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The Ideal Appeal Letter Begins With You

December 3, 2013 by Dennis Fischman 4 Comments

Thanksgiving weekend kicks off the annual scramble for donations in the U.S.  Your mailbox filled up with appeal letters from groups you support (and some you don’t). But did any of them look like this?

Next Step appeal letterNext Step filled their letter to my wife Rona with signs they care about her.

  • Calling her by name.  (I’m amazed how many groups still use the salutation “Dear Friend.”)
  • Creating visual appeal.  The photo catches the eye.
  • Using a real story.  It’s not just a photo: it’s a person, looking you in the eye, telling his story.
  • Adding a hand-written note.  It’s actually on an orange sticky note, and the content is personalized to Rona.
  • Directing her clearly how to give.

All of these elements make the letter vivid, attractive, and appealing.  But the most important thing that Next Step did was starting the letter with “You.” 

Next Step understands that donors will give if they feel that their donation is doing the good work.  As Seth Godin recently wrote, the donor is the hero of the story.  That’s why they give.

Now, your letter doesn’t literally have to start with “You.”  It would be boring if every letter did!  But when you wrote your organization’s annual appeal letter, did you start with the donor?  Did you do everything you could do to make them feel the letter was personally written for them?  And did you place the donor at the center of the story?

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The Tao of Twitter, for Nonprofits

November 25, 2013 by Dennis Fischman Leave a Comment

Author Mark W. Schaefer

Mark W. Schaefer, author of The Tao of Twitter

I started tweeting about nonprofit communications a year and a half ago. I would say, “The Tao of Twitter is the book I wish I had read back then,” except that might give you the impression it’s only for beginners. That would be untrue.

The Tao of Twitter is basic in the sense that it focuses on the basis underlying all successful social media–and a lot of life.

1. Targeted connections. “Systematically surround ourselves with people likely to want to know us, learn from us, and help us.”

2. Meaningful content. Write, blog, and tweet for the people you want to reach. Make sure what you say will be important to them.

3. Authentic helpfulness. Don’t sell. Connect. Find ways to help without already seeing (let alone asking for) a favor you can get in return.

One-third of the book elaborates these principles. One-third tells you how to put them into action through Twitter. And one-third tells you how to build on the basics and succeed.

Nonprofit organizations are in an especially good position to practice what Mark Schaefer preaches in The Tao of Twitter.  We may call it outreach, coalition-building, collaboration, or whatever, but acting together with a mission in mind is in the nonprofit DNA. Doing it online is just a natural outgrowth of what we do already.

Nonprofits know a lot about our subject matter, too.  When we write, blog, or tweet in order to be useful to our community, it does more for us and our reputation than if we blow our own horn.  The nifty new name for this approach is content marketing, but it’s how nonprofits have always made our reputation.

So I encourage you to read this slim book, then decide whether Twitter is the right medium for you.  And if it is, tweet me…and Mark.  I’m sure both of us will be happy to hear from you!

 

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Girls Who Read: A Poem

November 22, 2013 by Dennis Fischman 1 Comment

And now something on the lighter side, for all my fellow bibliophiles.

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