Aren't your donors worth putting some extra effort into creating events and campaigns that are worth their time and, ultimately, their money?
Budget management and budget cuts are never easy, but becoming stagnant and not trying to change is not the answer.
It's not always easy to make your donors' wishes come true. But if you don't put forth the effort to meet their emotional needs, someone else will.
While the old techniques — direct mail and telemarketing — still work and generate responses, they alone are no longer the "gold standard" in fundraising. Savvy nonprofits are moving to "surround sound" fundraising.
There is too much competition for your donors' attention and dollars to make fundraising a narcissistic exercise.
Be explicit, don't beat around the bush, get to the point and be clear in your fundraising appeal letter. You'll raise more money if you do!
When I open an envelope, I want to quickly grasp what it is I am being "offered" — what problem can I solve if I send a gift? Are you answering that question for your reader?
Although the outcomes of any given fundraising effort cannot be known with absolute certainty, assessing the probability of success isn't entirely guesswork, either.
Join FundRaising Success in Washington, D.C., next week for our inaugural peer-to-peer conference, Engage P2P: Redefining Peer to Peer.
How can you understand the communication experience your donors are having if you don't have it all written down?