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Actual for You - Donor Newsletters Boost Direct Mail Donations Without Asking For Donations
7 Questions to Ask Before You Advertise letters can be print or email. One page or many pages. Black and white or full-color. But whatever format they take, they should inform and inspire donors.Most business owners and managers keep a fairly close eye on their marketing budgets.And nothing throws a budget out of whack faster than advertising.Advertising, or paying good money to get your message in front of your target market, still has a place in your marketing mix, although it's not quite as effective as it once was.If you're go Get by giving donors what they want My client’s donors, like yours, give to make a difference. They want their financial contributions to right a wrong, change attitudes, eliminate a problem that keeps them awake nights, and he Should You Crack the Tough Nuts? I have a client whose direct mail fundraising program is in trouble. I think you can profit from his predicament. I know he is going to.Years ago I used to focus on the worst members of the audience. The ones who crossed their arms and legs, never smiled, hardly said a word or took a single note throughout the day. I felt the need to ‘win them over’ to prove my ability as a speaker and a trainer.I’ve learned something over the years: Some people do not want to be won over – and that’s O The development officers at his non-profit organization are doing plenty of things right. They attract new supporters by mailing donor acquisition packages a couple of times a year. They solicit gifts from their existing donors many times a year. They thank donors promptly for every gift received. They recover lapsed donors using direct mail. And they watch their numbers. Yet the return on investment for their best renewal mailing each year has been declining steadily, from 1,500% five years ago to only 700% today. How come? Because they are trying to raise money only by asking for it. With the exception of their gift acknowledgement letters, every letter they mail to donors asks for a donation. And that’s why their direct mail program is floundering. You need givers, not just gifts The key to success in direct mail fundraising is not donations, but donors. Your primary goal is not raising revenue, but building relationships. Your aim with everything you mail is first to keep your donors, and then to keep them giving. The most effective way for my client to keep his direct mail income steady or growing is to use direct mail as a donor retention tool and not just as a donation acquisition tool. He should create and publish a donor newsletter, and mail it as often as he mails his appeal letters. If his donors receive four asks a year, they should receive four newsletters a year. These newsletters can be print or email. One page or many pages. Black and white or full-color. But whatever format they take, they should inform and inspire donors. Get by giving donors what they want My client’s donors, like yours, give to make a difference. They want their financial contributions to right a wrong, change attitudes, eliminate a problem that keeps them awake nights, and hel Improve Your Small Business Through the #4 Universal Funnel Law ank donors promptly for every gift received. They recover lapsed donors using direct mail. And they watch their numbers.Universal Funnel Law #4 – Every business needs customers or clients. A customer relationship plan further develops loyal customers and serves as a source for ongoing referrals.W. Edwards Deming who is considered to be the father of continuous or quality improvement said “Profit in business comes from repeat customers, customers that boast Yet the return on investment for their best renewal mailing each year has been declining steadily, from 1,500% five years ago to only 700% today. How come? Because they are trying to raise money only by asking for it. With the exception of their gift acknowledgement letters, every letter they mail to donors asks for a donation. And that’s why their direct mail program is floundering. You need givers, not just gifts The key to success in direct mail fundraising is not donations, but donors. Your primary goal is not raising revenue, but building relationships. Your aim with everything you mail is first to keep your donors, and then to keep them giving. The most effective way for my client to keep his direct mail income steady or growing is to use direct mail as a donor retention tool and not just as a donation acquisition tool. He should create and publish a donor newsletter, and mail it as often as he mails his appeal letters. If his donors receive four asks a year, they should receive four newsletters a year. These newsletters can be print or email. One page or many pages. Black and white or full-color. But whatever format they take, they should inform and inspire donors. Get by giving donors what they want My client’s donors, like yours, give to make a difference. They want their financial contributions to right a wrong, change attitudes, eliminate a problem that keeps them awake nights, and he Youth and Business - Can Be a Great Combination t letters, every letter they mail to donors asks for a donation. And that’s why their direct mail program is floundering.It is great to be young and to have that entrepreneurial spirit. Many businesses have been made successful with this concept of youthful enthusiasm and mature approach. With the advent of the internet, it seems that the chances of being successful - or at least, losing little, are increasing.In 2002, a few young programmers made a modification for the w You need givers, not just gifts The key to success in direct mail fundraising is not donations, but donors. Your primary goal is not raising revenue, but building relationships. Your aim with everything you mail is first to keep your donors, and then to keep them giving. The most effective way for my client to keep his direct mail income steady or growing is to use direct mail as a donor retention tool and not just as a donation acquisition tool. He should create and publish a donor newsletter, and mail it as often as he mails his appeal letters. If his donors receive four asks a year, they should receive four newsletters a year. These newsletters can be print or email. One page or many pages. Black and white or full-color. But whatever format they take, they should inform and inspire donors. Get by giving donors what they want My client’s donors, like yours, give to make a difference. They want their financial contributions to right a wrong, change attitudes, eliminate a problem that keeps them awake nights, and he Creativity Management and Time Pressure m giving.There is a pervasive belief that time pressure stimulates creativity. This is both true and false.There are a number of forces at work:a) Time pressure increases creative output. By forcing idea production, setting goals and incremental deadlines, a greater number of ideas are produced than if a “do your best” approach is taken. If a leader asks The most effective way for my client to keep his direct mail income steady or growing is to use direct mail as a donor retention tool and not just as a donation acquisition tool. He should create and publish a donor newsletter, and mail it as often as he mails his appeal letters. If his donors receive four asks a year, they should receive four newsletters a year. These newsletters can be print or email. One page or many pages. Black and white or full-color. But whatever format they take, they should inform and inspire donors. Get by giving donors what they want My client’s donors, like yours, give to make a difference. They want their financial contributions to right a wrong, change attitudes, eliminate a problem that keeps them awake nights, and he Make Luck Happen letters can be print or email. One page or many pages. Black and white or full-color. But whatever format they take, they should inform and inspire donors."I’m a great believer in luck, and I find the harder I work, the more luck I have."Thomas JeffersonI couldn’t agree more with Mr. Jefferson, luck is truly a product of our efforts, hard work, and the persistence we maintain to get what we want in life – to make our dreams a reality.Some people think that you need a great amount of luck in Get by giving donors what they want My client’s donors, like yours, give to make a difference. They want their financial contributions to right a wrong, change attitudes, eliminate a problem that keeps them awake nights, and help the downtrodden and underprivileged. When donors pick up a newsletter, they are looking for stories that demonstrate that their gift is accomplishing their goals. That’s why my client needs to write newsletter stories that show donations at work. He needs to show the link—explicitly or implicitly—between the donor support he received and the good he is accomplishing because of it. Many donors will not give another donation until they know their last one is hard at work. That’s why donor newsletters are so vital. They get by giving. My client no longer expects to raise direct mail donations simply by asking for them. His attention is now off the donations and on his donors, where it always belongs. © 2006 Sharpe Copy Inc. You may reprint this article online and in print provided the links remain live and the content remains unaltered (including the "About the Author" message).
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