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How NOT to Market Your Services

May 23, 2016 by Dennis Fischman 5 Comments

My wife, realtor Rona Fischman, was listening to a webinar when her phone began to ring. She didn’t recognize the number, but it might have been another realtor calling about a transaction in progress.  She decided to answer.

“Hello, this is [fill-in-the-blank] Media calling about your website.”

Woman grimacing at phone

Not the reaction you want.

Rona groaned. This company had been leaving messages on her voicemail for days.  “I’m listening to a webinar right now. If my website is on fire, tell me so.  Otherwise, call me back after the webinar.”

“Do you know that half the links on your home page are broken and that people who click on them will see 404 errors?”

“No, I didn’t know that. After the webinar, I will check on it.”

In fact, Rona checked her website–on Chrome, IE, and Firefox, just to make sure–and there were no broken links.  Later, she received an email from the company that had called her.  They apologized for “startling” her and listed several other “problems” with her website.  Some of them did not exist.  Others are not problems for Rona because her business model does not require a huge volume of clients.

In short, they lied to her and never took the time to find out what she really might need.

This is the internet age.  Wouldn’t it be easy to spend a little time looking at Rona’s website and finding comments about her on Angie’s List, etc., and figure out where you could really add value to her communications?

Whether you are out to make a profit or looking to recruit support for your good cause, you owe it to yourself to treat the client with respect and personalize your message.

Have you ever encountered a sales pitch like the one Rona heard? How did you react when you heard or read it?

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Fundraising Tuesday: How Well Do You Know Your Donors?

May 17, 2016 by Dennis Fischman Leave a Comment

Toyota hybrid alesman

(AP Photo/Shuji Kajiyama)

Who knows your donors better: you, or the companies that sell them cars?

My wife, Rona, was an early adopter of the Toyota Prius. She bought the first model the dealer ever had sitting on the lot. Every five years or so since then, she’s traded in and bought another Prius. And the dealer knows it.

The dealer doesn’t mail her in years 1, 2, or 3 after her purchase. But beginning in year 4, they start sending her teasers about how much she could get if she traded in now.

They don’t advertise Camrys to her. They don’t send her email about Highlanders or RAV4s. They talk to her about what they know she wants to buy–the new Prius–at the time when she’s most likely to buy it.

Does your nonprofit organization know your donors and their giving, the way Rona’s car dealer knows her buying habits?

When Your Donors Give

A lot of donors give once a year, in November or December. That may be because your organization only asks them once a year. I’ve suggested you should try asking for donations more often. See what happens!

But if you are among the one-third of nonprofit organizations who ask at least every few months, you don’t have to guess. You can look at your donor’s track record. If you’ve been sending Debbie Donor letters every season for three years, and Debbie only ever gives in September, does it really make sense to send her those other asks?

Your donor's behavior is telling you something. You ought to listen. Share on X

Of course, what the donor is telling you may be, “I’ll give to your organization for general support once a year.” That means if you ask her for money at other times, it had better be for something special.

  • Does Debbie care about sending kids to summer camp? Then a letter in early June might do the trick.
  • Is she worried about low-income families freezing? If you’re in New England, February might not be too late for that kind of appeal.

What They Give For

How do you know what your donor cares about? You call and ask. You send surveys. You look for her name on the lists of donors to other organizations.

A little detective work will make sure you ask for donations when the donor is ready to give and for the good work he or she actually wants to support. You don’t have to promise to use the money exclusively for that purpose–but you do have to bring the results the donor wants to achieve to the top of your donor’s mind.

Otherwise, you’re peddling a truck to someone who wants a Prius.

 


Need help figuring out how to ask for donations at the right time, for the right cause? Email me, [email protected], to set up a free consultation. Because it’s more expensive to send out hundreds or thousands of appeal letters that don’t work than to get expert advice.

 

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How to Lose Even Your Fanatical Followers

December 17, 2015 by Dennis Fischman Leave a Comment

unfollowYou would have to say that my wife, Rona Fischman, is a Dan Fogelberg fanatic.

When I met her in 1986, she had all of his albums on cassette. Once she got a CD player, she replaced those cassettes with CD’s. then she put them on her iPod. And when the man died, in December 2007, it ruined her New Year.

But Rona is thinking seriously about un-following the Dan Fogelberg page on Facebook. Why?

Simple: it’s doing too much selling.

The Dan Fogelberg page is pushing Rona to check out the website, to buy a Christmas album on Amazon, to go to Peoria for a benefit concert.

It’s too much for Rona. And she’s a diehard fan. (Let’s face it, who else would follow a dead songwriter on Facebook in the first place?)

My advice to the Dan Fogelberg page is also my advice to your nonprofit. Give first. Give again. Give some more. Share things that your followers will value seven, eight, or nine times. Then if you must sell, sell. If you must ask, ask. But rarely.

People come to Facebook to spend time with their friends. If you want them to consider you a friend, give, don’t sell.

Here’s a gift from Dan Fogelberg to all of us. Enjoy the turning of the year!

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