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The Worst End-of-Year Email of 2016

January 9, 2017 by Dennis Fischman Leave a Comment

Yes, Virginia, it is a good idea to follow up your wonderful end-of-year appeal letter with email. But not any old email will do.

Remember, the person receiving your email gets as many messages in their inbox as you do! And what do you do with the majority of those messages? You scroll past them…to find messages from people you actually want to hear from.

Remember Why You Send an End-of-Year Email

Your goal is not merely to raise money. It’s to become one of the people that they actually want to hear from. You want every message–including the “asks”–to make your donors feel happy to be on your list.

Unfortunately, I have seen too many end-of-year emails that do just the opposite.

End-of-Year Email that Might End the Relationship

The nonprofit says, “Help us meet our year-end goal.”

  • The donor thinks, “Why does that matter to me? The goal is just a number. So is the date. You may care about your goal, but why should I?”

The nonprofit says, “It’s not too late to make your tax-deductible donation in 2016.”

  • The donor thinks, “I don’t give because of the tax deduction. Sure, I’ll take it, because who wouldn’t accept a few dollars back on their taxes? But I need a reason to give to you.”

The nonprofit says, “We haven’t heard from you yet.”

  • The donor thinks, “Oh, you noticed, did you? Good. But what makes you think you can just expect me to give?”

Ending the Relationship Before It Begins

And here’s the opening line of the worst email my wife and I received in 2016.

  • Our records indicate you haven’t donated to the [name of organization] yet this year. We need you now more than ever!

Not only does this nonprofit take a stuffy tone with us (“our records show”). Not only does its email focus on what the organization needs and not what we, the donors, want to accomplish. To the best of our knowledge, Rona and I have never given to this organization before.

My more suspicious side says this nonprofit is trying to scam us into believing we just forgot to give. They’re like the magazines that tell you “It’s time to renew your subscription” when you never subscribed before. That’s ugly. Nonprofits can do better than that!

But let’s give them the benefit of the doubt. Maybe they sincerely can’t tell the difference between their longtime donors and their first-time prospects. To the donors, it doesn’t matter if the nonprofit is deceptive or incompetent. That nonprofit has lost our trust.

Want to Do Better? Let Me Help

It’s a new year, and it’s time to plan a communications strategy that will make your email the first thing your donors want to read.

Email me, [email protected], and let’s make 2017 better from the start–for you and your donors.

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TY Thursday: Call and Thank Your Donors

January 5, 2017 by Dennis Fischman Leave a Comment

donor phone call thanks

Make a donor’s day. Call!

Sometimes the best thank-you letter a donor can get isn’t a letter. It’s a phone call.

Ideally, you’d do both. When the donation arrives, call and say, “You’ll be getting an official thank-you letter in a couple of days–but I wanted to call and thank you personally.”

Or, after you know the letter should have arrived, follow it up with a call. “I wanted to thank you again and tell you how much I appreciate your gift.”

What Calling to Say Thanks Does for Your Nonprofit

First off, you will feel great about talking to a donor.

Sure, there may be an awkward moment at the start of the call. The donor isn’t used to getting called out of the blue to be told “thank you.” (Sad,  but all too true!) She or he may be wary, thinking you’re about to ask for yet another gift.

When the donor realizes that you took the time to call just because they did a good thing and you want to acknowledge it, they are delighted. They may end up thanking you!

Second, you may learn more about the donor.

If you get a live person on the call and not a voicemail, they may be in the middle of something, or just not talkative. You respect their time, thank them, and move on. But if they seem open to conversation, then do what Tina Cincotti advises:

Say — “I don’t want to take up much of your time but would you be willing to share with me what inspired you to first give to ___________ (org name)?”

You can also ask things like:

  • Why does this cause matter to you?
  • What interests you most about our organization?
  • What expectations do you have of the organizations you support?
  • How often do you want to hear from us?
  • Would you like to be involved with us in other ways beyond being a donor?

(And don’t forget to make a note of what you hear, in your donor database!)

Third, even if you leave a voicemail, you build trust.

Your donor’s relationship with you follows a predictable path: first they get to know you, then they decide they like you, and finally they come to trust you. Leaving a personal message is a step along that path.

What all this adds up to is: your nonprofit makes more money!

According to Tom Ahern, first-time donors who get a personal thank you within 48 hours are 4x more likely to give a second gift. And you want that second gift, since donor retention rates skyrocket from 22.9% to 60.8%.

So, let’s see.

Don't call. That first-time donor never gives again. Call. They give and keep on giving. Share on X
Seems like a simple choice, doesn’t it?

That’s why Gail Perry says using the phone to thank donors is “highly profitable fundraising.” And Steven Shattuck of Bloomerang says you should call every new donor: no excuses!

How to Make a Thank-You Call

Who should call your donors? The best people to make those thank-you calls are Board members and volunteers. Like the donor, they have given time or money, or both, because they care about the organization and its mission. They reinforce the donor’s decision to give, because they are other people “just like you” who give.

Should your callers follow a script? They should have a script (and look at the Gail Perry and Tina Cincotti links above for examples. But they should feel free to adapt it so it sounds like their own voice. That’s particularly important when leaving voicemail. If the donor thinks it’s a sales call, she or he will hang up before hearing your gratitude. A conversational tone of voice can keep them listening.

How long should you stay on the phone? That depends entirely on the donor. If the reaction you hear is, “Oh, that’s so nice! Thank you, goodbye,” don’t try to extend the conversation. If the donor is willing to have a conversation with you, so much the better. If you reach voicemail, say what you mean to say, slowly, with feeling, and that is that.

Thank-You Calls to Mobile Phones

call on mobile phone

I’m a baby boomer. Most donors are my age or older, and we’re used to getting phone calls on our land lines (or what we used to call just “the phone”).

Increasingly, though, Generations X and Y are starting to give…and increasingly, the mobile phone is the only phone they have. On mobile phones, it’s a nuisance to see that you’ve missed a call, go to voicemail, and play it back. So, leaving voicemail on mobile is not effective: few people are picking it up.

The etiquette among younger donors is that if you call them and they recognize the caller, it’s up to them to call back. (If they don’t, then it’s your problem!) So how do you use the phone to thank a donor who’s mobile?

Text them. At least, that’s what a mobile phone expert told our friends at Blue Avocado. Actually, he advised matching the channel of the thank-you to the channel of the gift.

If someone makes a donation as a result of a text, text them right away with a thank you. A day or two later, send another thank you by email so they get two thanks. If they donated as a result of an email, send them a thank-you email right away, and then follow it up with a snail mail thank you.
What’s your experience thanking donors? What works best for you?

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Your Nonprofit New Year’s Resolutions

January 2, 2017 by Dennis Fischman Leave a Comment

resolutions

10 easy ways to communicate better in 2017

It’s a new year.  Here are ten resolutions that every organization should make to improve their communications in 2017.

  1. Google yourself. What are the first things people see about you? Would you support the group you see on screen?
  2. Take charge of your brand. Create your own reputation through the news you make and the stories you post.
  3. Cultivate local reporters.  They work too hard: if you feed them human interest stories and photos, they’ll be grateful.
  4. Everyone in your organization speaks for you.  What are they saying to their friends? Do they have stories to tell your supporters?
  5. Your website: keystone of all your communications.  Ask an outsider to click through it. Is it easy to navigate? Informative? Fun?
  6. Facebook is a party, not a meeting.  Find ways to get your fans talking with each other.  They’ll come back more often and like you better.
  7. Which social media should your group use?  Depends.  Who do you want to reach?  Where do they go when they’re online?
  8. Horror movie: “I mail to dead people.” In January, take people off your postal and email lists if you haven’t heard from them since 2013.
  9. Photos: not just for breakfast any more. Your readers want to consume photos at every meal, including online posts.
  10. Your good name is your most valuable asset.  What’s it worth to you?  THAT’S the return on investment for your communications.

Resolutions are not made to be broken! You can do #1 right away, as in the moment you finish reading this blog post. The other items will take time, so make a plan. For instance, to put #5 into action, who are you going to ask to review your website, and will you get their feedback in person, or by email, or…?

As your communications consultant, I can help your nonprofit make 2017 the year you communicate better with your donors and raise more money. Let’s talk about how. Email me at [email protected] and let’s start the new year right.

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