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Do Your Donors Want Poetry or Prose?

December 15, 2015 by Dennis Fischman Leave a Comment

How should you raise money for your cause? Write grant proposals, send out appeal letters, hold events, use crowdfunding?

It depends whether your donors want poetry or prose.

My Book of Days cover

Raising funds with words that sing

My late brother Ron Fischman needed money. He had commissioned artist Debora Alanna to produce the beautiful cover illustration for his new volume of poems, My Book of Days–and he had to pay her for her work.

Ron set up a crowdfunding campaign on Pubslush. He went on to do all the things that would draw people in and make them feel they were doing something good.

  • He showed people the art they’d be supporting
  • He gave them several tastes of what the book was all about.
  • He made it personal. Debora “prepared [this cover art] out of faith that my friends, colleagues, Jewish and poetic worlds would make this campaign successful.”

Ron also offered premiums that would appeal to exactly the kind of person who would support his book.

And it worked! The crowdfunding campaign raised enough money to pay the artist, send out the premiums, and do a tiny bit of additional promotion besides.  (By the way, you can order a copy of Ron’s book if you wish. Just click this link.

Raising funds with ideas that matter

Ron needed less than a thousand dollars to make his dream come true, and he had something tangible to show as a result. His cause was made for crowdfunding.

Others, not so much.

My friend and colleague Robin Carton of Kayak Consulting Group was trying to raise money for a group that makes small, progressive organizations all over the Boston area smarter and stronger.

Her client wanted to send a direct mail fundraising appeal to the people who support those organizations.  The catch? They had no money for direct mail in their budget.

Can you imagine going public with the plea “Give us money so we can send out letters to raise more money?”  No, I can’t either!

Robin and I agreed that her client’s best bet was to submit grant proposals to foundations and businesses. Foundations have concepts for what her client does: “capacity building,” and “combined impact.”  Businesses understand “marketing’ and “return on investment.”

The language may not sing, but it may convince. And if they’re successful, Robin and her client will attract a lot more than a thousand dollars.

When you think about how to raise money for your cause, consider it a communications question.  Do the people you want to support you think in poetry or prose?

 

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Don’t Let Your Donations Get Lost in the Mail

November 16, 2015 by Dennis Fischman Leave a Comment

My beloved brother Ron Fischman died in October 2014. Our family asked that donations in Ron’s memory go to an organization he had supported. We gave out the organization’s website and its mailing address. But only the online donations went through.

The mailing address we found on the website was wrong.

Now before you wonder “How could a large nonprofit organization make such a stupid mistake?”, let me explain. The group’s correct address did appear on its website. It was on the Contact Us page.

But when you go to the Donate page (as we did) and look for the mailing address, you find a donation form to print out and mail in. That form hadn’t been changed since 2011–but the organization’s address had!

I don’t recommend asking your donors to print out a donation form. Hardly any of them ever do, and asking them to do it may actually discourage some people from giving. But if you aren’t going to use the form any more, make sure you take it off your website.

And no matter what, make sure your address is correct on every page where it appears.

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When People are in Mourning, Don’t Try to Sell!

October 16, 2014 by Dennis Fischman 4 Comments

Thank you to everyone who expressed their sympathies on the death of my brother Ron Fischman.

And no thanks to the sales rep who called my dear wife Rona the day after Ron died…and wouldn’t take no for an answer.

We heard the news of Ron’s death on Wednesday, October 1. On Thursday, a company that does business with Google called Rona about her business page.

“Good morning, Rona, and how are you today?”

“Not very good, actually. My brother-in-law died yesterday.”

“Oh, so sorry to hear that. I won’t take much of your time. I noticed that your company had recently moved. Would you like help changing your physical address on Google?”

“I don’t want to buy anything today, but if you can help me with that, let’s take a minute and do it.”

“Great! I also want to tell you about the SEO services our company can offer your business.”

“What? Did you hear what I just said? What kind of monster are you?”

And the sales rep hung up.

Whether you’re selling a product or a service or asking for a donation, when someone is in mourning, just stop. Period. “I’m sorry for your loss, and I’ll call back another time” is acceptable. Nothing more, not one word.

If common decency isn’t enough reason, think of this: do you want people to think of their loved one’s death every time they think of you?

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