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TY Thursday: The Love You Save May Be Your Donors

April 28, 2016 by Dennis Fischman Leave a Comment

leavingWhen a donor stops giving, it’s like a lover walking out the door.

They didn’t just wake up one day and decide to leave. Their reasons have been piling up, little by little, over time, until they just couldn’t stay any longer.

What are the reasons that donors say goodbye? Jay Love lists five:

1. Thought the charity did not need them 5%
2. No information on how monies were used 8%
3. No memory of supporting 9%
4. Never thanked for donating     13%
5. Poor service or communication     18%

Poor communication kills marriages. If your donors are saying, “You never listen to me and we hardly talk except what you want money,” they are going to file for divorce.

Get some help with your communications now. This marriage can be saved.

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Fundraising Tuesday: How Often Should You Ask?

April 19, 2016 by Dennis Fischman Leave a Comment

You've got mail!When people find out I consult to nonprofits about their communications and fundraising, they usually ask me one of two questions.

One is, “Which social media should we use?” The other is, “How often should we ask our donors for money?”

The best answer is, “It depends on you and your donors.” You want to adopt a Goldilocks strategy: not too much, not too little, just right.

And that depends on what your donors prefer–and how well you can write an appeal letter that puts your donors front and center.

“Same Time Next Year” is Not Enough

If your nonprofit is asking for money only once a year, however, chances are you’re leaving money on the table…and losing donors.

Most nonprofits are asking for money more than once a year. Kivi Leroux Miller’s survey found that about a third of organizations are sending fundraising appeals by direct mail every few months, or more frequently! Another third are sending at least twice a year.

If you’re mailing once a year, other organizations are tapping donors’ charitable impulses when you’re not even looking.

Find Out for Yourself

You can determine how often you should ask: by testing.

Not by asking your donors. “Because how people say they’ll behave is often quite different from the way they’ll actually behave,” as Claire Axelrad points out.

Years ago there was a famous door-to-door study where survey researchers knocked on people’s doors and asked them what magazines they read. Wanting to look “smart” people answered with things like “Time” and “Life” and “The New Yorker.” Then researchers looked in their trash cans. They found all sorts of “junk” and “gossip” literature that none of the respondents mentioned.

Donors say the best way to raise money from them is to mail once a year. But there is a reason that the 2016 Nonprofit Communications Trends Report found that most nonprofits are mailing twice or four times a year instead. It works, for most!

Consider making 2016 an experiment. If you’ve previously mailed an appeal letter only at the end of the year, try adding a spring or fall appeal. If you’ve sent out two, try upping it to three or four. See what happens!

Can You Mail Too Often?

Does three or four appeal letters a year sound like too much? Claire Axelrad tells us, “Large organizations who’ve done this testing are now mailing monthly, with 3 – 4 emails in between! Is this right for you? The only way to know is to test it for yourself. However, it’s not a bad place to begin.”

If you’re a large organization, that is! Smaller nonprofits may find it a big investment of time and money to send out the ideal appeal letter two, three, or four times a year. I’d urge you to make the investment, however. It’s how you’ll find out what works for you.

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Fundraising Tuesday: Donors Give for the Wrong Reasons

April 12, 2016 by Dennis Fischman Leave a Comment

Heart has its reasons

My friend fretted, her hand tapping the table. “I’m going out with this great guy, and he seems to really love me, but….”

“But what?” I asked.

“But I’m not sure he really knows me. What if he’s in love for the wrong reasons?”

I shook my head in disbelief. My friend is smart, attractive, accomplished, warm, and loving. Chances are, this guy knows very well who she is. But if he doesn’t yet, he will…and it would be a tragic mistake to turn him away.

A tragic mistake I see nonprofits making all too often! Share on X

How to Make Your Donors Think Twice

How do nonprofits tell donors, “Don’t love me for the wrong reasons”? Here’s how you do it:

  • Don’t show any emotion in your appeal letters.
  • Don’t tell any stories.
  • Don’t show any pictures–much less, pictures that touch the donors’ hearts.
  • Throw statistics at them at every opportunity.
  • Talk to living, breathing people the same way you’d answer questions in a grant proposal.
  • At all cost, avoid finding out who your donors are and what they really want, and giving it to them. That would just be leading them on.

Your Donors Have Their Own Reasons to Give

Deciding to donate to a cause is an affair of the heart, not just of the head. Honor your donors’ good hearts. Don’t second-guess their motives.

Yes, of course, you should make it possible for donors to find out all the details about you. Make your financial statements public. Give evidence of your impact. If you have a “theory of change,” put it out there, on a back page of your website.

But not in your newsletter, and not in your fundraising appeals!

When you communicate with your donors, it’s like going on a date with the one who loves you. Don’t worry about reasons. “The heart has its reasons, of which reason knows nothing.” (Pascal)

 

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