Instinct vs. Insight

As a fundraiser you’ll have a lot of people offer you suggestions on how best to do your job.  Well intentioned board members, executive directors, program staffers, volunteers and supporters will, at one time or another, probably all give you suggestions (requested or not).

Most of these suggestions are based on instinct.  Unless the person making the suggestion is an experienced fundraiser herself, chances are the suggestion is based on a “gut feel”.  Acting on a gut feel (whether from a board member or even your own) can be devastating to your fundraising if it turns out to be wrong.  And FYI, much of the time acting on instinct isn’t the best course of action.

That’s where insight comes into play. Insight is knowledge based on a deep understanding of your consumer (or donor) and the fundraising techniques that yield most significant results.

When in doubt, choose insight over instinct.  Here are some examples to get you thinking…

Mail Frequency
Instinct:
We only mail 3 times per year because we don’t want to overload our donors.  Donors hate being solicited more than that, and they’ll stop giving if we ask more often.

Insight: Research and testing shows exactly the opposite is true.  As long as you’re doing a good job thanking donors and sharing relevant, compelling opportunities with them, increased frequency helps retain more donors and deliver more revenue.  It’s naive to think that donors won’t continue to be solicited just because you stop asking.  They’ll just not be solicited by you.  Which means they’ll be more likely to give to someone else.  Why?  Because the #1 reason donors give is BECAUSE SOMEONE ASKED.

Social and Mobile Media
Instinct: We’re shifting all of our fundraising to text messaging and Facebook.  Look what Obama’s campaign and Red Cross have been able to do on mobile and social media.  We’ll save a ton of money and be able to engage millions.

Insight: Your organization isn’t the Obama campaign (or any other Presidential campaign).  The reason Facebook and mobile giving worked for Obama is because he was getting millions of dollars in paid and free TV media and had an aggressive offline program as well.  In fact, most of the Obama campaign’s revenue still came from direct mail and e-mail vs. Facebook and text giving.  And unless you’re a major disaster relief organization, you won’t be able to compete with Red Cross either.  Mobile giving worked for them because they had (pardon the potential pun) the perfect storm.  Major natural disaster, days and days of free Television coverage and a network of volunteers and donors built through traditional media that they could leverage in crisis.  Most organizations don’t have these options.

Photographs / Images
Instinct: We only want photos of happy kids.  We’re about positive change.  Those organizations that show sad looking, needy kids are exploiting them for financial gain.

Insight: People give to meet a need.  To right a wrong.  To solve a problem.  If your photos and communications show only the happy “after” images, you remove the donor’s natural motivation to act.  You can show only happy photos – but you won’t raise as much money.  And that means you won’t meet as much need in the community.  Which is more important to you?  Which is more important to those you serve?

Demographics
Instinct: We have too many old donors.  We need to change up our strategy and approach and focus on acquiring younger donors instead.  They’ll be the future of our organization.

Insight: Yes, younger people will be the donors of the future.  But you probably don’t have unlimited resources, so focuse the resources you do have where you’ll get the highest ROI.  It isn’t as sexy or interesting, but older donors still give a significant majority of all charitable dollars.  Spend a little time and money (no more than 20%) of your budget to test into new audiences.  But spend the bulk of your resources on the donors who are giving today, and who are giving the most money (i.e., older donors).

Multi-channel Giving
Instinct: We never mail our online donors because they gave online.  They clearly didn’t want to receive mail.  Besides, this saves us a lot of money.

Insight: Recent studies show that donors who are acquired online but cultivated offline as well give significantly more than those who are not cultivated offline.  And their retention rates are higher as well.  While you might save a few dollars on the cost side, you’re missing out on a ton of income.  As a good friend of mine likes to say, “stop wasting a dollar to save a dime!”

Major Donors
Instinct: Major donors absolutely get pulled out of our mail program.  We send them event invitations only.  They’re major donors.  They expect not to be hounded.

Insight: This one decision results in more lost revenue opportunity than just about anything else in the nonprofit space today.  Yes, your major donors should get special appeal formats.  Yes, you should consider reducing their mail frequency (assuming you’re mailing 12+ times/year now).  Yes, they should get highly personalized treatment (including face-to-face relationship building).  But no, you shouldn’t pull them completely from your mail program (unless they specifically ask you to do so).

Branding
Instinct:
Everything we send needs to adhere to our brand guidelines.

Insight: Everything you send should adhere in principle to your brand guidelines.  Good branding that reinforces your core fundraising strategy can help. But direct mail is a unique monster, and donors are equally unique.  Often you need to break brand guidelines and standard rules of grammer to write copy that compels people to action.  The goal of your fundraising materials should be to raise money.  That’s it.  Not to be “on brand”.  If given the choice between being “on brand” and “on revenue”, you owe it to those you serve and those who support you to pick the revenue.

3 Comments

  1. Alva

    Thank you so much for the article. It is very useful.

    Recently I sent a LinkedIn Invitation, Facebook Event and Facebook post as wel as EMailing abot 300 people to invite them to a fundraiser dinner to build a camp for abused children in Romania five days ago. We have received only 5 RSVPs saying them could come. I assume phone calls are the next step, or should we continue to repeat the Invitation on the social media?

  2. AndrewOlsenCFRE

    Hi Alva,

    You should send a paper invitation, if possible. Then you can follow that up with a phone call. In the meantime, it wouldn’t hurt to post again in a few days to FB and LinkedIn, etc. Then as you get closer to the event date you should send another e-mail blast.

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