broader community?

It’s vital that you make this clear: to your communications maven and to yourself.

Raising Funds, or Building Community?

Kivi Leroux Miller

Kivi Leroux Miller

Author Kivi Leroux Miller says whether you’re a fundraising communicator or a brand-builder/community-builder affects everything you do.

If you’re a fundraising communicator, then most likely:

  • You work for a smaller organization that can’t afford separate staff for both development and communications.
  • You focus on people ages 55+, because they give more money.
  • You use print and email marketing, and you send out direct mail appeals.
  • You also use phone banks and events.
  • You may “be on” social media but you’re cautious about it and see it as a lower priority.

But if you’re a brand builder or community builder, then probably:

  • You work for a larger organization (at least a $1 million budget), and your organization has a written marketing plan.
  • You focus on people under age 55, for the life-long value of the relationship.
  • You see volunteering (including advocacy and fundraising with friends) as equally important with immediate donations.
  • You do more content marketing than asking.  You tell more often than you sell.
  • You use social media regularly, and you aim to engage your community–not just do outreach.

Why Clear Expectations Matter

Your nonprofit needs to know which kind of communicator you have hired, and be clear about what you expect. That way, your communications person will know how to direct their efforts.  And that way, you can define and agree on what will count as success.

What if you’ve engaged one person to do both jobs? According to Kivi’s estimate, about half of us communications professionals are asked to do both.  She says:

These communicators are the ones I worry most about, because their jobs are much more likely to be poorly defined, and therefore they are much more likely to burn out and hate their jobs.  We need all the creative, dedicated people we can get in this work, so I don’t want this to happen!

What It Takes to Succeed

What kind of communicator does your organization need, and are you being clear with them about what you expect? And do you provide the resources they will need to succeed?

Some nonprofit organizations hire one staff person to do all their communications and then give that staff person a consultant to call upon. If the staff person is great fundraiser but hasn’t had much experience building a community, the consultant should know all there is to know about engagement and mobilization.

If the staff person is really good at building community (online and face to face), but they don’t know that much about donor communications, then call me! We can work together to make sure your nonprofit organization has loyal friends who show up, speak out…AND give money.

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TY Thursday: Nonprofits, Many Thanks

September 15, 2016 by Dennis Fischman Leave a Comment


thank-you letter

Write the ideal thank-you letter

Are you planning on sending out a lot of thank-you notes before 2016 is over?  (I hope so, since many thanks means you got a lot of donations!)

Here are some great tips on writing thank-yous that people will remember.

  1. Caryn Stein of Network for Good gives us 5 Rules for Thanking Donors.
  2. Pamela Grow shares A free thank you letter template you can swipe!
  3. Beth Ann Locke advises us, “Start with appreciation. End with thanks. And liberally sprinkle gratitude in between.” Find out how in this great article.
  4. Gail Perry of Fired-up Fundraising tells us How to Craft a Killer Thank-You Letter.
  5. I’d be silly not to mention my own article, The Ideal Thank-You Letter Went Out Today. (It’s the sequel to The Ideal Appeal Letter Begins With You.)

My friend Ann Green has it right: we should be thanking our donors all year long.  In fact, she suggests we set up thank-you calendars the same way we set up editorial calendars.

It’s not too late. Today, before any more time goes by, figure out when you’re going to write, call, email, or send a video to show donors just how grateful you are.

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Fundraising Tuesday: Fundraising the Dead

September 13, 2016 by Dennis Fischman Leave a Comment

Fundraising the Dead cover

Murder mystery starring…a fundraiser!

If you’re  a fundraiser for a nonprofit organization, you have to read Fundraising the Dead, by Sheila Connolly.  How many other chances will you have to see someone in your profession solve a murder mystery?

Your Fundraising Appeals are a Killer

Nell Pratt is the Director of Development at the Pennsylvania Antiquarian Society. Hours before her big fundraising event, a blueblood Board member informs her that priceless documents from the Board member’s family collection have disappeared from the building.

Then, after the gala, Nell discovers the body of the man who worked most on those documents, dead in an upstairs room.

Is it murder? How will Nell get the documents back, and save her job? And is her relationship with her boss, the elegant Charles Elliot Worthington, going to survive the crisis?

Putting the Fun Back in Fundraising

The book gives a good idea of how fundraisers spend their work days, and the relationship between staff and major donors. The author has done the work herself. Like me, she speaks nonprofit.

As a mystery, this is a fun read.  If you are looking for a puzzle that will tax your brain, this isn’t it. I figured out who stole the documents halfway through the book, and who committed the murder almost immediately thereafter.

But it was a pleasure to follow the relationships between Nell, Board member Marty Terwilliger, and her nephew Special Agent James Morrison (yes, he went down to the wrong side of town). Even your non-fundraising friends will enjoy it.

Have you read any other fiction about nonprofit fundraisers or communicators? Would you please recommend it in the comments section below?

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