The 7 deadly sins of nonprofit storytelling

Fundraising is Beautiful Podcast

Here are seven common storytelling sins that make your story ineffective:

  1. It’s about you, not your donor.
  2. It doesn’t have conflict.
  3. The problem is too big.
  4. It’s a story about success, not need.
  5. It’s over-written.
  6. It’s too hard to read.
  7. It’s aimed at the wrong audience.

The Evil Cousin of Fundraising

Fundraising is Beautiful Podcast

Listen to an excerpt from the new book, How to Turn Your Words into Money: The Master Fundraiser’s Guide to Persuasive Writing by Jeff Brooks, reading the chapter titled “The Evil Cousin of Fundraising.”

Coverstanding180Learn about the all-too-common practice of fundcrushing — using large numbers and overwhelming facts as the means for coaxing donors into giving. The truth is, it rarely works.

Find out what to do instead of fundcrushing that will motivate donors to give. (It’s not that difficult!)

How to Turn Your Words into Money: The Master Fundraiser’s Guide to Persuasive Writing, is available at:

Your fundraising is not for you

Fundraising is Beautiful Podcast

The most common and destructive error fundraisers make is aiming their messages at themselves — creating what they believe would motivate them to give.

They should be aiming at their donors. And donors are very different from you in nearly every way.

Here’s help for aiming your work in the right direction so you can raise more money for your cause.

Good News Fundraising or Bad News Fundraising?

Fundraising is Beautiful Podcast

What story does your fundraising tell? Is it Bad News — the problem and brokenness that you want your donors to help you change? Or is it Good News — the promise of what can happen when your donor steps up and gives.

Or maybe there’s a third, more perfect, way.

We’ll show you that way, the approach to fundraising that avoids the revenue killing errors of either good news or bad news fundraising.

You say it’s your anniversary: How to make it work for fundraising

Fundraising is Beautiful Podcast

Most of your donors don’t care that your organization has been around for a nice round number of years. That’s why Give to us because it’s our 25th and we’re awesome is a lousy way to raise funds.

But there are some things you can do to leverage your anniversary into more revenue. We discuss four cool things you can do that will turn that otherwise meaningless milestone into good things.

The unique unimportance of uniqueness in fundraising

Fundraising is Beautiful Podcast

Many organizations believe that their uniqueness is the main reason donors will choose them for their charitable giving. That’s a revenue-crushing mistake.

Successful fundraising starts where the donor is — not in the organization’s uniqueness — and makes a clear, simple case.

“I’m looking for an organization to support that’s completely unique,” said no donor, ever.

Your uniqueness is important. But it can drag down your fundraising if you over-focus on it.

Fundraising techniques that everyone does: Are they bad?

Fundraising is Beautiful Podcast

How often we hear someone say: I will never use that fundraising technique because everyone does it!

We see something again and again and think it’s hackneyed, out-of-style, and ineffective.

Actually, it’s usually the other way: Those fundraising “techniques” you see again and again are the things that work.

This special podcast for fundraising nerds only includes the cheapest way to get a powerful fundraising education.

Fundraising From Yourself: Beware

Fundraising is Beautiful Podcast

We’re taking a look at one of the most destructive forces in all of fundraising: The need we all have to make ourselves the audience for our messages: Fundraising From Yourself — or FFY.

It’s the quick and sure path to failure.

We’ll show you the three signs that FFY is happening in your organization and give you the tools for avoiding this common problem that costs nonprofit organizations millions of dollars every year.

Want relationships with your donors? Prove it!

Fundraising is Beautiful Podcast

Consider this: Most nonprofit organizations want “real relationships” with their donors. But they communicate with donors as infrequently as possible, and when they do, they tend to talk only about themselves. What kind of relationship-building is that?

We’ll examine three ways to walk the talk if you really want to build relationships with donors:

  1. Communicating frequently enough.
  2. Talking to donors about donors.
  3. Reporting back to donors about the impact of their giving.