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Fundraising Tuesday: Is More Mail Better?

November 15, 2022 by Dennis Fischman Leave a Comment

My family was standing around the kitchen table, which was covered with mail. My mother picked up one envelope as if it were a holy object. She handed it to me.

It was my college acceptance letter to Yale.

I was a high-school senior, and here I was, not only going to be among the first generation in my family to go to college, but accepted to an Ivy League school. I had also applied to Princeton (which turned me down), Boston University (accepted me), and three local universities in my home town of Pittsburgh. But Yale was my top choice.

I was smug. I made a great show of reading the Yale acceptance letter: once, twice. I folded it and looked up. “Well,” I said, “I guess we could have just applied to the one place, and saved all those other application fees.”

My mother nearly chased me out of the room!

Do you ever get that same feeling: that you could send out fewer letters and raise just as much money for your nonprofit? Does that feeling make sense? Or is it just like the immature way a high school senior thinks?

To answer, let’s look at what donors actually do with your mail.

One Donor’s Perspective on the Mail

I am not your typical donor. I saved all the fundraising appeals that my wife and I received in the first ten months of 2022, from January through October. There were 122 pieces of mail. A dozen a month. One every few days, from over 50 different organizations.

By far, the most typical number of mailings any organization sent was either 1 or 2. on the other hand, there were half a dozen organizations that mailed to us 5 or 6 times, or even more. Planned Parenthood alone sent 16 appeals, plus 2 newsletters!

So, you are wondering, do the Fischmans give to the groups that mail them most often or the ones that mail least often?

The answer is yes. We give to both.

What makes us give?

Looking at our donations over time, the number of mailings has no correlation at all with whether or not we gave, nor how much. It seems as if we give to groups that:

  • Express our values. Progressive and Jewish groups are high on the list.
  • Represent people we care about. Immigrants, LGBTQ+ people, low-income people…we know these folks, or are related to them, or have been there ourselves.
  • Have a local connection. We give to Greater Boston PFLAG over and above donations to national groups like GLSEN or the Task Force.
  • Are run by people we know. Rabbi Arthur Waskow of the Shalom Center, I’m looking at you!
  • Employed us or were our clients.

Now, this is 65-year-old donor behavior, not 35-year-old. Our family has had decades of donations to decide on already. For the most part, we go down our list and give to a lot of the same groups each year, adding some that have caught our attention.

Rarely do we drop a nonprofit from our list–whether they mail us once or sixteen times!

Is More Mail Better? Your Donors May Vary

If all donors were like Rona and me, sending one or two letters during the first ten months of the year would be ideal. But they’re not.

You can’t judge your donors by us–or by your own pattern of giving. Just as your board is not your audience when you communicate, you and the insiders at your organization are no indication of what your donors actually need, in order to become loyal donors.

The research says that most nonprofits (especially small nonprofits) do not ask often enough. Once a year is pitiful. Twice a year is leaving money on the table.

It's worthwhile for most nonprofits to send out appeal letters three or four times a year. Share on X

Those appeal letters should not be your only communications! Whether it’s by email, social media, text, phone, or in person, you should be thanking your donors and sharing valuable information and compelling stories all the time. 80% of your communications should be providing value to your supporters. 10% of them should ask your supporters for time. That will set up the remaining 10%, when you ask for money, to succeed.

But would your nonprofit be better off with three, four, or sixteen letters? It all depends on:

  • Your audience
  • Your budget
  • The amount you need to raise
  • The staff you can devote to fundraising and communications

At least, try adding ONE MORE fundraising appeal next year and see what happens.

It’s worth the “application fees.” And who knows, your extra fundraising letter might be just the one you need!

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Fundraising Tuesday: Mike Pence Shows What NOT to Do

November 8, 2022 by Dennis Fischman Leave a Comment

Pence mailing

When you're raising money, you must know your audience. Share on X Mike Pence, the former Vice President, didn’t know me at all.

Okay, I’ll admit he knew me well enough to know that I’m an inveterate reader, with close to 2000 reviews on Goodreads. (Or maybe, he just got lucky.)

But when Pence sent me a letter in the mail and the envelope said, “I signed a copy of my new book just for you!”, he lost me. Why?

I’m the kind of voter who hardly ever voted Republican before Trump, and never since.

I thought Pence was a nonentity before becoming Veep and a bootlicker during his term of office.

The only good thing Pence did as Vice President–refusing to collaborate with the seditious conspiracy to eliminate rule by the people in the U.S. and install an unelected President–was his simple duty. Anything else would been a crime.

You don’t have to agree with me (although I hope you do!). What you should see is that sending this mailing to me showed me:

  1. He didn’t know me.
  2. He lied when he implied he did.
  3. He was wasting money by targeting an audience he was never going to reach.

Is Your Nonprofit Making Mike Pence’s Marketing Mistakes?

You may have many mailing addresses in your database or CRM. Great! But what do you know about the people at those addresses?

  • Are you calling them by the right name?
  • Are you writing to them about something that would interest them, not your Board or your program staff?
  • Have you segmented your list so that different groups hear about different topics?
  • Are you adding names only with permission? When people ask to be removed from your list, do you comply?

Please don’t make the Mike Pence mistakes. Yes, I do mean “Don’t support Trump” or the movement to end democracy in this country–I’m not going to lie!

But even if you and I completely disagree on politics, we can agree that wasting your nonprofit’s money on mailings to the wrong people is a mistake, a bad idea, a step in the wrong direction. If you believe your organization is doing good work, ruining your reputation like this is a sin.

So Help Me God.

 

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In-Kind Fundraisers: An Overview and Helpful Tips

November 1, 2022 by Dennis Fischman Leave a Comment

A guest post by Wayne Elsey, Sneakers4Funds

Thousands of nonprofits across the country are short on the supplies they need to further their missions. Animal rescues don’t have enough blankets for their latest influx of kittens and puppies, and food banks are running low on the canned goods their beneficiaries need.

The culprit of this problem could be anything from underperforming fundraisers to a limited pool of dedicated supporters. Some nonprofits also find it challenging to decide where to allocate their funding. So as to combat these issues, nonprofits might choose to try a new way of fundraising: by requesting in-kind donations.

What Nonprofits Look for During In-Kind Fundraisers

In-kind donations are donations outside of traditional monetary gifts. Typically, these include goods, services, and time.

Almost any nonprofit organization can make use of in-kind donations. For example, if the organization helps underserved student-athletes, they might ask running stores to collect and donate athletic shoes.

For nonprofits, some of the benefits of setting up an in-kind fundraiser include:

  • Reduced operating costs
  • The ability to make a larger impact
  • The opportunity to grow as an organization
  • Providing a way to develop connections with other organizations

Despite these benefits, some nonprofits shy away from asking for in-kind donations because they aren’t sure what to request. Keep in mind that there are a wide variety of in-kind donations nonprofits can request, ranging from access to a fundraising event venue to goods like clothing and shoes. And as Sneakers4Funds explains, donating items like new, used, and gently worn running shoes can even help make the fundraiser more environmentally friendly.

In-kind fundraisers are incredibly impactful for nonprofits that are just getting started. In-kind donations like computers, office equipment, and professional services like accounting can help them get off the ground and expand their capabilities. These types of contributions have the unique ability to give nonprofits the exact items and tools they need to further their mission and reach more people.

How to Participate in In-Kind Fundraising as a Business

Businesses can play a role in the in-kind fundraising process, too. Many companies already contribute resources to philanthropic organizations, a part of the concept known as corporate social responsibility (CSR). CSR programs encourage businesses to find the organizations and cause that benefit from their contributions the most and make a difference for those missions.

How can businesses get started?

To get started, businesses need to find organizations with in-kind donation requests they can fulfill. To find the nonprofits that need their donations, companies should:

  • Look for new nonprofits in their area. If you are a business owner, look for young nonprofits without a large base of supporters. These organizations need in-kind donations the most so they can grow and serve more constituents.
  • Contact nonprofits with causes relevant to your business. Seek out local nonprofits with a mission that aligns with your business. If you own a running shoe store, reach out to your local community closet and ask if they need donations of athletic shoes.
  • Sponsor a charity event. Keep tabs on any local charity events like races or auctions. Sponsor these events by contributing your goods or services to help the nonprofit put on the event at a lower cost. A common way to support a charity auction, for example, is to contribute high-quality auction items. You’ll probably gain some valuable marketing during these experiences as well!

Once businesses find the right cause to support, they will need to decide how they will support the cause.

What can businesses do to support nonprofits?

During in-kind fundraisers, businesses have the opportunity to contribute exactly what nonprofits need, whether that is free coaching services for student-athletes or time from volunteers. Some of the common ways business owners can support nonprofits include:

  • Supplying free goods. Offer free items to nonprofits that need them. Your business might offer school supplies to local teachers or donate the items you sell to a relevant organization. To make a large impact, consider running a collection campaign like a shoe recycling program to collect additional goods from your staff, customers, and other members of the community.
  • Offering a free service. List of some of the services your business could provide to nonprofits. These services can be particular to the nonprofit’s cause, like a restaurant lending its head chef’s services to a soup kitchen. However, offering pro bono law, accounting, and business management services is standard and helps nonprofits better manage their organizations.
  • Asking employees to volunteer. Let employees know about opportunities to volunteer for a good cause, offering incentives like paid time off to encourage participation. When looking for these volunteer opportunities, get your employees involved in the process. Consider advertising these volunteer opportunities to your customers, involving everyone from teenagers and college students to seasoned trainers at your gym.

Because there is a wide variety of in-kind donations, businesses of all shapes and sizes can make impactful gifts. If you are a small business owner, keep in mind that you can also leverage the power of your community to come up with contributions that help nonprofits expand their offerings to more deserving beneficiaries.

The next time a local youth center asks for running shoe donations, be one of the individuals or companies that steps up to contribute.


Wayne Elsey head shotWayne Elsey is the founder and CEO of Elsey Enterprises (EE) and a member of the Forbes Business Development Council. Among his various independent brands, he is also the founder and CEO of Sneakers4Funds, which is a social enterprise that helps schools, churches, nonprofits, individuals and other organizations raise funds while helping to support micro-enterprise (small business) opportunities in developing nations.

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