Here’s something weird but true:
Your Staff and Board receive more of your fundraising communications than your donors do.
That might not seem possible, but here’s how it works:
The Staff and Board of a nonprofit tend to open and read everything the organization sends out… but donors don’t.
Let me give you an example, and then I’ll share why this is so important.
For example, if you send out a fundraising email, almost everyone on your Staff and Board notice and look at it. But if your email open rate is 30%, then 70% of the people on your email list did not see the email.
So your Staff and Board received an email, but effectively 70% of your donors did not.
And if you send out an appeal letter, everyone on your staff and Board will notice and take look at it. But maybe 50%* of donors opened the letter.
So your Staff and Board received an appeal letter, but about half of your donors didn’t.
Play this out over the course of a year and your Staff and Board have received a lot more of your fundraising than your donors have. Put another way, the Staff and Board understand how many pieces the organization is sending to donors, but they don’t understand how few pieces the donors are receiving.
Consequently, most nonprofits have an over-inflated sense of how much they are communicating with their donors.
The Consequence
When Staff and Board don’t know this truth, they often inadvertently keep an organization smaller than it could be.
The Staff and Board base their advice on “how much communication is enough” on their own inflated perception, NOT on their donors’ lived experience.
Consequently, nonprofit Staff and Boards consistantly advocate for less communication than the organization could be sending out, which results in less money raised from individual donors.
At Better Fundraising, our general rule of thumb is that most individual donors see a little less than half of the fundraising an organization sends out. Keep that in mind as you build annual plans and campaigns, and you’ll communicate more effectively and raise more money.
And if you’re at a smaller nonprofit where your Staff or Board are handicapping your fundraising because of a mistaken understanding of “how much we’re communicating with our donors,” please share this post with them.
Getting Staff and Board to recognize the situation, and then moving past the stage where “my Board/boss won’t let us send out any more fundraising because s/he thinks we send too much,” is a step made by every organization with a thriving individual donor fundraising program.
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* This is an educated guess. The published data on direct mail open rates is self-reported data, which is notoriously inaccurate.
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Hey, I’m giving a free webinar next Wednesday on how to make your most effective annual plan ever.
There are two main things I’m going to teach:
- How to know the times when your donors are most likely to give you a gift, so that you can plan your asks during those times
- How to tweak your “communication mix” so that you get more response from the same number of letters and emails
The free webinar is next Wednesday, January 29, at 2pm Eastern/11am Pacific.
There’s limited availability so that we can have a conversation. This is NOT me talking for 55 minutes. There will be lots of time for questions.
For more info, here’s the link:
https://betterfundraising.com/annual-planning-webinar/
I hope to see you next Wednesday!