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Fundraising Tuesday: Up Close and Personal

January 31, 2017 by Dennis Fischman Leave a Comment

personalOne of the seven reasons your nonprofit is not raising as much money as you want is that you’re not making those appeal letters personal.

Making it personal means more than sending out a mass mailing that calls donors by their names. If you’re not doing that already, please start! “Dear Friend” letters are the clearest signal that the person receiving the letter is not really your friend.

But mail merge is old hat. It doesn’t make anyone feel that you, the nonprofit, know anything about them, the donor. There are better ways to tell the donor “You’re my hero.”

Make It Personal by Sending the Right Letter

The donor wants you to know whether or not they have ever given before. If you don’t know that, you don’t know them. If you don’t know them, why should they give?

Send a different letter to previous donors than people you're asking to give for the first time. Share on X

Simple, right? But in my personal experience, nine out of ten appeal letters used exactly the same language to me that they would use to someone who had never given them a penny!

Fix this by segmenting your list, writing different letters to prospects, lapsed donors, and renewing donors, and acknowledging the date and amount of the previous gift.

Make It Personal by Talking about MY Issues

Let’s say you run a community center. I came to an event where you highlighted your youth programs, and I was so impressed that I donated on the spot.

At the end of the year, you sent me an appeal letter, and it talked all about your Meals on Wheels program for seniors. It said nothing about youth.

What are the chances you’re going to get a donation from me again? Slim and none.

Appeal to people based on the things you do that actually appeal to THEM. Share on X

With a good database, you should have no trouble keeping track of my giving history and my attendance at events. With the right tools, you can even tell which of your emails I opened, showing what topics I was interested in. (And you can tell a lot about me just by listening.)

Write Me a Personal Note

It used to be a no-brainer for Executive Directors, Development Directors, or Board members who knew the donor to write a personal note on appeal letters.

People, we are going in the wrong direction on this! 90 out of 106 letters arrived in my mailbox with no personal touches whatever–even when my wife and I have known the person sending the letter for many years.

Fix this by composing your appeals long enough in advance to add those personal notes…and doing so. It will pay you back in donations, this year and for many years to come.

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Fundraising Tuesday: What Do You Call a Donor?

May 10, 2016 by Dennis Fischman 2 Comments

keep calm what's my nameHere’s a question you may already have faced: You have a donor in your database and you don’t know their gender. When you send them mail, what do you call them?

a) Dear Friend
b) Dear Mr. Lastname
c) Dear Ms. Lastname
d) Dear Firstname

It’s a tricky one, isn’t it? You can’t always tell people’s gender from their first name.  Is Robin a man or a woman? How about Dana?

And “first name” is not always the same as “personal name.” If you have a Chen Shih Huang on your donor list, do they use the Chinese practice of putting the family name first?  Then calling them “Dear Chen” is like calling me “Dear Fischman.” (Please don’t!)

I asked a group of nonprofit consultants what they thought about salutations.  I found out that people I respect have different opinions on this. Let’s look at each approach.

Why You Might Say “Dear Friend”

Option A) is quick and easy. You don’t have to match the letter to the envelope with the same name on it (or be embarrassed when you send the letter to the wrong name!)

You can also make it a little more personal without naming names, as Susan Ruderman of Veritas Information Services suggests:

For example, if you are an animal welfare organization, try “Dear Fellow Animal Lover.” Or a civil liberties org might use “Dear Defender of Freedom.” When all else fails, use “Friend” with the organization’s name: “Dear Friend of the Toledo Zoo.”

Still, this was the LEAST favored option in the group, and I understand why. It starts your donor thinking, “I gave them money, and they don’t even know who I am? How important can my donation be?” And that’s deadly–especially when you are trying to renew donors.

Why You Might Say “Dear Mr. Lastname” (or “Dear Ms. Lastname”)

Options B) and C) have the advantage of not getting too personal with someone you don’t really know yet. Many donors (especially older donors) might agree with Jane Savitt Tennen, Development Director, FDU School of the Arts at Fairleigh Dickinson University: “When a stranger writes to me as ‘Dear Jane,’ it feels too weirdly familiar.”

You can do research and try to figure out the person’s gender, and even which is their family name and which is their personal name. Google the person for clues, as Mary Cahalane of Hands-on Fundraising does sometime, or use an online name directory to find out which gender the name is most commonly linked with.

But there are multiple problems with the “Mr. or Ms.” approach as well. As Hildy Gottlieb of Creating the Future points out:

We live in an age where people do not always take their spouse’s name when they get married, or may not even be married but are long-time partners. Which means that no, I am not Ms. My-husband’s-last-name, even though that’s what your records say.

Name directories also don’t help you much with women’s names like Toni or Freddi. They don’t at all address the question of people who use non-gendered titles like Mx. (instead of Mr. or Ms.), as Jane Garthson mentioned to me.

And Jessica Dally, Director of Marketing at South Sound Motorcycles, speaks for a lot of us, especially younger donors, when she says, “Don’t ever assume that gender would fit into the binary of B or C. We’re not in that era anymore.”

Why You Might Say “Dear Firstname”

Option D was the favorite of most of my colleagues, and it’s my favorite too. It avoids having to guess at a person’s gender (which is usually something that matters to people a lot).

It is more personal…and for everyone who resents the familiarity, there are probably two who would find formality cold.

It does not solve the problem of knowing which is the personal name and which the family name. It also doesn’t tell you whether you should write to your donor Mary Ann Thomas with a “Dear Mary” or a “Dear Mary Ann.”

Is There a Better Option?

Some of my consultant friends favor an option e), which is to call people by their full names. Not Mary. Not Mary Ann. Not Ms. Thomas. They would write, “Dear Mary Ann Thomas.”

If you want to avoid making mistakes, using a full name is probably your best guarantee. As long as the data in your database is correct, your salutation won’t say anything wrong. But it doesn’t seem right, either. To my ears, using all three names sounds more like you’re taking roll than addressing a letter to a friend and supporter.

Talking about what to call our donors with my consultant friends has convinced me that Isaac Shalev has it right: “Stop mailing people if you don’t know the first thing about them, and get to know them instead!” I’d follow Susan Ruderman’s advice:

Include a field–whether online or on paper–that allows people to specify how they wish to be listed or acknowledged. Sometimes what people choose is nothing at all like the concatenation of honorific+firstname+lastname.

If your donors have a sense of humor, you might follow the model that Ken Wyman, Professor of Fundraising Management at Humber College, suggests:

Dear Dennis Fischman,

Not to be too forward, but may I call you Dennis? You can certainly call me Ken, and I hope you will call me to talk about….

And then on the reply form, let the donors tell you.


Please call me
[]Mr []Ms []Mrs []Miss []Mx
[]Dr []Rev. []Rabbi
[]Sergeant []Captain []Lieutenant []Admiral []POTUS
[] Ken
[]Other ______

 

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Fundraising Tuesday: Show Me You Care

April 5, 2016 by Dennis Fischman 1 Comment

careToday I received a letter in the mail from my health insurance company.

You are taking a certain medicine, they said, so every year, you should have a certain kind of blood test.  Are you doing that?  Will you ask your doctor to make sure?

The company called the letter a Care Alert, and everything inside it reinforced the message, “We Care.”

The envelope didn’t: it looked as if it might have been one of those Explanations of Benefits that don’t explain anything at all.  And of course, one of the reasons they care is that if I look out for myself, I can avoid serious health risks that would end up costing the insurance company a lot.

Still, the message itself was caring.  It was personalized, and it treated me like a responsible adult who can make good decisions with the proper information.

A Modest Proposal: Show You Care

I would like to propose that nonprofits aim at making all their communications as personal and as caring as the letter I received.

What would it take to do that?

  1. Knowing, and remembering, a lot about your supporters.
  2. Thinking, “How can I make my agency useful to this person?”  What topics matter to him or her?  What information would she or he find useful–not in a general way, but here and now?
  3. Calling on them to take action…and showing them how.

The tools exist to make all this possible.  Databases, constituent relationship management software and processes, email tools, various programs that remind you it’s time to send this kind of message to this specific person: they’re out there, and not that expensive.

But is your organization willing to spend the time and attention it takes to treating every client, constituent, prospect, or donor with at least as much care as a health insurance company showed to me?

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