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Thank-You Thursday: Many Thanks!

May 26, 2016 by Dennis Fischman Leave a Comment

Did you do a spring fundraising appeal? Are you sending out a lot of thank-you notes?   Here are some great tips on writing thank-yous that people will remember.

  1. Caryn Stein of Network for Good gives us 5 Rules for Thanking Donors.
  2. Pamela Grow shares A free thank you letter template you can swipe!
  3. Beth Ann Locke advises us, “Start with appreciation. End with thanks. And liberally sprinkle gratitude in between.” Find out how in Resolution 2014.
  4. Gail Perry of Fired-up Fundraising tells us How to Craft a Killer Thank-You Letter.
  5. I’d be silly not to mention my own article, The Ideal Thank-You Letter Went Out Today. (It’s the sequel to The Ideal Appeal Letter Begins With You.)

My friend Ann Green has it right: we should be thanking our donors all year long.  In fact, she suggests we set up thank-you calendars the same way we set up editorial calendars.  Now, there’s a resolution to keep in 2016!

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Fundraising Tuesday: Write Me a Love Letter

May 24, 2016 by Dennis Fischman Leave a Comment

Cyrano de Bergerac

Cyrano could write a love letter. Can your nonprofit?

Listen, my friends: I’ve been trying to tell you how to write the ideal appeal letter in many different ways.

I’ve mentioned that your Board is not your audience, it’s your donors…and that you need to make your donor feel like the hero of the story, and get to know them, remember them, and thank them.

Forget what I said. Someone I just met said it better.

Why Donors Give

I was speaking to a conference of people with disabilities in the northeast U.S. last week. I was explaining that bragging about your organization and its accomplishments may make donors say, “That’s nice, but why should I care?”

I told them donors give not because you do good work but because giving makes them feel good about themselves. “Because of you,” the nonprofit should say to the donor, “a wonderful thing is happening.”

One participant at the conference turned his wheelchair to face me and raised his hand. “Now I get it,” he said.”What you’re saying is You want to write the donor a love letter. Share on X

Why a Good Appeal Letter is like a Love Letter

No heartsick suitor ever won his lady’s love by boasting. “I’m so great. I’ve done so well in so many ways. I deserve your love, so love me.” Sorry, Romeo, that’s not going to touch the heart.

What you have to say in your letter is what makes the other person–in this case, the donor–so love-able. Their values. The cause they support. The difference they make with each donation.

Persuade your donor that it’s their action that changes the world for the endangered people, species, or ecosystem they care about. Your organization is the vehicle by which they express what’s best about themselves–but only the vehicle.

Don’t focus on getting them to love you. Show the donor you love them.

Are you puzzled about how to write a love letter to your donor? Email me at [email protected]. I’ll be your Cyrano and show you the way to your donor’s heart.

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How NOT to Market Your Services

May 23, 2016 by Dennis Fischman 5 Comments

My wife, realtor Rona Fischman, was listening to a webinar when her phone began to ring. She didn’t recognize the number, but it might have been another realtor calling about a transaction in progress.  She decided to answer.

“Hello, this is [fill-in-the-blank] Media calling about your website.”

Woman grimacing at phone

Not the reaction you want.

Rona groaned. This company had been leaving messages on her voicemail for days.  “I’m listening to a webinar right now. If my website is on fire, tell me so.  Otherwise, call me back after the webinar.”

“Do you know that half the links on your home page are broken and that people who click on them will see 404 errors?”

“No, I didn’t know that. After the webinar, I will check on it.”

In fact, Rona checked her website–on Chrome, IE, and Firefox, just to make sure–and there were no broken links.  Later, she received an email from the company that had called her.  They apologized for “startling” her and listed several other “problems” with her website.  Some of them did not exist.  Others are not problems for Rona because her business model does not require a huge volume of clients.

In short, they lied to her and never took the time to find out what she really might need.

This is the internet age.  Wouldn’t it be easy to spend a little time looking at Rona’s website and finding comments about her on Angie’s List, etc., and figure out where you could really add value to her communications?

Whether you are out to make a profit or looking to recruit support for your good cause, you owe it to yourself to treat the client with respect and personalize your message.

Have you ever encountered a sales pitch like the one Rona heard? How did you react when you heard or read it?

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