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Fundraising Tuesday: Will the Donor Open Your Envelope?

January 15, 2019 by Dennis Fischman Leave a Comment

Did your nonprofit raise the money you hoped to raise at the end of the year? If so, congratulations. But if not, maybe it’s because the donor never read your letter.

They might never have gotten past your envelope.

What Other Nonprofits Do with Envelopes

appeal lettersIn November and December, I received over 100 appeal letters from 72 different organizations. That’s a lot of mail! And nobody has the time to read all the appeals they receive.

Donors figure out whether or not to toss your appeal in the recycling bin in seconds. They do it by looking at the envelope.

Most of the appeal letters I received did something on the front of the envelope to persuade me to look inside.

  • 77 of 102 showed me the name of the organization that was mailing to me, with its return address. That established some credibility.  (At the minimum, it made me less likely to worry that I’d open the envelope and find anthrax inside.)
  • 61 of 102 also showed me the organization’s logo. That makes sense, too. A logo is designed to be instantly recognizable, and if I stop and say, “Oh, I know that,” I may get curious about what’s inside.
  • 58 of 102 printed a teaser on the front of the envelope. It could have been a message from the organization, or a quote from a person whose life had improved because of the nonprofit.

For instance:

When Brittany went looking for like-minded veterans, she found About Face.

We need you. This is a time for action–not for standing on the sidelines. (from J Street)

Even the envelopes that say only “Immediate Attention Requested” make me think a moment longer…and that means I’m more likely to rip them open and see what’s inside. As you want me to do!

6 Ways Your Envelope Could Stand Out

You could mimic the other nonprofits to give yourself an equal shot at  your donor’s attention. But here are six ideas to make your envelope pop out from that tall stack of envelopes I showed you.

  1. GBFB envelope with graphicPrint a graphic on the envelope. If you can go full-color like the Greater Boston Food Bank did, so much the better. But even a line drawing will catch my eye.
  2. Put a stamp on it. Yes, an honest-to-goodness, first-class stamp, like you’ d see on a holiday card from your favorite aunt.
  3. Use an unusual size envelope. Did somebody say “card”?
  4. Use an unusual color envelope. In that pile of appeal letters I showed you up above, see the green one sticking out? Don’t you want to know what this?
  5. Have a real person’s name on the return address. It could be your Executive Director, or it could be Toni Morrison. Either way, it makes your donor hesitate to throw the envelope away.
  6. Handwrite the donor’s name and address. Here’s where being a small nonprofit could help. You’re not going to hand-address 10,000 envelopes, but if you have 150 donors–or you can pick out 150 from your list that you especially want to reach–handwriting in real ink will make it personal, not personalized.

Beyond the Envelope

Every Tuesday in January and February, we’re  going to look back at those 102 appeal letters I received–and look forward to what you can do better this year. Stay tuned to Fundraising Tuesdays on Communicate!

Next up: dear friend???

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Fundraising Tuesday: Your Top 10 Posts from 2018

January 8, 2019 by Dennis Fischman Leave a Comment

Top 10 fundraising

You, the reader, are the one who’s put Communicate! on many lists of best nonprofit blogs. Thank you! Here are your choices for the top ten posts of 2018.

Fundraising Tuesday: What Do You Call a Donor?

You have a donor in your database and you don’t know their gender. When you send them mail, what do you call them?

Fundraising Tuesday: Great Photos Make Great Appeal Letters 

How Nonprofits Use (and Don’t Use) Photos (and how you can do better)

Fundraising Tuesday: Remember the Postscript. Donors Do! 

Surprising but true: without a good postscript, your donors may not even read your nonprofit’s appeal letter.

Fundraising Tuesday: What Should You Know about a Donor? 

There are some things that friends have to know about their friends.

Fundraising Tuesday: Greetings and Salutations

When you’re sending an appeal letter to a donor, you want them to take the time to read it. Your biggest enemy? The recycling bin. Your biggest ally (once they open the envelope)? The salutation.

Fundraising Tuesday: Follow Up Your Appeal Letter with Email

There are things you can do now to make the donor pick that envelope out of the pile, read your letter, and donate online (or send in a check). One of them is to follow up your fundraising letter with email.

Fundraising Tuesday: How Often Should You Ask?

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

Fundraising Tuesday: 3 Ways to Get Personal with Your Donors

Send a different letter to previous donors than people you’re asking to give for the first time…

How to Find New Donors for Your Nonprofit Without Asking for Money

What will really help your organization cultivate that person as a volunteer and donor is the questions you ask about them.

How Fundraising Systems Can Help Small Non-Profits Do More with Less

“Instead of wondering how to cultivate a new prospect or follow-up from a stewardship event, you will have a system in place that you can use, with materials and scripts already prepared in advance.” (guest post by Joe Garecht)

 

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Fundraising Tuesday: Nonprofits Aren’t Bill Collectors!

December 18, 2018 by Dennis Fischman Leave a Comment

Your donors don’t owe you anything. Don’t treat them like they do.

bill collectionA nonprofit colleague of mine recently shared this story.

My mother-in-law received a letter this week from a national charity that had “Past Due” on it in red, “second notice” in black, and a bar code on the envelope. The nonprofit’s name was only in 8-point font, on the back, on the flap.

She’s been dealing with significant medical bills from a recent illness, and this straight-up scared her. Then made her mad.

I went straight to mad.

Can you blame her? I am angry too. Not only because that organization scared the bejeebies out of a sick woman, but because they made all the rest of us in the nonprofit sector look bad, too.

Responsible organizations want our donors to know, like, and trust us. We want them to understand the impact their donations are making. We want to win them as loyal donors.

I’m sure you work for a responsible nonprofit organization. Please join me to make sure the bad example in the story is shunned and not repeated.

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