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TY Thursday: Will Your Donor Welcome Your Email?

March 9, 2017 by Dennis Fischman Leave a Comment

I heard a knock at the door. “Oh, no,” I thought. “Who could that be?”

welcome visitor

Will they welcome your email?

I hadn’t ordered a pizza. I wasn’t expecting a package.

I went to the door and peered through the peephole, braced for someone trying to convert me to their religion (and/or sell me a magazine subscription).

What a pleasant surprise it was when my friend Miriam was there with a bundle of fresh-cut lilacs from her garden!

Your email should make donors happy

When a donor gets email from your nonprofit organization, they should react like I did when Miriam showed up at my door. It should make them happy. Write your email like a friend and you can have donors looking forward to seeing it!

Why email your donors?  I know your nonprofit sends a thank-you letter to every donor. You send it within 48 hours from the time you received their donation. It’s full of appreciation for the donor, and it helps them believe they made the right choice when they gave to you.

Great! But thanking the donor is not “one and done.”

You need to continue thanking them all year round. And email is one of the best ways of sending your thanks.

Is your email a welcome visitor?

Now, you know how many emails you get every day. They can turn into one big blur. You might start reading them in order, but soon, you scan for names of friends and leave the rest of the messages unopened–or even delete them.

Your audience is just like you. They get overwhelmed just as fast. And the delete button is always handy!

How to make your email delight your donors

If you want people to read your email, you have to be like Miriam.

  • Be a good friend. (Not that guy who only shows up to borrow money!)
  • Come bearing gifts. Present them with something they want: entertainment, information, a chance to see their friends and feel good about themselves at the same time…
  • Knock. Make sure the subject line of each email announces you in a way that makes your readers say, “I’m so glad you stopped by. Come in, come in!”

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Fundraising Tuesday: Why a Nonprofit Can’t Run Like a Business

March 7, 2017 by Dennis Fischman Leave a Comment

Business and nonprofitAre you tired of being asked, “Why can’t you run your nonprofit like a business?”

I’ve written about how nonprofits can use advice written for businesses (with just a little translation).  When it comes to nonprofit finance, however, some business wisdom is just wrong.

Clara Miller, the former director of the Nonprofit Finance Fund, explains why.  In her wonderful article, “The Looking-Glass World of Nonprofit Money,” she lists seven assumptions that businesspeople make that–in the nonprofit world–are just not true.

A Nonprofit Differs from a Business Because…

    1. “The consumer buys the product.” False. Donors and funders buy the “product” (which may be a service, a program, or a campaign), and clients benefit from it.
    2. “Price covers cost and eventually produces profits, or the business folds.”  False.  Nonprofits are devoted to their missions and will keep on pursuing the mission as long as they  can.  They have a sideline in fundraising to support their “business”–but it may also sap energy away from the reason they exist.
    3. “Cash is liquid.”  False.  Government and foundation grants are often restricted to specific purposes and can’t be used to pay for anything else.  A nonprofit can get more grants and have less money to pay its day-to-day costs of doing business!
    4. “Price is determined by producers’ supply and consumers’ ability and willingness to pay.”  False.  Since the consumers don’t pay (see #1), they don’t have the say.  Government or foundation funders decide what they’re willing to pay AND how many clients the nonprofit must serve in return for the money.  If it’s not enough, the nonprofit has to make up the difference with fundraising, or the quality of service suffers.
    5. “Any profits will drop to the bottom line and are then available for enlarging or improving the business.”  False.  Many nonprofits have spent less than budgeted only to see their budget reduced for the next year, on the theory that they must not really have needed the money.
    6. “Investment in infrastructure during growth is necessary for efficiency and profitability.”  False.  Well, actually, true, but not recognized by funders!  Many funders want to pay for program, but only a far-sighted few will invest in building capacity for the future.
    7. “Overhead is a regular cost of doing business, and varies with business type and stage of development.”  False.  As Miller says, “Overhead is seen as a distraction—an indication that an organization is not putting enough of its attention and resources into program.”  (Thankfully, this is beginning to change, but only beginning.)

The Donor Solution

When Miller talks about “funders,” basically she means government and foundations. The great hope for nonprofits is the individual donor.

When we persuade people who care about a cause to express their values by donating to our organization, we get out of the looking-glass world and back into the real world. People who pull out their credit card or their checkbook to make a gift care about the impact their gift is making.

They don’t care whether you have money left at the end of the year. They don’t care about whether an expenditure is “program,” “fundraising,” or “overhead” (within reason). What matters to donors is whether your organization is a good way for them to make a difference. Communicating with your donors? That’s your business.

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TY Thursday: Friends Don’t Let Nonprofits Treat Them Like ATMs

March 2, 2017 by Dennis Fischman Leave a Comment

ATMWhen your personal friends speak to you, do they only recall the gifts you gave them?

No. They wouldn’t be your friends if they did.

Your real friends know what matters to you and what hurts you. You have a history of shared memories…and in that history, “I got this flower vase from Jen” is much less important than “Jen and I go on the Walk for Hunger together every year, and then we go out for pizza.”

You treat your friends with the same love and care they show to you.

Does your nonprofit treat donors like ATMs? Or do you treat them like friends? Share on X

You can. You should. And a good database will make it easier.

Find out how. Read my guest post, 5 Ways Nonprofits Can Treat Donors Like Friends, on the Bloomerang blog.

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