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Digg it UP - Fundraising Letters Should Raise Donors, Not Donations, When Mailed to Strangers
Increase Sales to Your Business By Consistent Excellent Customer Service Let’s say you receive a 1 percent response rate. That’s 100 gifts. Further assume that the average gift is $30 Your income is $30 x 100 donors, namely, $3,000.Have you ever frequented one business establish because you received incredibly good customer service and then left that business when the customer service was no longer incredibly good? What business management continues to fail to understand is that you left not because of poor products or services, but because of inconsistent customer Your costs are: $6,000 Are you in trouble? No. Here’s what you tell your executive director. “We gained 100 new donors. And up to 80 percent of them will give again, provide Make Customers Come Back - Winning Customer Retention Strategies Are you willing to spend $1.25 to raise $1? To lose money to make money? You should be. Most donor acquisition mailings never pay for themselves. They lose money. And rightly so.Customer Retention marketing is a tactically-driven strategy to keep relationships with customers going and increase customer interest. This strategy relies on the study of customer behavior. Here are the basic tenets of a marketer that seeks to increase customer retention:1. Past and Current customer behaviorThis is the bes Acquisition letters (letters designed to acquire new donors) should be a vital part of your development program. Current donors fall away. Some lose interest in your mission. Some lose their jobs. Other leave the country. Some die. You need to be mailing fundraising letters to people who have never supported your cause in order to replace the donors who fall away every year through no fault of yours. But to be successful at acquiring new donors, you need to ignore one set of numbers and fix your eyes on another. The numbers to “ignore” are the costs of getting your first donation. According to James Greenfield, in his excellent book, Fund Raising (second edition), you can expect to pay anywhere from $1.25 to $1.50 to raise $1 with an acquisition mailing. That doesn’t sound like a wise use of your resources, does it? But with acquisition fundraising letters, you need to have your eyes fixed on the lifetime value of your donor, not the short-term value of their first gift. You need to remind yourself (along with your board members, key volunteers and inexperienced colleagues) that your goal with acquisition mailings is to acquire friends, not funds. Let me illustrate. Let’s say you mail a fundraising letter to a list of 10,000 strangers. These are people who have not supported your organization before but might. Assume that your costs for writing, design, production and postage come to $0.60 a piece. Your mailing costs are thus $6,000. Let’s say you receive a 1 percent response rate. That’s 100 gifts. Further assume that the average gift is $30 Your income is $30 x 100 donors, namely, $3,000. Your costs are: $6,000 Are you in trouble? No. Here’s what you tell your executive director. “We gained 100 new donors. And up to 80 percent of them will give again, provided Outcomes - That's What You Need to Focus On ou need to be mailing fundraising letters to people who have never supported your cause in order to replace the donors who fall away every year through no fault of yours.Successful business owners and managers need to be very clear about what outcomes they want. Whether you call them goals, objectives or targets, these are the factors that you're ultimately judged on. Outcomes determine whether your business is a success or a failure.If you're an employed manager, you'll find them in your jo But to be successful at acquiring new donors, you need to ignore one set of numbers and fix your eyes on another. The numbers to “ignore” are the costs of getting your first donation. According to James Greenfield, in his excellent book, Fund Raising (second edition), you can expect to pay anywhere from $1.25 to $1.50 to raise $1 with an acquisition mailing. That doesn’t sound like a wise use of your resources, does it? But with acquisition fundraising letters, you need to have your eyes fixed on the lifetime value of your donor, not the short-term value of their first gift. You need to remind yourself (along with your board members, key volunteers and inexperienced colleagues) that your goal with acquisition mailings is to acquire friends, not funds. Let me illustrate. Let’s say you mail a fundraising letter to a list of 10,000 strangers. These are people who have not supported your organization before but might. Assume that your costs for writing, design, production and postage come to $0.60 a piece. Your mailing costs are thus $6,000. Let’s say you receive a 1 percent response rate. That’s 100 gifts. Further assume that the average gift is $30 Your income is $30 x 100 donors, namely, $3,000. Your costs are: $6,000 Are you in trouble? No. Here’s what you tell your executive director. “We gained 100 new donors. And up to 80 percent of them will give again, provide The Vulnerable Research and Innovation Base of South Africa d Raising (second edition), you can expect to pay anywhere from $1.25 to $1.50 to raise $1 with an acquisition mailing. That doesn’t sound like a wise use of your resources, does it?IntroductionSouth Africa is facing structural problems in strengthening its research and innovation capacity in order to become and remain competitive in the global business environment. Although greater emphasis is given to strengthen Research and Development efforts in the country and to translate it into commercialization But with acquisition fundraising letters, you need to have your eyes fixed on the lifetime value of your donor, not the short-term value of their first gift. You need to remind yourself (along with your board members, key volunteers and inexperienced colleagues) that your goal with acquisition mailings is to acquire friends, not funds. Let me illustrate. Let’s say you mail a fundraising letter to a list of 10,000 strangers. These are people who have not supported your organization before but might. Assume that your costs for writing, design, production and postage come to $0.60 a piece. Your mailing costs are thus $6,000. Let’s say you receive a 1 percent response rate. That’s 100 gifts. Further assume that the average gift is $30 Your income is $30 x 100 donors, namely, $3,000. Your costs are: $6,000 Are you in trouble? No. Here’s what you tell your executive director. “We gained 100 new donors. And up to 80 percent of them will give again, provide IT Specialists: Branding Your Company eers and inexperienced colleagues) that your goal with acquisition mailings is to acquire friends, not funds.As IT specialists, a big way to differentiate yourself is to make sure that you're branding your company. Focus on selling your company name with its new industry twist. In this article, you'll learn why branding your company is so important for IT specialists.Don't go in flashing the certifications and vendor logos because that re Let me illustrate. Let’s say you mail a fundraising letter to a list of 10,000 strangers. These are people who have not supported your organization before but might. Assume that your costs for writing, design, production and postage come to $0.60 a piece. Your mailing costs are thus $6,000. Let’s say you receive a 1 percent response rate. That’s 100 gifts. Further assume that the average gift is $30 Your income is $30 x 100 donors, namely, $3,000. Your costs are: $6,000 Are you in trouble? No. Here’s what you tell your executive director. “We gained 100 new donors. And up to 80 percent of them will give again, provide The Keys To Successful Self-Marketing Let’s say you receive a 1 percent response rate. That’s 100 gifts. Further assume that the average gift is $30 Your income is $30 x 100 donors, namely, $3,000.You’ve probably noticed how few people always seem to get the raises, promotions and pats on the back from the boss, while so many others toil for years, unrecognized and unrewarded, at the same jobs.You can attribute career stagnation to bad luck, but that’s not enough. Napoleon believed that luck didn’t fail people; rather people Your costs are: $6,000 Are you in trouble? No. Here’s what you tell your executive director. “We gained 100 new donors. And up to 80 percent of them will give again, provided we follow up properly and solicit their gifts in the right way in the future.” Each of these new donors effectively cost you $30 each (your net loss divided by total new donors). Are you willing to spend $30 today to raise a friend who will likely give your organization hundreds of dollars in gifts in years to come? You should be, provided you can remember that your goal with acquisition letters is to raise a donor, not a donation. My thanks go to Stanley Weinstein and his book, The Complete Guide to Fundraising Management (second edition), for his insight into the economics of donor acquisition.
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