Fundraising Best Practice Series: Volume 10, Donor Stewardship

This final installment of the Fundraising Best Practice Series focuses on donor stewardship.  It’s fitting given that many of you are probably knee deep in thank you notes, thank you calls and visits to round out the 2011 holiday giving rush.

When I think about the word stewardship, I think of the responsibility of taking care of something that belongs to someone else.

The responsibility of taking care of something that belongs to someone else.  Think about that for a minute.  How does this definition impact the way you think about donors’ gifts?  Will it change at all the way you deal with donors in the coming year?

Here are some tips and resources for improving donor stewardship at your organization.

Treat people well.  The bottom line with stewardship is that you need to treat donors the way you’d want to be treated if the tables were turned.  Be honest, upfront, communicate regularly (and clearly).  Show appreciation and be sincere in all your dealings.  Look for opportunities to create “wow” moments for your donors.  And be prompt.

Have a written stewardship plan.  Much like documented major gift cultivation plans or even your annual development plan, your stewardship plan is a road map for your organization to navigate the stewarding of donor contributions.  This plan should cover the basics (how/when to receipt and thank donors, etc.), as well as the more specific (who in your office should be involved in managing the process, the donor relationships, stewarding large or unique contributions, etc.).  This plan should also describe your process for stewardship recognition (i.e., annual report lists, campaign signage, naming opportunities, special events, etc.).  The plan needs to outline ways in which you will report back to donors on their investment and the timing for such reports.

Follow the plan.  What good is a plan if you don’t follow it, right?  If you’ve gone through the trouble of writing the plan and documenting the process, then follow it.  If there are parts of the plan that are no longer viable for your organization, change them.  There’s no sense in doing things that don’t improve donor relationships.  Update the plan, then follow it.

Don’t assume.  If you don’t know whether a donor wants to receive public recognition for her philanthropy, don’t just assume one way or another.  This could create a big problem for both of you.  Instead, simply ask the question and make sure you’ve got permission from the donor before doing anything.  You and your donor will both be glad you did.  And remember, asking shows her once again that you care about her, not just about her money.

Reporting is key.  There are dozens of tactics you can use in the stewardship process.  Most of them are smart ways to engage donors.  But ask any donor and she’ll tell you that more than a fancy name plate on a wall or the best seat at an event, she wants to know that you’re using her gift wisely and that it is making an impact.  Be in contact with your donors regularly to show them how you’re using their money and what it is accomplishing.  Here are some ways to do this:

  • Monthly newsletters
  • Quarterly impact reports (used primarily for special project campaigns)
  • Tours (especially good if you’re in a capital campaign and can show progress toward a goal)
  • Dedicated website or page on your main site where you post regular updates on your progress
  • Monthly coffee chats
  • CEO’s weekly or monthly e-mail update (very short, bullet point list of recent accomplishments and things to look forward to)
  • Shareholder conference calls (these are hugely successful in political fundraising campaigns and could be valuable for nonprofit major and capital gift campaigns as well)
  • Annual report
  • Visits with program or project management staff
  • Informal meetings with board members

Throw good parties.  Everyone (well, almost everyone) likes to celebrate success.  Create a series of annual events you can use for stewardship and cultivation purposes.  These are not solicitation events.  They are receptions, dinners, backyard BBQ’s, CEO round-table discussions, lecture series’, etc.  They’re geared to report on progress, celebrate your shared successes, focus on the impact donors are making for your cause and show them that you appreciate them.

Hire someone to focus on stewardship.  Everyone in your organization should be responsible for stewardship at some level.  But if you don’t have a specific person responsible for creating the plan and managing the process, you won’t accomplish your goals.  In most organizations, this is a Manager or Director of Donor Relations.  It can be someone else, but make sure stewardship is the priority in that person’s job description.  This role needs to be much bigger than just a glorified event coordinator.  So much of your future success depends on getting stewardship right – don’t gamble with this part.

13 Comments

  1. […] donors because they ask too much.  Those that do fail to combine the right amount of feedback, stewardship and other communications with their solicitations.  If all you ever do is ask, then yes, […]

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