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TY Thursday: Say It with a Video

June 8, 2017 by Dennis Fischman Leave a Comment

 

If you work at a nonprofit organization, you’re probably pretty charitable yourself. Are you getting a lot of thank-you letters in the mail? Great. But have you ever received a thank-you video on your phone or computer?

You would remember if you had.

The Personal Impact of a Thank-You Video

There’s something about the face and voice of a real person saying “thanks.” Yes, I love getting thank-you letters in the mail.Video can’t substitute for an envelope with a stamp on it that you can hold in your had. But it can add.

A video can show you where your donation made a difference. That’s the approach The Nature Conservancy takes.

It can present the faces of the people who are doing the work, as charity:water did with their staff.

Or it can show you the faces of the people whose lives are better because you helped. The Children’s Hospital Foundation took that approach. They even titled their video “Thank you for supporting kids like me.”

Making Your Thank-You Video

These examples come from larger organizations, but the thank-you video is a great tool for the small nonprofit too. If you have a smart phone, you have a camera in your pocket.

Production values are not what matter in a thank-you. Here’s what does (according to Raymund Flandez, writing in the Chronicle of Philanthropy):

  1. Be brief. Don’t send out a fifteen-minute description of everything you do. One minute of gratitude says it much better.
  2. Say thanks–and say why. Let the donor know the impact his or her gift has made.
  3. Speak personally. Make sure the donor can tell who it is that’s saying thank-you and why they care.

Sharing Your Thank-You Video

Once you’ve made your thank-you video, you have multiple ways to share it.

You can email it to the donor–but sending it as an attachment may make recipients worry about being spammed. Your video is more likely to be seen if you’re using an email service like MailChimp that allows you to embed the video in your message.

You can distribute the thank-you video through your Facebook page or other social media. You can post it permanently on your website or YouTube page, so you have the link to share in the future.

And you can personalize it. With a very little bit of editing skill, you can add the individual donor’s name to the basic video and thank him or her directly. Try personalizing some of your thank-you videos and see how that affects your donor renewal!

 

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Fundraising Tuesday: Wedding Season for Donors

June 6, 2017 by Dennis Fischman Leave a Comment

When we were ready, we both knewI never asked my wife to marry me. I didn’t have to.

When we were ready, we both knew.

We’d met when I was in grad school and Rona was already working full time.

I finished my dissertation. We moved to a different city. I started a new job, and I remained the same sweet guy she thought she knew all along.

One day, Rona said, “Everything’s going fine. Should we pick a date?” I just said “Yes.” And nine months later, we were married. Yes, a June wedding!

Your nonprofit is building a relationship with every potential donor you meet.

  • A donor “goes out with” you when they get your newsletter and email. Make sure you’re charming every time.
  • They “go steady” when they follow you on social media or come to your events. Make them feel special when they do.
  • They “get engaged” when they donate time or money.  Your thank-you is like slipping on the engagement ring.
  • When they give two or three times, they’ve said “I do.”

Now, your sweet donors may not be as eager as Rona was. You may have to go down on one knee and ask. But when the donor is ready, you should know.

Your relationship should be that strong. Is it wedding season for your donors?

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TY Thursday: Thanking Donors Makes You Happy

June 1, 2017 by Dennis Fischman Leave a Comment

grateful happyWe’ve been talking about the hows and whys of thanking your donors, every Thursday for over a year. But we still haven’t mentioned the best reason to say “thank you.”

It will make you happy.

As reported in Inc. magazine, “A team of researchers out of Indiana University led by Prathik Kini recruited 43 subjects suffering from anxiety or depression. Half of this group were assigned a simple gratitude exercise — writing letters of thanks to people in their lives — and three months later all 43 underwent brain scans.”

The results?

The participants who’d completed the gratitude task months earlier not only reported feeling more gratefulness two weeks after the task than members of the control group, but also, months later, showed more gratitude-related brain activity in the scanner.

And their attitude of gratitude is linked with happiness, optimism, calmness, willpower, and other psychological benefits. Saying thank you is good for your mental health! Share on X

“Something as simple as writing down three things you’re grateful for every day for 21 days in a row significantly increases your level of optimism, and it holds for the next six months. The research is amazing,” Harvard researcher and author Shawn Achor told Inc.com.

Be good to yourself: say “thank you”

Writing thank-you letters is a way to express gratitude. We know donors want it. We know nonprofits benefitHappy grateful from it. And now, we know it’s a work task you can carry you that will actually be good for you.

So, why not try it? Write three thank-you letters every day for the next twenty-one days. You’ll be making your outlook brighter AND making donors feel appreciated. A happy result!

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