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Fundraising Tuesday: Nice to Meet You. Please Give Now?

October 3, 2017 by Dennis Fischman Leave a Comment

bait and switchHave you ever joined a professional organization because of the opportunities it offered–and then find out your first opportunity was to be asked for more money?

This is exactly what happened to my wife, Rona. She didn’t like being treated that way…and neither do people who want to know more about your nonprofit.

Nice to Meet You. Please Give Now!

Rona joined the “Local First” organization in the city where her real estate office is based. The Shop Local First movement does many good things for the community and the environment. For her membership dues, however, Rona was promised tangible benefits like business improvement seminars, inclusion in a local business directory, marketing opportunities, and advisories about local policy changes that might affect her business.

She was not promised that local charities would call her for money–before she got any of the benefits of membership!

Yet within a week, she got several calls asking for $100 or more. Here’s how one of those nonprofits followed up that fundraising phone call by email:

Dear Rona,

Following up on our brief conversation this morning, please see the attached e-packet about the “100 by 100” [city name] Business Community Scholarship Fund.  The “100 by 100” is a way for 4Buyers Real Estate to be engaged with the community, receive some recognition as a business that cares about the betterment of [the city], and support the students and faculty of the city’s only public high school….

It wasn’t the Local First group asking Rona for more money a week after she’d paid her membership dues. It was a nonprofit with access to their membership list. But how do you think Rona felt about her decision to join when, before she even received a membership card, she received a solicitation?

What to Do When a Person Gives You Contact Info

We are deluged these days with phone calls and emails. Go on vacation, come back, and check your voicemail and email. You’ll see what I mean.

When a person asks for more information about your nonprofit and gives you a phone number or an email address, she is taking a big step, like Rona did when she joined the Local First organization. That person is trusting you to use her contact information the way she agreed to have it used. You must show her she put her trust in the right place.

If she asked for more information, give her more information. If she signed up to attend an event, make sure she’s invited. ou can also start building a relationship by asking her more about her interests…and listening to and making a note of the answers.

What you can’t do is turn around and ask her for money right away.

Don’t Play the Numbers Game

playing the numbers Now wait, you say. I receive multiple “asks” from many well-known national organizations–even some I’ve never given to before.

They must know what they’re doing! Why shouldn’t my community-based organization do the same?

You can certainly do that…IF:

  • You have a huge mailing list. The national organizations are playing a numbers game. They’re calculating that if even 2% of the people they’re mailing to will donate, they’ll make a lot of money. If you have a list of 1,000 names, though, and only 20 of them donate, you may not even make back the cost of doing the mailing.
  • You’re willing to see those donors make a one-time gift and then walk away. Fewer than 30% of donors who gave to an organization for the first time in 2014 gave again in 2015. You may get a few donations by asking right away. You’ll get a lot more, over a lot more years, by creating loyal donors.

You don’t have to play the numbers game. At Communicate! Consulting, we specialize in helping you make loyal friends, instead. For a free consultation, email [email protected].

 

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Arts Nonprofits: To Get Gifts, Tell Stories!

October 2, 2017 by Dennis Fischman Leave a Comment

arts audience stories

Speak to your audience with stories

I work in the arts.

All you fundraisers who work for human service organizations, you have these heartwarming stories to tell–about children learning to read, or families getting food to eat.

But I raise money for a theater company. Can I use storytelling in my fundraising too?”

I heard this question when I presented a Nonprofit Academy webinar called Where’s the Story? Discovering Stories that Drive Donations. But it wasn’t the first time I’d heard it. And every time I hear it, it makes me want to cry.

If your nonprofit is an arts organization, storytelling is in your organizational DNA. It’s in the drama you put on stage, or the moment you capture in paint, or the music you present to a live audience. You take the randomness of everyday events and shape it, so people will stop, look, listen, and wonder. That’s what a good story does too.

So yes, arts organizations, you can tell stories to your donors. In fact, they are the perfect audience for them! But it’s up to you to find and craft those stories. Here’s how.

Stories are about people

The first thing to do is figure out the protagonist of your story. Who is the story about?

I think that’s what was puzzling the webinar participant who worked for the theater company, the one who asked me that question. She was probably thinking about things like the schedule of plays this season, or the artistic choices involved in the direction and staging, or the great reviews the production has already received, and asking herself, “What’s the story here?”

And she was right. Those are not stories–because they have no protagonist, no central character to follow.

You can turn statements into stories

Focus on a protagonist with a problem, and you can transform dry facts into dramatic stories. For example, you could take a list of titles of plays and turn it into this message from your Artistic Director:

Antigone-613X463“As 2016 goes on, I have been dreading each day’s news. One act of mass violence has followed another around the globe. I look to political leaders, hoping for solace and wisdom, and instead I see them spreading fear and hatred.”

“Here in our theater, I shudder…and I wonder, what can we do as a theater to bring us back to our a sense of our shared humanity? The 2017 season is our answer. We begin with Antigone, a story of a woman caught on the losing side of a civil war who refuses to put loyalty to nation over loyalty to family…”

Notice! Instead of a list, now you have:

  • a person (your Artistic Director)
  • facing a challenge (how do I stop feeling overwhelmed and make a contribution to a more peaceful world?)
  • and overcoming it (through this year’s program)

That’s classic narrative. You’ve turned a statement into a story. And your donors are going to notice, too.

Stories speak to an arts audience

The thing is, unless your Artistic Director is really well-known and loved, it’s not her or his story your donors want to hear.

As fundraising expert Tom Ahern puts it, donors are only really interested in two things. “What did you do with the money I gave you?” and “What difference did it make?”

And the difference they want to hear about is probably not that it made the AD feel worthwhile, or even that it gave jobs to dozens of actors and set painters.

What difference do the arts make to the audience?

Your donors are interested in the experience of the arts. They know what it’s like for them to walk around a Rodin and look at it from all sides, or hear unexpected music in the subway, or go to a play. They want you to make sure others share that experience.

Raisin in the Sun

Raisin in the Sun

Can you find audience members who will tell any of these stories?

  1. “I never liked Shakespeare. When they tried to teach it to me forty years ago in high school, I tuned it out. But then my wife dragged me to your production of King Lear, and I wept for a man looking back at the ruin of his life. Now the words make sense, and they make me think about my own life.”

2. “I thought my family was the only one where parents and children fought about how to stand up proud against people who want to put us down. Now that I’ve seen Raisin in the Sun, I will never look at my parents the same way again.

3. “My mind was whirling. My heart was downcast. Your production of Stomp was better than medicine. I am going back tomorrow!”

If I gave money to your organization and heard these stories, I would rejoice. And give again.

What’s another story you can tell that would move your arts supporters to give?

 

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TY Thursday: I Thought You’d Be Interested in This

September 28, 2017 by Dennis Fischman Leave a Comment

being interested

One of the best ways you can thank a donor is to show them you know what they’re interested in–and talk about their interests.

How do you do that? Here’s a good example.

A Personal Email to a Donor: Me!

My wife Rona and I are longtime supporters of RESPOND, the Somerville, MA based organization working to end domestic violence. Their Chief Development Director, Danielle Kempe, knows that. So, look at the personal email she sent me just this week:

Good morning Dennis,

Hope all is well!

I just heard a client success story for our programs office that I thought you’d be interested in too.

This August, we moved a resident into her own apartment/independent living. She was excited to have her own space in her own name. As we did her exit interview, she said what she was most grateful for and would remember was RESPOND being there for her as she went through the immigration process.

In these times when immigration reform is at the center of every discussion, families are in fear, and it is one of the reason why people are afraid to report domestic violence, RESPOND was more than just a roof over her head. While at RESPOND, she was able to get a green card, take ESL classes, obtain gainful employment, and is set to start college classes. The safety planning tools will help her keep safe from her abuser, and the empowerment RESPOND provided will keep her strengthened for her future.

All the best,

Danielle Kempe

P.S. Hope to see you at our open house! Details below.

Why This Email Interested the Donor

As Development Director, Danielle has RESPOND’s database at her fingertips. She knows the recency, frequency, and monetary value of the gifts that Rona and I have made over the years: not that large, but consistent.

Danielle also knows we care about the safety and dignity of immigrants. How does she know that? I suspect it’s because she made a point of meeting with me after a a few months on the job, and we discussed it then. She probably went back to the office and made a note in the database of the donor’s interests. That’s what I would do in her place.

interested in immigrants

You can tell Rona and I are interested in immigrants!

Danielle and I have followed each other on social media for a while, too, and she’s seen some of the posts I’ve put up, and my photo with the words “#HeretoStay-I Support DACA” on my personal Facebook page. If she’s really good, and her database allows it, she has my feed at her fingertips too.

Show Your Interest to the Donor by Recognizing Theirs

Can you do as well as Danielle at RESPOND did? Ask yourself:

  • Do you know the names of your loyal donors?
  • Do you understand what they’re interested in, besides your organization?
  • Are you taking steps to find out? And,
  • Are you unselfishly giving them information they will enjoy that makes them say, “That organization really knows me”?

The more the donor believes you are paying attention to them as a person, the more they will feel you’re not just looking at them as a wallet. You have a relationship.

Now, that’s interesting!

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