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20 Ways to Thank Your Donors Throughout the Year

November 19, 2015 by Dennis Fischman 1 Comment

thanksgivingIf you’re a nonprofit, every day is Thanksgiving…or should be.

Yes, I know it’s been months since your last appeal.  You sent a thank-you letter to each donor back then.  (In fact, maybe you sent the ideal thank-you letter.)  But have you been ignoring them since then?

You neglect donors at your peril.  Donors notice when and how often you’re in touch.  If they say, “That organization only writes me when they want money!”, how likely are they to respond the next time?

Have you heard the rule that you should thank a donor seven times before asking him or her for money again?  Maybe you wondered how in the world you’re supposed to do that.  How many ways can you say thank you?

Here are 20 creative ideas for showing your gratitude, courtesy of our friends at Lifehack.

  1. Make a gift bag. It doesn’t have to be expensive–just personal.
  2. Give a toast. You don’t need a special event–you could do this over lunch. Make a video and send it to the donor.  Picture the smile when they see it!
  3. Write a poem. Say why they deserve your thanks.
  4. Send them custom gift labels.
  5. Give a gift card. (Get the gift card donated, too.)
  6. Send a hand-written letter.
  7. Use social media to give thanks in public.
  8. Make your own digital greeting card.
  9. Make a Youtube video.
  10. Bake cookies.
  11. Make surprise gifts for guests at your events.
  12. Put together a flower basket.
  13. Take a picture. Again, it doesn’t have to be professional, just unique.  The camera on your phone can capture priceless moments!
  14. Pay it forward.  Show them you care about what they care about too.
  15. Do something special for them.
  16. Help them when they’re the ones who need help.
  17. Be there for them.
  18. Listen to them.
  19. Say it another language…especially if they speak it.
  20. Show them some #donorlove, without being asked.

You can’t do all twenty for all your donors. Fine.  But which ones can you do?  Make a plan to say thank you to as many of your donors as you can, each month.  When annual appeal time comes around again, they’ll think of you as a friend.

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7 Reasons You’re Not Getting Enough Donations

November 17, 2015 by Dennis Fischman Leave a Comment

“Is the mail here yet?”

When I worked at a nonprofit organization, every day in December, I would anxiously check the mail. How many of those appeal letters I’d sent out were coming back with donations enclosed?

Now I’m a consultant–and I’ve always been a donor–so I’m looking at the mail in a different light. Last November and December, I received 58 solicitations in the mail. How many of the organizations I support are sending out letters that will make other people want to support them?

Good news, bad newsFriends, there is good news and there is bad news. 

The bad news is that your appeal letters are failing, in seven different ways. If you are falling short of your fundraising goals this year, your letters may have a lot to do with it.

The good news is that you can do something about that!

7 Reasons You’re Not Getting Enough Donations (and what you can do about it)

1) You’re starting your letter “Dear Friend.”  21 out of 58 letters I received called me Friend or Supporter.  Wrong!

As fundraising expert Gail Perry says, “Your donor expects that you know her name and who she is, since she’s been sending you money for a while!”  Fix this by using a good database and adding a First Name mail merge field to your appeal letter.

2) You’re mainly talking about your organization. 41 out of 58 letters were in French: they said “we, we, we.” Another 9 said, essentially, “Thank you, you’re great because you support our great work.” But that’s making your organization the hero of the story!

As Seth Godin has pointed out, in a good appeal letter, the donor is the hero of the story.  That’s why they give. Fix this by talking about how the donors are helping to right wrongs, save lives, or help people.

3) You’re not telling an “impact story.”  There are six types of stories that nonprofits should tell. In your appeal letter, you should tell an impact story, showing how the donors’ contribution makes a difference.  28 out of the 58 letters I received told just the facts, ma’am. Another 22 included a brief quotation from a client, or a general anecdote about a client, and how the agency helped them.

These letters blur on me. They all sound alike. Fix this by telling a compelling story about one person whose life is better because the donor helped.

4) You’re not including a photo. People are becoming more visually oriented, and a photo helps your appeal stand out. Yet 26 of 58 letters I received were text only! Another 25 included blurry black-and-white photos, or nice color photos that added nothing to the message.

Fix this by taking striking photos of people in action throughout the year. Then you won’t have to scramble for a picture in December.

5) You’re not letting me know you appreciate what I already gave.  This, I find really shocking: 48 out of 58 letters I received used exactly the same language to me that they would use to someone who had never given them a penny.

Fix this by segmenting your list, writing different letters to prospects, lapsed donors, and renewing donors, and acknowledging the date and amount of the previous gift.

6) You’re not personalizing your letters. It used to be a no-brainer for Executive Directors, Development Directors, or Board members who knew the donor to write a personal note on appeal letters. People, we are going in the wrong direction on this! 55 out of 58 letters arrived in my mailbox with no personal touches whatever–even when my wife and I have known the person sending the letter for many years.

Fix this by composing your appeals long enough in advance to add those personal notes…and doing so. (Kudos to the Welcome Project for including notes to my wife and me from both the Executive Director and the Board President.)

7) You’re sending multiple copies of the same letter to my address. Is it really so hard for you to figure out that Dennis Fischman, Dennis and Rona Fischman, and Dennis K. and Rona J.S. Fischman are the same people?  Besides wasting paper and postage, you’re letting me know that you really have no idea who we are: not a good way to ask for money!

Fix this by cleaning up your database, and by asking your envelope-stuffers to be on the lookout for duplicates.

 I’ll tell you how the 2015 appeal letters looked at the end of the year!

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Don’t Let Your Donations Get Lost in the Mail

November 16, 2015 by Dennis Fischman Leave a Comment

My beloved brother Ron Fischman died in October 2014. Our family asked that donations in Ron’s memory go to an organization he had supported. We gave out the organization’s website and its mailing address. But only the online donations went through.

The mailing address we found on the website was wrong.

Now before you wonder “How could a large nonprofit organization make such a stupid mistake?”, let me explain. The group’s correct address did appear on its website. It was on the Contact Us page.

But when you go to the Donate page (as we did) and look for the mailing address, you find a donation form to print out and mail in. That form hadn’t been changed since 2011–but the organization’s address had!

I don’t recommend asking your donors to print out a donation form. Hardly any of them ever do, and asking them to do it may actually discourage some people from giving. But if you aren’t going to use the form any more, make sure you take it off your website.

And no matter what, make sure your address is correct on every page where it appears.

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