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6 Reasons Your Fundraisers May Be Underperforming

October 4, 2022 by Dennis Fischman Leave a Comment

A guest post by Bonnie Meyer of Meyer Partners

If you’re pouring your heart and soul into raising money for your nonprofit’s cause, it can be frustrating when the amount of effort you put in doesn’t quite match the money raised. Fundraisers underperform from time to time, but sometimes trial and error through testing is the best way to learn what works for your nonprofit.

Keeping up with fundraising trends can be hard to manage, but it can also keep your fundraisers fresh and make sure they appeal to donors. In this article, we’ll cover some of the marketing faux pas that can keep your fundraisers from reaching their full potential, and how to alter your nonprofit marketing strategy to best suit your fundraiser and create a lucrative campaign.

Follow along to learn some of the most common reasons fundraisers underperform, and how to fix them!

1. You don’t have a compelling story

Your organization was founded to support a cause using your core values along the way. According to 360 MatchPro, 90% of millennial donors are motivated to give because of  a compelling mission rather than wanting to support a specific organization. People want to hear your “why” and learn about the driving force behind your organization and fundraisers.

If your fundraiser isn’t tied to a specific project or doesn’t incorporate your core values, then you could be missing out on engaging a crucial audience. Your audience wants to learn about your cause, the work you’re doing, and the people you’re helping. Without those details, your donation requests will feel much less urgent and compelling.

Each fundraiser should have a story to engage your audience and inspire donors to give to your cause. Here are some ways to incorporate storytelling into your fundraising:

  • Include imagery of your volunteers in your promotional materials.
  • Create a fundraiser tagline that highlights your mission.
  • Show the people or places you’ll be helping.
  • Explain how your nonprofit was inspired to aid your cause.

Tie your fundraiser to a concrete project or initiative to give supporters a better understanding of who or what they’re contributions will go toward. If your next fundraiser is just a general fundraiser for your organization, consider planning it around a holiday, giving day, or a themed day related to your cause. This can help you create a message for your campaign that is tied to a story rather than just your nonprofit. Look for days of celebration that could be related to your cause, such as Mother’s Day for a women’s shelter or Earth Day for a climate change nonprofit.

Whether you’re fundraising broadly for your nonprofit or creating a short-term campaign, it is critical to weave storytelling into your strategy. This can help inspire donors and relieve any questions they may have about where your funding goes.

2. Donors don’t understand where their contribution is going

People donate to feel like they are a part of supporting the cause they care about. If they can’t figure out exactly how your organization will use their gift, they may feel less motivated to contribute.

Be specific about current initiatives or projects that your donors’ contributions will go toward. This will give your donors confidence to give and make them feel like your nonprofit is efficient and capable. Follow up with donors after their contribution about how the fundraiser went and the next steps in your project to grow this confidence in your organization and inspire them to stay involved.

3. You don’t show appreciation

Fundraisers without subsequent appreciation campaigns can be discouraging for donors. Without showing how meaningful your donors are to you and your organization, donors may just feel like a cog in the wheel.

Reach out to them with personalized messages to make them feel seen and appreciated. Avoid sending robotic automated messages, as this can make donors feel less valued. Here are some ways to connect with donors on a human level:

  • Include donor names in the communications you send them.
  • Have leadership call mid-size and major donors to personally thank them.
  • Remind donors of how they’re helping your cause and initiatives.
  • Tell them a story about someone who was helped because of their contribution.
  • Follow up quickly after their first donation.
  • Send branded merchandise gifts.
  • Send annual report newsletters highlighting their contributions.

You can also show appreciation for your donors on your website and social media platforms by spotlighting specific donors or providing updates on your projects and programs.

Donors want to feel like they’re making a difference, so be sure to keep them updated on the outcome of the fundraisers they participated in, where the money went, and how it was used. Then, they’ll feel like an important part of the community and will be more likely to give again.

4. Your fundraiser isn’t easily shareable

When potential donors can’t share your campaign or don’t have enough information to spread the word about your fundraiser, your audience may shrink. Reaching out to current and recurring donors can be a great place to start, but if they can’t share their involvement, their networks will be slow to catch on.

People are often excited to share with friends and family about their donation and how they are helping a cause they care about. Think about reaching donors where they are. Try to use communication channels that naturally encourage sharing when promoting your fundraiser, like social media, email, and text messaging.

You can still use traditional communication channels like direct mail and phone calls, but make sure the cost of these methods doesn’t outweigh the funds raised from them.

5. You don’t steward all levels of donors

If your fundraisers are focused on too narrow of an audience, you’re likely missing out on reaching potential donors. Your fundraisers should appeal to a multifaceted audience of donors at every stage of the donor pyramid.

According to Meyer Partners, the donor pyramid has nine levels, ranging from prospective donors to lead donors at the top. To be sure your fundraisers are lucrative, you’ll need to steward donors at each level of the pyramid. This involves the process of recruiting donors, upselling them, and fostering major donor relationships.

Here are some benefits of stewarding different levels of the donor pyramid:

  • Prospective donors. Recruiting new donors means expanding your network of supporters and reaching new individuals who are energized about your cause.
  • Recurring donors. Encouraging existing donors to increase their gifts helps your organization grow financially and increase your donor engagement.
  • Major donors. Creating a healthy dialogue with major donors shows that you value their involvement and want to maintain a strong relationship.

You won’t know when donors may be ready to make the leap to the next level of the donor pyramid if you don’t reach out to them. Whether this is because they’ve developed a stronger affinity for your cause or because of a change in their circumstances that increased their giving capacity, be sure to steward at all levels.

6. You don’t stay up-to-date with trends

Picking arbitrary dates and seasons to host your fundraisers is ultimately a missed opportunity for an otherwise successful fundraiser. Because nonprofits are always in the midst of an active fundraiser or the planning stages of one, you have ample opportunity to learn from each fundraiser. Record and track data about donor engagement, recruitment, retention, and communication. Leverage this valuable information by creating reports and analyzing the data to find donor trends.

Here are some trends to look for in your donor data:

  • Times of the year when donors are more willing to give.
  • Events dates that had more guests attend.
  • Donor response rates on communication channels.
  • Donor retention and donor upsell rates.

In addition to donor trends, be sure to pay attention to the latest nonprofit fundraising trends. Some of the tried and true methods of fundraising have started to fall by the wayside to make room for more convenient or cost-effective methods like online fundraising and corporate gift matching. Make sure your fundraising platforms are efficient and cost effective to truly maximize the potential of your fundraiser.

Regardless of how much time you take to plan your fundraiser, nothing beats knowledge of the industry. Train your fundraising team to ensure they are adequately prepared to speak authoritatively on behalf of your organization and identify the best avenues for fundraising.


Bonnie Meyer head shotBonnie Meyer

Bonnie brings to her role at Meyer Partners more than 30 years of fundraising experience, with a special emphasis in multimedia approaches to new donor acquisition and development. Her expertise encompasses several facets of direct response fundraising, including copy writing and creative direction, market research, strategic planning, and comprehensive results analysis.

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Donor Stewardship from a Distance: 3 Tips for Communicating

September 29, 2020 by Dennis Fischman Leave a Comment

A guest post by Carl Diesling of DNL OmniMedia

How are you doing stewardship for your donors during Covid-19?

Loyal, supportive donors can see your organization through even the bleakest of crises. However, many nonprofits were simply not prepared with enough loyal donors to outlast the fundraising challenges of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Thankfully, it’s not too late to build those strong connections with your nonprofit’s donors. But, to do so, you’ll have to optimize your communications strategy.

At DNL OmniMedia, our team specializes in nonprofit marketing and technology consulting. From our experience working with nonprofits throughout this year, we’ve collected three tips that we’ve found valuable for mid-sized nonprofits looking to continue stewarding donors while social distancing:

  1. Communicate Regularly
  2. Use Multiple Channels
  3. Emphasize Impact

During times of uncertainty, it’s more important than ever to have strong donor stewardship tactics in place. Read on for our top three tips to stay in touch with your supporters.

1. Communicate Regularly

Take a close look at your nonprofit’s current communications strategy. Which dates do you have highlighted as key times to communicate? You likely highlighted the time leading up to key giving days, leading up to fundraising events, and the end of the year.

As a nonprofit communications director, you send out fundraising letters, coordinate event marketing, and follow up with thank-yous. However, if you’re only communicating around the dates when you have a big event going on, you’re missing out on key opportunities to connect!

Our first tip for stewarding donors from a distance is to communicate regularly throughout the crisis. Your donors shouldn’t just hear from you when you’re seeking something from them.

During times of crisis, the needs of your nonprofit and your response to the crisis change every day. Staying in touch during this fluidity is key to drawing supporters closer to your organization.

According to Dennis Fischman of Communicate! Consulting, some tips to stay in touch are:

  • Post regularly to your website and social media profiles.
  • Align your communications with the current events that your donors are interested in.
  • Tie your communications to direct action.

A few additional communications in the time between your main outreach efforts can go a long way.

2. Use Multiple Channels

In recent years, we’ve seen the fundraising landscape diversify. There is a decent chance your nonprofit is now seeking donations from five unique generations of givers— all the way from the Matures to Gen Z. Just as each may have different giving preferences, they will have unique communication preferences as well.

Our second tip is to use multiple communication channels to reach all of your donors.

By leveraging a variety of platforms, you’re more likely to reach a representative sample of your entire donor base. Consider using the following channels:

  • Website: This is often the first place a supporter seeks information about your nonprofit. In addition to providing giving information, share updates about your crisis response efforts and ways to connect (such as links to follow your organization on social media).
  • Direct Mail: Don’t discount the power of direct mail to reach supporters. According to Fundraising Letters, this is one of the most consistently effective ways to connect with a donor.
  • Social Networks: There’s a decent chance you have a wide age range of supporters connecting via social networks. This channel is particularly valuable for creating a two-way conversation with donors.
  • Mobile Apps: There are now mobile apps created to meet specific nonprofit needs, such as mobile advocacy apps. When it comes to communicating with convenience, mobile apps are a great tool to engage tech-savvy supporters.

Structuring your communications in this way is called multichannel marketing. When it comes to multichannel communications, be sure to create a comprehensive strategy where the channels work in sync, to structure messages to best fit the communication channel, and focus on the channels most popular with your audience.

With a multichannel communication strategy, you’re more likely to make multiple impressions on your supporters. As it can take up to 18-20 impressions to connect with a first-time supporter, multichannel efforts can be instrumental to successful stewardship during times of separation!

3. Emphasize Impact

When so much of the future feels out of anyone’s control, what your donors seek most is validation that the efforts they are taking are having a positive impact.

Our final tip is to emphasize your donors’ impact.

Donors give, both their time and resources, because they want to make a difference. This means that the best thank you, the one that will continue stewarding donors, will showcase donor impact.

Consider the following ways you can emphasize donor impact in your communications:

  • Sharing photos of volunteers giving their time on social media
  • Sending nonprofit email marketing communications with specific impact data
  • Sharing testimonials from constituents in blog posts on your website

The list can go on! But the key in each communication is to get specific. Let’s look at an example:

“In this year’s technology drive, you raised $500,000 to benefit elementary education. With this, X tablets were purchased for kindergarteners participating in distance learning this year.”

This isn’t a time to brag on the impact of your nonprofit! Highlight the direct correlation between the donors’ support and the impact toward your cause to make the message more personal and persuasive.

When you’re unable to host in-person events or meetings with major donors, you may struggle to steward donors into impactful, long-term support of your organization. With these tips, you’ll be communicating successfully despite the challenging circumstances.


Carl Diesing DNLCarl Diesing, Managing Director – Carl co-founded DNL OmniMedia in 2006 and has grown the team to accommodate clients with on-going web development projects. Together DNL OmniMedia has worked with over 100 organizations to assist them with accomplishing their online goals.

As Managing Director of DNL OmniMedia, Carl works with nonprofits and their technology to foster fundraising, create awareness, cure disease, and solve social issues. Carl lives in the Hudson Valley with his wife Sarah and their two children Charlie and Evelyn.

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Communicate More Often to Renew More Donors

August 18, 2015 by Dennis Fischman Leave a Comment

sheepish look

Don’t look sheepish. Let your donors hear from you often!

It’s a facial expression that’s become way too familiar. When I talk with nonprofit organizations about communicating with their donors, they give me a sheepish look.

“We know we should be in touch more often,” the Executive Director says. “But we have so little time, and there are so many ways people expect to hear from us.”

“Newsletters, annual reports, website updates, email, social media…not to mention local newspapers and community TV. How do we keep coming up with new ideas for stories?”

You don’t need to wear that sheepish look in your organization. There’s a simple way to make sure you always have the stories to tell your donors, and the messages to share: repurpose.

Find out how to get ten posts out of one great idea. Read my guest post on Fundraising Coach.

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