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Fundraising Tuesday: The Right Tools Help

January 24, 2017 by Dennis Fischman Leave a Comment

Feel like a numberYour supporters aren’t numbers. Why are you keeping track of them with a spreadsheet?

A recent study by Software Advice, a consultancy that helps nonprofits find software, found that 52% of the organizations they studied currently use general-purpose software, such as Microsoft Excel or Google Drive, to manage data. That includes all the data on their donors and prospects.

I feel your pain, nonprofits. You’re strapped for time and short on money. That makes you use the tools you already have–especially if they’re free.

But free is not always the best price.

What it Costs You to Use Free Tools

Using Excel or Google for your fundraising database may be fine if all you want to do is look up what you know about one person. Suppose, however, that you want to:

  • Send a carefully crafted email to only those people who have given more than $100 as a donation and who live in the zip codes closest to your office.
  • Keep track of registration for a gala or other event.
  • Print call sheets for a phone-a-thon.
  • Automatically send a welcome message and a series of follow-ups to new members.

You can’t do any of those directly from free tools.

If you want to send a targeted email message, for example, you might have to create a distribution list in Outlook, export it to Excel, import that to an email marketing system like MailChimp or Constant Contact, compose and schedule the email, and then enter the results back in Outlook–all by hand. What a waste of time! Don’t you have better things to do?

Better Tools for the Personal Touch

“Nonprofits have always tracked donors and contributions, but increasingly, buyers are requesting robust constituent relationship management (CRM) systems and outreach tools,” says Janna Finch of Software Advice, the author of the study.

Why invest in that kind of tool? The paradox is that the more high-tech systems let you keep in touch with your donors and supporters in a more personal way. As Finch explains:

CRMs let nonprofit staff track information beyond a supporter’s name, address and contribution amount, including specific interests, professional experience, relationships, participation in activities, and more. Leveraging this knowledge, fundraisers can create a personalized message that targets a group of supporters that is more likely to turn a fence-sitter into an active donor, advocate or volunteer.

The Power of Personalized Asks

It’s a sad truth that big corporations like pharmacy chains and health insurance companies treat me more personally than the causes I support. Part of the answer is to invest in tools that will let you, the nonprofit, track your relationship with me, the donor, and let me know you care.

Quoting Janna Finch of Software Advice again:

“Here’s a comparison to illustrate the power of personalization. The first is a sample of a generic ask letter sent to all supporters; the second is personalized and targeted to past donors who are also teachers working in a school district the organization serves.”

Generic: Once again, we’re holding our annual drive to collect contributions to supply underprivileged students with school supplies for the upcoming school year. Since our organization relies on the generosity of individuals such as yourself, would you consider a donation to our cause?

Personalized: As a teacher, you are undoubtedly aware of how having the necessary school supplies impacts a student’s educational experience. Thanks to your $100.00 donation last year, 23 underprivileged students in your school district started the year fully-stocked with supplies. Would you consider another donation this year to ensure every student has all the supplies he or she needs?

Neither of these is the ideal appeal letter–but the personalized one will win every time. And you can only write the personalized letter if the data are ready to hand. A CRM tool will help you let the donor know he or she is not just a number to you.

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Who Actually Sees What You Post on Social Media?

August 10, 2015 by Dennis Fischman 4 Comments

social media

When your organization posts text or photos or video on social media, who sees what you posted?  Answer: It depends on which social media you’re using.

Know the differences so you can invest your social media time wisely.

Facebook is huge, but the percentage of your followers who see your Facebook posts is small. If you have less than 10,000 page likes, on average, it’s about 7%.  That’s right, 93% of your followers won’t see a particular post! (And the problem is even worse the more followers you attract.)

Why?  Because Facebook doesn’t show everybody everything.

Let’s say that you have a follower named Sarah Thompson.  What will Sarah see in her News Feed (the main page where people spend their time on Facebook)?

  • She is more likely to see your story if she has recently liked, commented upon, or shared another of your posts.
  • If she likes text-only posts, those are your posts that she’s more likely to see.  If she likes photos, she’s more likely to see your posts that contain photos, and so on.
  • She’s more likely to see your post if other people have liked, commented, or shared, and less likely if they have complained about it.

Plus, Facebook keeps tweaking its algorithm (the rules by which it decides which of your posts get seen), sometimes from week to week.  The only guaranteed way to get seen is to pay Facebook for the privilege.

Bottom line: If you are a small organization, you will need exceptional content over a long period of time to get your Facebook posts seen.

Twitter is different from Facebook: it shows every tweet you tweet to everyone who follows you.  The trouble is that there are so many messages on Twitter, and they all rush by so fast, Sarah may not notice your message!

You will need to tweet the same basic message multiple times to give Sarah a better chance of actually reading it.  Again, plan on taking time to build a loyal following.

Google+ gives you the chance to target your message to the people you choose. You can send to specific communities (where everyone will receive it) or to circles that you have created (where they will receive it only if they have followed you back).

Check carefully to see whether the people you want to reach actually use Google+. Is Sarah there?  If not, she’s never going to see that brilliant article you posted!

LinkedIn gives you three ways to post: by updating your status, by participating in a group, or by writing a long-form post for LinkedIn Pulse (essentially, blogging on LinkedIn).

  • Status updates potentially get seen by everyone who has connected with you (unlike status updates on Facebook, and more like on Google+), but they tend to get pushed way down the page quickly (as on Twitter).
  • Groups allow you to post to a more selected audience…but it depends on them to check messages from the group and to click on yours.  Will Sarah pay the attention and take the time to open your post?
  • Posts are more likely to be seen by people who have connected with you, but they are available for everyone to see. All these ways of putting content on LinkedIn will be there and easily accessible to anyone who comes looking for you.

We could go on adding examples from YouTube, Instagram, Pinterest, etc., but the point would be the same:

Know where your audience is on social media.

Know what it takes to get your message seen on that particular medium.

Take time to build a loyal audience–so THEY come looking for YOU.

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Should You Worry about SEO?

November 17, 2014 by Dennis Fischman 1 Comment

Worried faceYou get them by email.  You see them as comments on your blog.  You read them through the Contact Us section of your website.  And they want you to worry.

They’re the SEO fearmongers.

My wife Rona Fischman opened an email that began politely, “I thought you might like to know some of the reasons why you are not  getting enough search engine & social media traffic on your website.”  It went on–mostly in bold blue font that screamed from the page–to list the same useless advice that she and I have both seen from search engine optimizers over and over again.

Why useless?  Because it’s generic.  The fearmongers don’t know you and they don’t know your audience.  Here are three reasons not to worry about SEO:

  • You might not need to be found.  If you’re a nonprofit, these days you may already be serving more clients than you can handle!  If you’re a referral-based business, random searches are the equivalent of cold calls.  They’re low-percentage sources.  Why attract people who may never do business with you when you can spend the time and money attracting people who already want your services?
  • Social media may do better for you than search.  If you do need to be found, wouldn’t you rather be found in good company? People are not just Googling “realtor” (for instance) and calling the first on the list.  Instead, they’re asking their friends to recommend someone.   Facebook or Yelp may be more important to you than Google or Bing.
  • What do they find when they get there?  Improving the content on your website may get you better results for less money than increasing the number of people who ever happen to take a look at it.  Spend your resources on content creation and content marketing.

You shouldn’t worry about SEO–but paying just a little bit of attention to it might be worth your while.  Here’s a piece I wrote about “How To Get Found: SEO and the Small Nonprofit.”  It includes ten tips on getting more eyeballs to your site.  But most of them are not SEO.

Don’t worry, be effective!

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