Here’s a rule I live by when asking for donations through the mail or email. It’s subtle but important.
Focus on the understandable change your organization makes in the world, not on how your organization makes the change.
Let me give you a quick “before & after” of an example ask, and then dig into the details…
Focused on how the organization makes the change:
Your gift will fund our research-based brain development program addressing the mental health and cognitive needs of children from 8 weeks to 5 years.
Focused on the change the organization makes:
Your gift provides a pre-school where a child feels safe so that they learn the skills they need to succeed in Kindergarten.
In the “before” example, notice how much “how we do our work” is present:
- Their work is researched-based
- Their program is a brain-development program
- Their program addresses mental health and cognitive needs
Those details are incredibly valuable to the organization, and are what make them effective.
But they are not why most individual donors, in email or the mail, donate.
What makes individual donors donate, based on the fundraising results we see, is the understandable change that the donor’s gift will make. Let’s look again at the example that focuses on the understandable change – you’ll see how it’s focused on things the donor will immediately understand and how the world will be better than it was before.
“Your gift provides a pre-school where a child feels safe so that they learn the skills they need to succeed in Kindergarten.”
- The gift “provides a pre-school” – everyone reading immediately knows what pre-school is and who goes there, as opposed to very few people knowing that a “research-based brain development program” is.
- “where a child feels safe”’ – feeling safe is an obvious benefit, and indicates that the child didn’t feel safe before, which points to an obvious positive change the donor can help make.
- “learn the skills they need to succeed in Kindergarten” – this communicates that the child doesn’t have the skills now, but that the donor’s gift will help provide the skills. The obvious “understandable change” is that the child probably wasn’t going to succeed in Kindergarten, but now they will.
Here’s the hard-won knowledge I’m hoping you’ll work into your fundraising this year: if you focus your fundraising to individual donors on the understandable change your donors can help make with a gift today, you’ll raise more money.
If you want to know more about why this happens, read my post from last Thursday.
And if you want two other ways of describing the same general concept, here you go:
- Donors fund outcomes, not process
- Focus on what you make possible, not on what you do
Good luck, and I hope your year is off to a great start!