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Fundraising Tuesday: 3 Exciting Peer-to-Peer Fundraising Ideas

May 17, 2022 by Dennis Fischman Leave a Comment

A guest post by Jacob Spencer of Donately

Donating is good, charitable, and meaningful. But can it be exciting? While it might not be the first word that comes to mind when you think about how to raise donations, injecting a new element or two into your usual fundraisers can help spice things up for long-term supporters while also intriguing new ones.

How can you make a classic reliable fundraiser like a peer-to-peer campaign more exciting? Like with most fundraisers, your data will be your guide. Put it to use to make informed decisions about what your donors want out of your campaigns. For instance, if donors have shown a preference for virtual events, start brainstorming more ways you can engage with them online during your campaign.

To help inspire your nonprofit, this article will dive into three peer-to-peer fundraising ideas to help change up your usual campaigns for the better. We’ll explore:

  1. T-Shirt Fundraisers
  2. Giving Days
  3. Events

1. T-Shirt Fundraisers

Donors give to peer-to-peer campaigns because of their connections to your volunteers who are fundraising on your behalf. You can make their choice to give even more meaningful by making them feel like they’re part of a team with custom t-shirts.

In t-shirt peer-to-peer campaigns, volunteers raise funds by selling t-shirts to donors. These shirts promote your cause and give donors something to hold onto that will remind them of your nonprofit. Here are a few tips for running this type of fundraiser: 

  • Design custom shirts. While you theoretically can make one t-shirt design and have all of your volunteers promote it, it’s much more meaningful for donors if they can buy a custom garment either designed wholly or with significant input from their friend or family member. Help your volunteers create designs that look good and represent their connection to your cause with design templates, color choices, and suggested fonts.


  • Gamify your campaign. Just like with sports jerseys, having everyone wear matching t-shirts can create a bit of a competitive vibe. Your nonprofit can leverage these feelings of friendly competition and gamify your campaign with a prize for the volunteer who raised the most.

 

  • Celebrate volunteers. At the end of your campaign, thank all of your volunteers for their hard work. Send a thank you card, give them a call, or even host an appreciation event where they and their friends and family can show up in their new t-shirts.

To get started with your t-shirt peer-to-peer fundraiser, you’ll need to partner with a platform that specializes in custom merchandise. Donately’s guide to online donation tools recommends Bonfire, citing their high-quality and discounted payment processing fees for nonprofits. Check them out or explore other options to find a partner that gets your nonprofit team and supporters excited.

2. Giving Days

Giving Tuesday has become a staple of nonprofits’ fundraising strategies. In just 24 hours, supporters are encouraged to give and see if they can reach your organization’s fundraising goal. While the short time span might seem like a detriment on the surface, creating a sense of urgency can help generate a lot of excitement in a limited time frame.

For your peer-to-peer campaigns, consider scheduling them around Giving Tuesday or create a giving day just for your organization. For example, many veterans’ groups make Memorial Day their giving day.

To prepare your volunteers for rapid-fire fundraising, share your nonprofit’s marketing and promotional tips ahead of time. Host an onboarding session where volunteers can ask questions like how they should discuss your nonprofit or if they can still accept donations made after the deadline.

Plus, giving days and peer-to-peer campaigns have an essential aspect in common: they both rely heavily on social media promotion. Online fundraisers can be more accessible for many volunteers, including those who live in remote locations outside of your core community. Make sure your nonprofit’s social media pages are set up ahead of time so volunteers can link to your organization when they make their #GivingTuesday posts.

3. Events

How do you end a peer-to-peer campaign? For nonprofits running continuous and rolling peer-to-peer campaigns, the answer might be never. But sometimes your organization will need to launch a campaign to raise funds in a short period of time. For these types of peer-to-peer campaigns, consider ending with a bang by hosting an event.

Peer-to-peer events give your volunteers an opportunity to meet with others who worked on your campaign, have one-on-one conversations with your staff, and introduce your nonprofit to members of their personal networks who attended. There are a variety of events you can host, including:

  • Walk-a-thons
  • Auctions
  • Community days
  • Advocacy events
  • Sporting competitions

Remember that an engaging event can also serve as one last opportunity for supporters to donate. If you’re close to your goal, let attendees know and keep them updated on your progress live throughout your event to drum up even more excitement.


Author: Jacob Spencer, Customer Success / Account Manager, Donately

Bio: I strive to make every step of our customer journey as enjoyable as possible. My goal is to turn everyone that trusts Donately into a raving fan! Raising funds can be daunting, but we know that with the right tools, it can and should be easy.

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10 Ways to Maintain a Happy, Healthy Volunteer Program

April 26, 2022 by Dennis Fischman Leave a Comment

A guest post by Matt Hugg, Nonprofit.Courses

“Early to bed and early to rise, makes a man happy, healthy and wise.” Who wrote that? Benjamin Franklin in his Poor Richard’s Almanack in 1735.

Ben must have gotten to bed pretty early. He was the original American super-volunteer!

He started a school that became a great university, and also a scientific society, a library, a firefighting company, a hospital, an insurance company, and headed a major fraternal organization. And nearly all exist today! (Which were they? Keep reading!)

We can wonder what kept Ben motivated. Was it civic pride for his adopted home? Was it a feeling that what was good for his community was good for his business — the print shop that produced the Pennsylvania Gazette newspaper and more? Maybe his wife encouraged him, knowing that if he was busy elsewhere, he couldn’t make trouble for her!

We’ll never really know.

But have you asked yourself, “Besides a good night’s sleep, what would make my volunteers ‘healthy and wise’?” Or, in other words, “How can I create some Ben Franklin-inspired super-volunteers of my own?” Let’s look at 10 ways to achieve and maintain a happy, healthy, volunteer program.

1. It starts with seeing the big picture.

This may have been Franklin’s greatest strength. His newspaper gave him a perspective that few had. Few people come to you saying, “I love filing! Put me to work filing all day and I’ll be happy no matter what your cause!” No. They’re with you because they want to be a part of your mission, and if that takes some filing, they’ll file. Some will even get out of their comfort zone and do things you or they never imagined, like fundraising, if they love your cause.  Reminding your volunteers of their role in your bigger picture keeps them motivated, even if the work is difficult, boring, or scary.

2. Give your volunteers variety.

It’s hard to see a common thread among Franklin’s community work. Education, healthcare, public safety, science… maybe when he got bored, he went on to another? You don’t want your volunteers to get bored. Give them variety in their work. Even the most enthusiastic program volunteer may appreciate helping in the office just for the different nature of the work — as long as they believe in your cause.

3. Know why they’re volunteering.

We can only guess at Franklin’s motivations for all that he did. He may have enjoyed the notoriety. He may have had compassion for those who needed the services he created. He could have had a vision for what Philadelphia could become. After all, Franklin’s Philadelphia was the British Empire’s biggest city (after London), but with few of its rival’s amenities.

My guess is that someone knew — and kept him motivated to do more. Do you know what motivates each of your volunteers? For some it will be community spirit. A few might have personal connections to someone on your organization’s board. Others want friends, while some are looking for job skills or simply felt inspired by your website. Maybe they’re giving back for services given to them or a loved one in a time of need. It’s essential that you find out so you can fulfill their needs and they can, in turn, keep fulfilling yours.

4. Let them think.

Franklin was known as one of the great minds of his age. He brought ideas to the table and helped implement them on a regular basis. If his colleagues would have only valued Franklin for his printing abilities, think of how much we all would have lost!

What about your volunteers? Do you value their ideas as much as their output? A lot of them may have ideas on how to do their assigned job better. Or maybe they see how your nonprofit can serve more people or save money. Ask them! Just asking, even if it leads to nothing, shows you value them and keeps them on your side.

5. Tap into their skills. 

In the beginning, few people probably appreciated Franklin’s skills to organize and envision a better Philadelphia, let alone a better America. His culture placed tradesmen like Franklin just slightly over farmers as people who didn’t imagine their world beyond the land or shop they worked in. Real thinking, everyone thought, was done by the noble elite.

But Franklin’s skills went beyond typesetting and ink rolling. His print shop became a place where people brought ideas, and he, in turn, sent those ideas out to the world. The smart people around Franklin saw this and put his skills to work for everyone’s benefit.

Do you know your volunteers’ skills? Not just the skill for the job you have them doing, but do you know the skills they developed over their lifetime of experience? Franklin was more than “just a printer,” just like your volunteers are more than “just volunteers.” You could be missing a lot of potential for your mission. Ask them. They’ll be happy you did.

You can even provide them with training to help build those skills they arrive with. And there are a ton of free training resources out there that are perfect for nonprofit volunteer programs. For example, the Nonprofit.Courses list of nonprofit webinars points nonprofits towards a variety of training opportunities that cover topics from fundraising to marketing.

6. Give clear directions.

This was not lost on Franklin at all. In fact, there’s hard evidence of how much he valued clear directions, starting with a job description and right down to the task level. Top of the list are the Articles of his all-volunteer Union Fire Company. They lay out exactly what a member needed to have and do to carry out his firefighting duties, which included providing linen bags and leather buckets, and penalties if they were missing or broken.

Do you have clear directions for your volunteers? Does each volunteer know what’s expected of them, and the consequences of not meeting those expectations? Your volunteers want to do their best. They’ll appreciate knowing what you expect.

7. Help them tell your story.

As a printer, Franklin knew the power of stories to illustrate a point. He used stories to motivate others on the issues of his day, even if he told them under made-up names — like a middle-aged widow named Silence Dogood!

Stories are a powerful way to motivate your volunteers, and for them to pass on to rally others to your cause. Chances are that whoever started your nonprofit saw a problem, injustice or need that required fixing. For example, perhaps your founder saw a problem in your community with animal abuse or environmental issues and wanted to make a difference. From there, they probably faced resistance or apathy when they brought the issue to light. Your nonprofit exists because they took on the challenge despite any opposition. That’s your heroic origin story! Your volunteers would love to know!

Build on that story and tell more stories about the impact your work has on the people it serves. Encourage your volunteers to tell others. It’s not only a way to keep volunteers happy, it’s also a great nonprofit marketing strategy, too.

8.Make them insiders. 

It’s clear that Franklin loved being an insider. He loved to know “the scoop,” as we’d call it today. Maybe that’s what made his newspaper so well-read.

Knowing “inside” information helps everyone feel more secure in what they are doing, whether it’s a paid job or a volunteer position. If you want happy volunteers, you need volunteers to feel that their role is secure in an organization that securely fills its niche in the community. A little bit of “insider” information can go a long way toward everyone feeling good about their work.

9. Make them donors.

If you have your own money dedicated to a project, you’re even more committed. Franklin knew that probably more than anyone of his time. And he didn’t just talk the talk. There’s evidence of his giving, and even giving the ultimate gift — a bequest. At his passing, Franklin left $4,000 that was to be invested and distributed 200 years later to Boston (his birthplace) and Philadelphia (his home). The resulting $6.5 million went to education, science, healthcare, and more.

Are your volunteers also dedicated donors? Why not? When someone is giving their time and talents and also gives what treasure they can, think of how powerful a statement that is for everyone around them! And don’t think that even the person who looks like they can’t, won’t. Make them happy by giving them the dignity of making the decision for themselves.

10. Wish them well when they leave.

If Franklin’s friends were smart, they wouldn’t have resented or bad-mouthed him when he went on to another project. They would have thanked him heartily and wished him well. Why? To start, they probably knew they couldn’t stop him from moving on. Franklin, like all of us, needed to grow. But even more importantly, they knew that his positive experience, even to the end, would encourage others to join. A great experience, even for an ex-volunteer, encourages others to join your cause.

Not every volunteer will be as prolific as Ben Franklin for your worthy cause. But follow these ten points, and your organization will become wealthy and healthy — and you’ll all feel pretty wise!

 

(And just so you’re not wondering, those organizations Franklin started that exist today are the University of Pennsylvania, the American Philosophical Society, the Library Company of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Hospital, the Philadelphia Contributorship (insurance), and the Grand Lodge of Free and Accepted Masons of Pennsylvania. The Union Fire Company lasted until 1843 — about 100 years!)


Matt Hugg is an author and instructor in nonprofit management in the US and abroad. He is president and founder of Nonprofit.Courses (https://nonprofit.courses), an on-demand, eLearning educational resource for nonprofit leaders, staff, board members and volunteers, with hundreds of courses in nearly every aspect of nonprofit work. He’s the author of The Guide to Nonprofit Consulting, and Philanders Family Values, Fun Scenarios for Practical Fundraising Education for Boards, Staff and Volunteers, and a contributing author to The Healthcare Nonprofit: Keys to Effective Management.Matt Hugg is an author and instructor in nonprofit management in the US and abroad. He is president and founder of Nonprofit.Courses (https://nonprofit.courses), an on-demand, eLearning educational resource for nonprofit leaders, staff, board members, and volunteers, with thousands of courses in nearly every aspect of nonprofit work.

He’s the author of The Guide to Nonprofit Consulting, and Philanders Family Values, Fun Scenarios for Practical Fundraising Education for Boards, Staff and Volunteers, and a contributing author to The Healthcare Nonprofit: Keys to Effective Management.

Over his 30-year career, Hugg has held positions at the Boy Scouts of America, Lebanon Valley College, the University of Cincinnati, Ursinus College, and the University of the Arts. In these positions, Matt raised thousands of gifts from individuals, foundations, corporations and government entities, and worked with hundreds of volunteers on boards and fundraising committees, in addition to his organizational leadership responsibilities.

Matt teaches fundraising, philanthropy, and marketing in graduate programs at Eastern University, the University of Pennsylvania, Juniata College and Thomas Edison State University via the web, and in-person in the United States, Africa, Asia and Europe, and is a popular conference speaker. He has a BS from Juniata College and an MA in Philanthropy and Development from St. Mary’s University of Minnesota. Mr. Hugg has served on the board of the Greater Philadelphia Chapter of the Association of Fundraising Professionals, the Nonprofit Career Network of Philadelphia and several nonprofits.

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3 Ways to Make Your Volunteer Opportunities More Accessible

March 7, 2022 by Dennis Fischman Leave a Comment

A guest post by Shreya Tragad, Digital Marketing Specialist at InitLive

As a volunteer coordinator, you work to recruit and engage exceptional volunteers and encourage these individuals to stick with your organization. But are you doing everything you can to engage the widest possible audience?

One way to ensure your volunteer opportunities are truly open and inclusive to all community members is to make them more accessible. In this case, accessibility means your volunteer opportunities are open to everyone, regardless of their age, background, or ability.

Here are three ways to make your upcoming volunteer events more accessible:

  1. Take an individualized approach to accessibility.
  2. Diversify your recruitment efforts.
  3. Make volunteer opportunities more flexible.

1. Take an individualized approach to accessibility.

Accessibility doesn’t mean adopting one-size-fits-all solutions to attempt to make your opportunities inclusive for all. It means getting to know your volunteers on a deeper level to understand their personal barriers to participation and how you can help reduce or eliminate those barriers.

To ensure you don’t leave any volunteers out, send out surveys before your volunteer events or incorporate questions into your registration page that ask volunteers whether they’ll require certain accommodations. This will provide you with the information you need right from the start and also leaves a good first impression, showing your volunteers that you value offering everyone an equal chance to engage.

These are some of the common barriers your volunteers may face:

  • Time restrictions: Your volunteers may have full-time jobs or children to take care of. Consider offering evening shifts or a variety of shift options for those who have busy schedules.

 

  • Physical barriers: Certain volunteers may face physical barriers where they cannot stand for long periods of time and may require wheelchairs or other devices to assist with mobility. Consider planning volunteer tasks for them to participate in that don’t require physical work.

 

  • Language barriers: It’s important to remember that not every volunteer will be able to speak fluent English, which can cause some difficulty in participating. Try to incorporate different languages in your program, such as offering multilingual training materials.

 

  • Transportation barriers: Not every volunteer will have access to reliable transportation. Try offering a shuttle service or carpool program to offer everyone a chance to participate.

When your volunteers see that you’ve really thought about what barriers they may face and the right solutions to help them, they’ll feel more invested in your program and will be more inclined to continue engaging with your volunteer opportunities.

2. Diversify your recruitment efforts.

Reach out to new groups or audiences that you might not have connected with in the past. This includes individuals from all backgrounds, abilities, and ages. When you have a team of individuals from different backgrounds, it helps your organization become more creative and innovative. This will also allow new volunteers to feel more comfortable being a part of your organization when they see themselves reflected in your existing volunteer base.

Ensure your recruitment materials are accessible to all and reflect a diverse range of experiences. For example, your online registration page should feature accessibility best practices like using alternative text for images, ensuring sufficient contrast between the foreground and background, and avoiding flashing or strobing elements. Plus, your images should reflect the diversity of your volunteer base so that prospective volunteers can visualize themselves working with your organization.

Remember to craft your volunteer opportunity descriptions in a way that will attract a diverse group of candidates to avoid filtering down your volunteer options. For example, avoid saying “looking for young volunteers,” as it may exclude older, talented volunteers who are just as passionate about your cause. To have a diversified recruitment strategy, it’s important to have an inclusive approach right from the beginning of your volunteer management process.

3. Make volunteer opportunities more flexible.

Ensure your volunteer opportunities are flexible, as finding the free time to volunteer can often be a major barrier for supporters. Your volunteers may have busy schedules, which may prevent them from participating in your volunteer opportunities, even though they have the desire to. A great solution to this is offering flexible volunteer opportunities, including:

  • Micro-volunteer opportunities. This helps accommodate volunteers with busy schedules or childcare conflicts. For instance, if you’re planning a major event, consider offering shorter one-hour shifts so that your volunteers only have to take minimal time out of their days to participate.

 

  • Virtual opportunities. These opportunities allow volunteers to support your organization from home. This can open your volunteer opportunities to those with transportation or mobility restrictions. You can even engage your virtual volunteers to help support your digital fundraising campaigns, such as your crowdfunding campaigns.

 

  • A variety of volunteer roles within each shift. For instance, if you’re working on sprucing up your community garden, you might have some volunteers working on planting or weeding. You can have others take on less physical roles, such as logging your plant inventory in your virtual database or creating educational materials for visiting school groups.

 

The goal is to enhance your volunteer’s experience and allow everyone an equal opportunity to participate. To make your volunteer opportunities more flexible, adopt a well-rounded approach that’s most effective for your supporters.

 

Now that you’ve learned some of the ways to make your volunteer opportunities more accessible, it’s time to start planning! There’s no reason not to embrace accessibility and work to incorporate more inclusive elements into your volunteer program. Increasing the accessibility of your volunteer opportunities creates a more positive, engaging experience for all volunteers.

It all starts with understanding any restrictions your volunteers face and trying to overcome them by providing multiple solutions. Once you’ve got a handle on that, it’s all about providing ongoing support.

 


Shreya Tragad, InitLiveShreya Tragad, Digital Marketing Specialist at InitLive

Shreya is a creative content creator focusing on delivering information about the importance of volunteerism for nonprofit organizations. She is passionate about creating engaging content, writing, and graphic design to help viewers easily retain information. You can find her work at www.initlive.com or on Linkedin and Twitter.

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