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Fundraising Letter Tips
Questions To Answer Before You Ask Anyone For A
Donation
I have a brother-in-law who farms and drives a 16-wheeler for a living. When I
told him that I start each business day with a blank computer screen that I must
fill with at least 1,000 words by noon, he almost fainted.
He says he could never do it because he wouldn't know where to start. But the
same goes for me when it comes to pulling the engine out of a John Deere 6020
Series tractor.
My brother-in-law is correct, of course. You can't write an effective
fundraising letter unless you know where to start. The most important part of
any direct mail fundraising appeal is what you do before you write a word of the
package.
Poorly conceived appeals lead to poor results. Letters written in haste usually
waste money and hinder donations.
The secret to attracting new donors, renewing support, raising funds, building
relationships and retaining loyal donors with direct mail is to ask yourself the
tough questions before you ask anyone for a donation. You need to know who you
are writing to, why you are writing them, and what you want them to do.
Here are some tips for increasing your chances of success by answering the vital
questions that leading fundraisers ask before writing a single line of copy.
1. Who are you writing to?
Most of your donors share a common trait. What is it? Are they all touched by
heart disease in some way? Are they all veterans? Are they all former students
of your university? Are they all theatre-goers?
Understanding your audience is the first step because who you mail to is the
single most important determinant of your success. You can craft the most moving
appeal letter of the decade but your campaign will flop if you mail it to the
wrong people.
Here are some of the questions you should ask yourself to get a better
understanding of your donors--and how to appeal to them in a relevant way that
motivates them to give.
* What are they passionate about--what makes them furious?
* What is their affinity with your organization--strangers? Regular donors?
Major donors? Former donors? Volunteers? Clients?
* What types of appeals (emergency, renewal, acquisition, year-end) generate the
highest response and largest gifts with this audience?
2. Why are you writing?
That sounds like a dumb question, right? You are writing because you need money!
That's a given. But as someone has so well said, "Your donors do not give to you
because you have a need. They give to you because you meet a need."
This means you need to take your attention away from your financial need and
turn it to your cause. What crisis, opportunity, current event, issue or need is
causing you to appeal for funds today? Focus on that and not on your need for
funds. Here are some other questions to ask at this stage:
* What is the goal of this appeal letter, exactly? Acquire new donors or
members? Get your current supporters or members to renew their support or
membership? Raise funds for a particular project? Recover lapsed donors or
members?
* What will you do with the money raised? Put it in your general fund? Spend it
on a designated project or program? Reduce your deficit? Buy some capital
equipment? Donors want to know.
* Why do you think donors will respond now? Have they responded to similar
appeals? Have they supported similar organizations?
3. What do you want your readers to do?
"We want them to mail a gift, the larger the better!" Not so fast. Are you
writing to business peers, inviting them to join your organization as members?
Or are you mailing to existing donors, asking them to renew their support by
mailing you a gift? Or are you writing to major donors, inviting them to join
your giving club (President's Circle, for example)?
In each of these cases, the action you want your reader to take will be
different. So make sure you know what action your readers must take before you
start writing. Consider these other questions:
* What other actions do you want your readers to take? (Request information
about planned giving? Sign and mail a petition to their member of parliament?
Complete and return a survey? Refer a friend?)
* How much do you want them to give? What is the amount of money that you want
to receive from each person who receives your letter?
* What is the minimum size of gift you need? What is the largest gift that you
can reasonably expect?
Some of these questions are easier to answer than the others, depending on where
you are in your annual giving program, the age of your organization and the
nature of your mission. But asking them (along with the many other questions you
must ask yourself before committing money to a mailing) should reduce your
mailing costs, eliminate waste and increase your response rates and levels of
giving.
About the Author
Alan Sharpe is a professional fundraising letter writer. Sign up for free
weekly tips like this at www.RaiserSharpe.com.
Related Pages
How To Write Fundraising
Letters - Sample donor query letter and tips on writing your own donation
request.
Raising Funds By Mail - Five success
pointers for raising funds by mail for your nonprofit - How to use direct mail
to increase your non-profit fund raising.
Powerful Postscripts - Ten ways to
boost donation letter response rates - Add powerful postscripts to your
fundraising letters.
Increasing Donor Gift Size - How
to increase the size of donor gifts from your fundraising letters - Proven
methods for getting better donation response rates.
Sample Donation Thank You
Letter - Here's a sample thank you note and tips on how to thank each donor
personally for their contribution.
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