donor communications secrets to success
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https://bloomerang.coTRANSCRIPT
Donor Communications Secrets to Success
Presenter: Jay Love
Your PresenterJay B. Love !• 30 Years of Technology Leadership • Over 20,000 Database Installations • Former Founder & CEO of eTapestry • Former CEO of Master Software/Fund-‐Master • AFP Board Member • AFP Ethics Committee Chairman • Center on Philanthropy at IU Board Member • Innovation Fund at Butler University Board Member • Gleaners Food Bank Board Member • Co-‐Chair of Indianapolis YMCA Capital Campaign
3
In our surveys, less than 45% of fundraisers knew their current donor retention rate.
Do you know your retention rate?
The 2013 FEP results are in »
6 out of every 10 donors do not give again!
New donor retention is even worse »
Donor Attrition Over Five Years
# of Donors Attrition Rate
Donors Remaining After 1 Year
Donors Remaining After 2 Years
Donors Remaining After 3 Years
Donors Remaining After 4 Years
Donors Remaining After 5 Years
1,000 20% 800 640 512 410 328
1,000 40% 600 360 216 130 78
1,000 60% 400 160 64 26 10
So what?
https://bloomerang.co/retention
• 5% -‐ thought charity did not need them • 8% -‐ no info on how monies were used • 9% -‐ no memory of supporting • 13% -‐ never got thanked for donating • 16% -‐ death • 18% -‐ poor service or communication • 36% -‐ others more deserving • 54% -‐ could no longer afford
Why nonprofit donors leave »
https://www.linkedin.com/today/post/article/20140520191728-746287--infographic-why-donors-stop-their-support
BAD COMMUNICATION
Why nonprofit donors leave »
Cue the experts »
A significant number of donors lapse because they find the communications they receive inappropriate. - Dr. Adrian Sergeant,Bloomerang Chief Scientist
http://www.afpnet.org/files/ContentDocuments/Donor_Retention_What_Do_We_Know.pdf
Cue the experts »
“Are your charity's fundraising, advocacy or other "persuasion" communications riddled with common, hidden flaws that limit their effectiveness?” - Tom Ahern, Bloomerang Donor Communications Head Coach
Cue the experts »
You send a message...
Goal of donor communications »
...and you want action!
1. What do I know about the target audience? 2. What does that knowledge suggest I do? 3. What are the obstacles?
First, ask yourself »
Ignore Pay attention
You send a message »
Ignore Pay attention
You send a message »
• How did you grab my attention? • How did you stir my emotion? • How did you make your case so I cared? • How did you talk to me personally? • How did you advance the case story? • How were you relevant to the reader? • How were you relevant to the times?
Why were you successful? »
You’re trying for “mental nods.”
Secret to Success #1 »
Pay attention
Ignore
Skim & engage Skim & discard
You send a message »
Pay attention
Ignore
Skim & engage Skim & discard
You send a message »
Pay attention
Skim & engage
Not satisfied Satisfied
Action No action
© 2013 Tom Ahern
Ignore
Skim & discard
You send a message »
© 2013 Tom Ahern
An Example »
Why am I in your home?
Ask #1.
Do I have relevant news?
Ask #2.
Do we have a connection?
Ask #3.
Brief opening
Personalization
Reinforce the connection
Are donors important?
Far more than you might
realize.
Disqualify other sources of
income
Demonstrate importance of donors’ work
Ask #4
Shift responsibility for the success of the mission onto donors’ shoulders
Remind what’s at stake
Ask #5
News value. Urgency.
And Ask #6.
Flesch reading ease: 58, Flesch-Kincaid grade level: 8
Ahern Audit »
Your appeal is NOT about how wonderful your organization is.
Your appeal IS about how wonderful the donor is.
Secret to Success #2 »
Beginning of mail
End of mail
Elapsed time: 1-‐3 seconds
You do not sell everything to everyone.
!
You sell to specific values, feelings, beliefs, hopes, dreams, connections, affiliations, tribes,
etc.
It’s not about you. It’s about the donor.
Not you. The donor.
Not you.
The donor.
What kind of communication am I going to write today?
First Question »
Types of Donor Communications »
• Letters • Emails • Acknowledgements • Newsletters • Social Media • Videos • Blog Posts
1. Acquisition (no gift yet, reader is a stranger) 2. Renewal (made a prior gift, reader is a friend)
Two Distinct Types of Appeals »
½ of 1%
Acquisition Response Rate »
40-‐70%
Renewal Response Rate »
1. Who are you (your promise)? 2. What do you want? 3. Why should I trust you? 4. Why do you matter? 5. How do you relate to me? 6. What’s the rush?
Ask Yourself (Acquisitions) »
1. What did you do with my prior gift? 2. Are you grateful? 3. What do you want now? 4. Do you have proof? 5. Again: Who are you? 6. What’s the rush?
Ask Yourself (Renewals) »
• Use the person’s name• Use the pronouns “you” and “I” • Include an audience attribute: “As a parent, you know....” • Geography: “As a resident of...” • Hand-‐written touches
Personalize! »
Make your donors the solution to some local problem.
Secret to Success #3 »
They’re aware of consequences !
“Someone might be hurt if I don’t give.”
Dr. Adrian Sargeant: Why Donors Stay Loyal »
“…the purpose is to get the reader involved long enough and interested enough to make a positive decision. Nothing else.” -‐-‐ Jerry Huntsinger
1st paragraph: 10 words or less.
Secret to Success #4 »
Multiple asks
Secret to Success #5 »
Multiple Asks
Logo
[ Optional important message ]
Dear Ms. Smith, If you’re like me, the sight of kids running around on stage in silly costumes makes you giggle with delight.
Sincerely, Ms. Sincerity Champion, ED !PS: ytuytggygkigkygkygigikgy
Ask!
Ask!
Ask!
Ask!
The purpose of donor communications:To get inside a person’s home or office ... ... and carry on a brief, persuasive “conversation in print,” hoping it will earn your cause a gift.
It’s not breaking and entering.
How does a good guest act?
• Is the letter a conversation – or a brochure? • Is the opening sentence short? • Is it personal (“you” and “I”)? • Have I said why I’m here? (“I’m writing to you today
because...”) • Does it make a promise? • Is there urgency? • Are there at least 3 asks? • Does it entertain (tell a story, offer news)? • Is the donor the hero?
Donor Communications Checklist »
Don’t bore me.
Secret to Success #6 »
Neuroscience says…“Coming across new information triggers a chemical reaction that makes us feel good, which in turns causes us to seek out even more of it.” Source: Wall Street Journal article by Lee Gomes, on USC neuroscientist, Dr. Irving Biederman; published March 12, 2008
Dear Jane Sample, ! Our doctors call it "Day Zero.” ! It’s the day you come back from the dead.
NewAnything
Will Grab My Attention (including the word “new”)
Also “new-‐ish”Words like secret, hidden, hints, tips, update, private, confidential, mystery, discover, unveil, expose, reveal, divulge. Phrases like "Did you know?", "Myths
and Facts," "Frequently Asked Questions," "Heard on the Blog."
Know your SMIT. Single Most Important Thing.
Secret to Success #7 »
“Focus on the SMIT (single most important thing) you want to tell someone, right now. Ideally focused on a story about an individual.”
-‐-‐ Jonathon Grapsas
Get them into a fight.
Secret to Success #8 »
“Giving is not about a calculation of what you are buying,” Yale economics
professor, Dean Karlan, proved.
“It is about participating in a fight.”The New York Times | March 9, 2008
Make a promise.
Secret to Success #9 »
Memphis Child Advocacy Center
Helping VictimsBecome Children Again
They are not giving to this, at least not initially
They are giving to this
Donors don’t give to your organization. They give through your organization to:• fix a problem they worry about• sustain or expand a solution they believe in • get more of what they’re interested in • feel like they’ve made a difference
• Emotion • A story • Urgency
What You Must Have »
1. Mental nods 2. Not about you, it’s about the donor 3. Make your donor the solution to a problem 4. 1st paragraph: 10 words or less 5. Multiple asks 6. Don’t bore me 7. Know your SMIT 8. As long as it needs to be 9. Colloquial language
9 Secrets to Success »
Questions?