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Who is your nonprofit’s Malala?

August 21, 2017 by Dennis Fischman Leave a Comment

Malala YousafzaiTMichelle Obamaoday’s example of great nonprofit communications comes from someone you might have heard of before: Michelle Obama.

And it’s about another person you might know about: Malala Yousafzai.

The letter

Obama sent the following letter to my friend Carol (and perhaps a few million others).

Twenty years ago today, in a part of Pakistan where women and girls are so often silenced, a girl was born who would one day use her voice to change the world.

Her name is Malala Yousafzai, and she is one of my heroes.

Despite threats from Taliban terrorists who banned girls in her community from attending school, Malala’s father, a teacher, believed that his daughter should get an education. And Malala bravely spoke out about the dangers she faced, writing a blog about her fears that the Taliban would attack her school.

The Taliban sought to retaliate, and in October of 2012, as Malala and her friends were traveling home from school, a gunman stormed their school bus and shot her in the head.

Thankfully, Malala survived, and she refused to be silenced. In the years since, she has traveled the globe, fighting for girls’ education, and she won a Nobel Peace Prize for her extraordinary efforts. She did all of this before even finishing high school — in fact, she graduated just last week!

There are young people like Malala in every corner of the globe who are determined to get an education worthy of their promise. In the new chapter of our lives, Barack and I are committed to doing whatever we can to support these young leaders.

I hope you’ll join me in wishing Malala a happy birthday and in working to ensure that every girl has the chance to fulfill her boundless potential.

— Michelle

Donate today to support the Obama Foundation’s work, including our ongoing investment in young leaders across the globe.

Why the letter works

Notice that the letter says practically nothing about the Obama Foundation, or Michelle, or Barack. It’s all about Malala Yousafzai…and you, the donor.

  • It tells an inspiring story–one that particularly appeals to female donors, like Carol.
  • It ties it to something that’s going on right now: Yousafzai’s bithday and high school graduation. (And just this week, she was accepted at Oxford.)
  • It asks for money. (In the actual email, there’s a “Donate” button right below the postscript.)

You don’t have to be Michelle Obama. Write a letter like this, and it will work for your nonprofit, too.

And you don’t need a world-famous figure, either. Whose story will your audience identify with? Find your Malala, then tell your donors, “Be on her side. Donate.”

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TY Thursday: 3 Things You Need to Write a Great TY

August 17, 2017 by Dennis Fischman Leave a Comment

bride writingDid you ever sit down to write a batch of thank-you letters and realize, “I don’t know who half of these people are”?

If you’ve gotten married recently, you might know what I mean. There are all those gifts from people who are friends of your parents. You might know them by name…or not. You might recognize their faces…or not.

But they wished you well and sent you a gift.

So you want to thank them. You want to appreciate their time, effort, and expense. But you end up writing a dozen, or two dozen, or a hundred letters that all sound the same. “Why am I doing this?” you think. “Will it make a difference to this person anyway?” And what should be a joy becomes a tiresome duty.

It’s a sad situation. It’s a situation that too many nonprofits find themselves in when they sit down to write thank-you letters to donors.

And it doesn’t have to be that way.

The 3 Things You Need to Write a Great TY

You can make writing a thank-you letter a joy if you prepare in advance. Here are the three things you need to have on hand before you write your TY (or record it on video).Continue Reading

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Fundraising Tuesday: Your Donors Need Watering

August 15, 2017 by Dennis Fischman Leave a Comment

watering plants

Tend your donors all year round

I put a plant into the ground.  Then I forgot about it.

The sun baked it.  It drooped.  It withered.

Oops!  Well, no problem.  I’ll just water it now.

Wait, why isn’t it coming back to life?

When your organization ignores a donor for months at a time, you are scorching and burning your relationship.

You may get lucky.  Their feelings for you may be so hardy that you can bring the relationship back to life with a really good appeal.  Most often, though, you’ll be watering a dead plant and wondering why it isn’t growing.

Real communications are the water of life.  Give your donors some water every week, and watch your relationships flower.

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