What KFC Can Teach You About Donor & Customer Communications

The following is a hand-picked guest post from Simon Scriver. Enjoy, and you can read more about Simon below.

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People talk a lot about how often you should be mailing, e-mailing and phoning your donors. Charities often ask me how often they should be contacting their donors. And whenever they do I always think about the Chicken Variety Meal at KFC.

Yes, KFC.

If you’re my age or older you might know them as Kentucky Fried Chicken. But they rebranded in an attempt to hide the word “fried” (or, as some might have you believe, to hide the word “chicken”). KFC is my secret shame. I don’t drink, I don’t smoke, I’m generally a good person. But, despite myself, I love KFC and have had to manage my addiction to the point where now I can proudly say it’s just a “special treat.”

Every time I go in to KFC and order my meal they ask if I want to give them more money to Go Large. And every time I say yes. And I never get annoyed.

Even if I went in there every meal of every day they would continue to ask me to give them more more money. And I would never get annoyed.

Why not?

Because I love their chicken, I love their fries, and I love their Pepsi. I crave it. Every bite is a euphoric journey to a salty land of nostalgic love. KFC and The Colonel are giving me exactly what I want, when I want it. And when they offer me more, I’m grateful.

You see, junk mail is only junk if it doesn’t apply to you. I get pizza menus dropped in my mailbox every day… and they annoy me every day that I don’t want a pizza.

I hear anecdotal evidence on Donor Communications all the time: People don’t want to get mail, don’t want to get e-mails, don’t want to get phone calls. And people don’t want to be asked for money.

That’s simply not true.

People don’t want to receive bad mails. They don’t want to receive bad phone calls. They don’t want to receive bad e-mails. And they don’t want to be asked for money… badly.

If people don’t want to receive your updates and your appeals it’s not the donors fault and it’s not the medium’s fault. It’s your fault.

The public want to hear from you as often as you have something interesting and relevant to say. How often should you be contacting your donors? Well, ask yourself: how often have you got something good to say?

And ask yourself, honestly, how good is your fundraising-chicken?

[You can read more like this at www.changefundraising.com]

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Steven says,Simon Scriver is one of the co-founders of Fundraising Everywhere.  If you’ve not heard of Fundraising Everywhere, it’s an online community that provides professional development and peer support for fundraisers. And if you’ve not heard Simon speak, make it a point to go to a session of his at a conference; he is fun, funny, and helpful!” This blog post originally appeared on the excellent Bloomerang.co.

Author Profile
Simon Scrivner.
Simon Scrivner

Simon Scriver is the co-founder of Fundraising Everywhere. He’s also a recovering fundraiser, coach/mentor, trainer, keynote speaker and podcast host. He’s been called"The Fundraiser's Fundraiser" and Fundraising Magazine ranked him in its Top 20 Most Influential Fundraisers. He also won Fundraising Ireland's 'Small Budget, Big Impact' and ‘Supplier Of The Year’ Awards, Eircom’s Start-up Award, and was a 2019 finalist of Charities Institute Ireland’s Communications Agency of the Year.

He’s a TEDx speaker and has previously won the Toastmasters UK & Ireland International Speech Contest, representing in the world finals where he was disqualified for going over time. He has a Diploma in Fundraising and a Certificate in Fundraising, and is working towards a degree in Theology.

Simon Scrivner

Simon Scriver is the co-founder of Fundraising Everywhere. He’s also a recovering fundraiser, coach/mentor, trainer, keynote speaker and podcast host. He’s been called "The Fundraiser's Fundraiser" and Fundraising Magazine ranked him in its Top 20 Most Influential Fundraisers. He also won Fundraising Ireland's 'Small Budget, Big Impact' and ‘Supplier Of The Year’ Awards, Eircom’s Start-up Award, and was a 2019 finalist of Charities Institute Ireland’s Communications Agency of the Year.

He’s a TEDx speaker and has previously won the Toastmasters UK & Ireland International Speech Contest, representing in the world finals where he was disqualified for going over time. He has a Diploma in Fundraising and a Certificate in Fundraising, and is working towards a degree in Theology.

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