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TY Thursday: Thank You, Donor–You’re Welcome!

February 1, 2018 by Dennis Fischman Leave a Comment

welcome buddy

What should you do when a donor gives to your nonprofit for the first time? The obvious answer: thank them. But take it another step, and welcome them, too.

The Donor Welcome Kit

Thanking a new donor is essential, if you’re going to make the donor feel like the hero of the story. Welcoming a new donor invites him or her to think of your story together as ongoing.

A welcome kit (also called a packet or package) tells the donor, “You matter to us. You’re not just a cash cow. We’re in this together for the long haul.”

What should go into a welcome kit?

Pamela Grow suggests:

Typically your welcome package would go beyond a mere thank you letter to include items such as photographs, surveys, a benefits brochure, even a small gift such as a bookmark. Send them in an oversized envelope marked with a bold “Welcome!”

You can download a  kit that Pamela likes, from Mercy Corps, for an example.

How do you sound welcoming?

When you’re welcoming a donor, avoid any hint of a business transaction. The welcome kit is not an item they’ve purchased. It’s not a premium, or even a gift to a customer. It’s  a warm smile and a hug, delivered through the mail.

Nancy Schwartz advises, “Imagine you’re welcoming a new member of the family, perhaps your sister’s husband to be. You want to make him feel like a part of the family.”

breadAnother way to think about it: Rebecca H. Davis says you want your new donor to feel  “like you’ve just handed them a loaf of warm, homemade bread and told them you are really glad they showed up on a cold, rainy Sunday morning.” Mmm, yummy!

 

How soon should you send your welcome kit?

Everything moves faster today than it did only a few years ago. You probably have heard that donors should get a thank-you letter within a week of sending their gift. Within two days of the time you receive it is even better…and if you call them on the phone within those two days (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.

The same applies to the welcome kit: the sooner, the better.

“Mail the welcome pack out right after you receive the gift,” Nancy Schwartz advises. “Send it first class if you can swing it. Your donor has to receive it within two weeks of making their gift for full impact.”

Welcome by mail and email too

Happily, a lot of donors are giving online these days. Your nonprofit gets their gift almost instantaneously. That makes it easier for you to thank them, and then to welcome then, as soon after they donate as possible.

It also poses a problem. You may not receive the donor’s physical mailing address. At first, all you may have for them is an email address. Does that keep you from sending a welcome kit?

Don’t let it stop you. Here are three steps you can take to welcome online donors:

  1. Create a welcome series of emails. You can gradually share more information that makes your donor feel happy they decided to give.
  2. Interact online. In your welcome series, invite your donor to follow you on social media. Be sure to post content that they will like and share. Take good note of when they do, and which posts of yours grab their attention. That tells you what they really care about–and if you send them more content just like that, they will feel listened to.
  3. Ask for their mailing address. In your welcome series, tell your first-time donor why it will be worthwhile for them to get something from you through the mail. Not “we want to send you this.” Rather, “Because you care about ___, this is something you’ll want to see.”

Thanking your first-time donor is vital, but really, it’s the least you can do. Making them feel like an essential part of the cause you both care about: now, that’s really laying out the welcome mat!

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Fundraising Tuesday: Greetings and Salutations

January 30, 2018 by Dennis Fischman Leave a Comment

no recyclingWhen you’re sending an appeal letter to a donor, you want them to take the time to read it. Your biggest enemy? The recycling bin. Your biggest ally (once they open the envelope)? The salutation.

Call the donor by name if you want them to read on.

 

Salutations: “Dear Friend” Won’t Do

I was happy to see that out of the 72 nonprofits who sent me appeal letters in November or December 2017, 52 of them–70%–called me by name.

The names varied. Some used “Dear Dennis,” while others said “Dear Mr. Fischman.” Some addressed themselves to both my wife and me. Very few of them asked me what I preferred to be called, which is what I consider best practice. But all 52 started off on the right foot, because they wrote to me personally.

That means that the 15 nonprofits that wrote to “Dear Friend” fell behind, from the opening line of their appeal letter.

How to Create a Personal Salutation

I forgot your nameAs fundraising expert Gail Perry points out, “Your donor expects that you know her name and who she is, since she’s been sending you money for a while!” To meet that expectation, you have to ask what she or he or they like to be called (and you could find out their preferred pronoun at the same time).

Once you’ve asked, of course, you have to remember. You can use the greeting the donor prefers only if you keep good records.

This is where a donor database, or even better, a constituent relationship management system (CRM), is worth every penny you spend on it. It is time-consuming to use spreadsheets and merge fields to call people by name, but if you have a CRM, it’s simple.

Our friends at Capterra have published reviews of many of the best fundraising software, including CRM systems. It would be worth your while to make 2018 the year you get a tool that will let you be more personal with your donor. Keep your appeal letter out of the recycling bin!

 


This is the second of a series about improving your nonprofit’s fundraising appeal letters that will appear on Communicate! throughout the next two months. Next up: postscripts.

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TY Thursday: Four Weeks, No Thanks?

January 25, 2018 by Dennis Fischman Leave a Comment

January is almost done. Have you thanked donors?

Today is the fourth Thank-You Thursday since the end of the year. If you’re a nonprofit, have you sent a thank-you letter to all your December donors yet? If not, how long will it take?

Donors, how many gifts did you give that still haven’t been acknowledged? How does that make you feel?

December Matters

Nearly one third (31%) of annual giving occurs in December. In fact, 12% of all giving happens in the last three days of the year, according to our friends at Neon CRM.

So it’s no surprise if December feels like a blizzard at your nonprofit. You love watching the white envelopes swirl in (or your online totals mount), and you dread clearing them off your desk.

Thank-You’s Matter

Clearing those donations, by sending thanks to each donor, is like shoveling your sidewalk. You have to do it if you’re ever going to get anywhere!

Every donor that you can call is a donor you’re likely to hear from again. Penelope Burk, author of Donor-Centered Fundraising, has proven donors care about promptness.  In one test with board members calling within 48 hours, those called gave an average of 39% more than those not called – and they gave 42% more after 14 months!

If you can’t call every donor, you can still send the ideal thank-you letter. One element of the ideal letter is promptness. Yet here it is, four weeks later, and many of the organizations my wife and I gave to in December have still not sent that letter–or any letter at all.

Are you one of those organizations? Then you are putting next year’s donation at risk.

Donors, Your Voice Matters Most

Fellow donors, do you agree? Tell your favorite organization what it feels like when you give online and get an automatic email and then…crickets. Or when you put a check in the mail feeling a nice warm glow at making a difference…and then find out the organization didn’t bother to thank you for months at a time.

You can use the comments section below, or you can get in touch directly. Or you can use Twitter, like @thewhinydonor does.

The Whiny Donor

 

Seriously. How long are you going to make me wait for that thank you letter?

 

 

 

But whichever medium you use, please do let nonprofits know how much it matters to hear the words “thank you”!

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