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Fundraising Tuesday: Why Should Donors Vote for YOU?

November 7, 2017 by Dennis Fischman Leave a Comment

It’s Election Day in Massachusetts. Please remember to vote today–and to train your volunteers all the time!

campaign volunteer

What do your volunteers say about who you are?

My dear wife Rona Fischman is constantly shaking her head at what passes for communication.

I told you before about the phone solicitor who lied to her, the email marketer who never told her the truth, and the bank that failed to earn her interest.

Here’s the story of the campaign volunteer who nearly lost her vote–in one phone call.

Why Should I Vote for You?

On the Saturday before Election Day, Rona got a live call to her business phone from an Alderman at Large candidate’s organization. (An Alderman is like a city councilor.) The volunteer asked Rona if this candidate could count on her vote.

Rona said something like this, “I have four votes. Two are spoken for. The other two are up for grabs. Tell me why your candidate should get one of them.”

The guy on the phone was gobsmacked. He could not tell her why she should vote for his candidate. After a short silence, he said “____ will work tirelessly for the good of the people of Somerville,” and hung up.

Rona went on Facebook and asked all her friends, “Should this candidate lose my vote because his calling staff don’t have a clue why he’s right for the city?”

That’s not the kind of question a candidate wants voters to ask.  It’s not the kind of question your nonprofit organization wants its donors to ask, either.

To Win Donors, Train Your Volunteers

Please, please, please train your volunteers.  At the moment they interact the public, they are your organization.  What they do and say is what you stand for–at least to the person interacting with them.  And when you ask for donations, you will need that person to vote yes.

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What’s Your Campaign Story, Nonprofit?

November 6, 2017 by Dennis Fischman Leave a Comment

As tomorrow’s election approaches, the news is full of last year’s election. Particularly, both presidential candidate Hillary Rodham Clinton and seasoned campaign manager and Democratic National Committee operative Donna Brazile have books out trying to explain what happened.

campaign biographyLooking back at elections can teach us something, but there’s an equally interesting kind of book to read: the kind that’s published before the election. We’re talking about the campaign biography.

Barack Obama’s The Audacity of Hope was a brilliant example. It told the story of who he was and made that the story of what we, the voters, wanted to see. It won him donations, volunteers, votes. It helped make him President.

Nonprofits can learn a lot from the campaign biography.

There’s an election going on, and your nonprofit organization is one of the candidates.

You’re competing for volunteer time.  You’re competing for donor money.  Everyone in your community can choose from a slate of good causes and “cast their vote”–for you, for a similar organization, or for a completely different cause that also appeals to them.

You need name recognition to win.  No one will vote for you if they don’t know who you are.  But how do you make sure people hear about you, and remember your name?

Tell stories.

Tell stories that dramatize the problem you’re trying to solve.  Tell stories that give people hope that there are solutions.  Give them a chance to be the hero of the story by giving you their time or money.

When they choose between you and other organizations, make sure they know your name.  Then you’ll have a chance to get their vote.

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TY Thursday: Your Donors Will Love This Video

November 2, 2017 by Dennis Fischman Leave a Comment

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ed8oVESVL00&feature=youtu.be

If you want to get your donors to give to your nonprofit again, you must thank them. Not once in a letter, but many times, in as many ways as you can.

I’ve been talking with you about thanking your donors using video. It’s easier than you think, and it puts small nonprofits on the same footing as huge ones.

Don’t believe me? Take it from my colleague Pauline Urbano Hechler of Hechler Consulting. A client of hers, a school, was happy to receive its first major gift. Pauline suggested they send the donor, Edna, a thank-you video.

Edna loved it. Take a look for yourself. Would your donors love it too?

 


You should plan to thank your donors throughout the year. But how? Every Thursday, I’ll share a different idea.

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