Expert Fundraiser is offering 10 telephone seminars during the last week of May, 2012.Each session is 90 minutes and includes time for questions. You canparticipate from anywhere in the world that has a phone.The presenter is Alan Sharpe, CFRE, direct mail fundraising consultant, author and coach. The cost of each tele-seminar is CDN$49. These tele-seminars will NOT be recorded. [Read more...]
How to Create Compelling Direct Mail Fundraising Envelopes
By Billy Sharma
One of the hardest things to do in direct marketing is to get the recipient to open your direct mail package, therefore, the outer envelope is of prime importance. Its function is more than just holding the contents securely; it must entice the respondent to I open it.
Siegfried Vogele, a research professor of direct marketing, observed that the average person spends between five and fifteen seconds scanning their mail, screening and rejecting what to open, what to discard or what to save for later, all in the proximity of their wastebasket.
If your direct mail piece never gets opened, your message never gets read. So how do you ensure that your piece survives? Here are some simple yet effective ways to ensure that your direct mail piece is opened:
The first thing that goes through a recipient’s mind is WIIFM. What’s-in-it-for-me” Why is this company writing to me? What do they want from me? Remember, you are intruding on someone’s time, so make sure the piece has some relevance to the recipient. Otherwise you are just producing junk mail.
Provide a hint of what’s inside. Partially revealing the contents through a window can be exceedingly effective. Many books have suggested this, but the most conclusive evidence is a piece of research that tested two envelopes.
One had simply the words ‘Free Book Inside’. The other had a large window that partially revealed an actual book with the same words, ‘Free Book Inside’. The envelope that revealed the book out pulled the other by 30%.
Clear polybags display the entire contents. Polybags are great for mailing unique offers, posters or several booklets or multiple pieces. Publishers and catalogues use polybags extensively.
Capture the reader’s imagination. Remember that if the reader can decipher what you are selling without even opening the envelope, then it is a bad envelope. The bad envelopes do not reveal everyt5hing-they only tantalize you to look inside.
Use teaser copy. Teaser copy can arouse curiosity and interest, either by using a provocative statement or by asking a question. The teaser can be a partial one to lead the recipient inside or it can be split on the front and back of the envelope. If it is enticing, the recipient will flip it over to get the complete message.
When targeting a very select group, the message should be meaningful to the audience. For example, “Your copy of a report on osteoporosis” is more likely to be opened by someone concerned with osteoporosis.
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Excerpted from The Handbook of Direct Marketing for Non-Profit Organizations, by Billy Sharma. Available in paperback from www.expertfundraiser.org
The Art and Science of Keeping a Direct Mail Donor
By Billy Sharma
The art lies in building and fostering a strong bond with your supporters. This is best achieved through compelling communications and quick responses to their generosity.
- Your appeal must give a persuasive reason for giving and should identify the financial goals essential to your charity
- Work to understand your donors and offer them an appropriate plan of action
- When a gift comes in, send a thank you promptly
The science is how you use the data, research and testing methods available to you.
- Segment your donor files. Remember the RFM (Recency, Frequency and Monetary Value) rules of direct marketing
- Spend more time, effort and money on people who have given more recently, more frequently and more generously. They are the most likely to give again and could very well keep increasing their donation amounts. They are also the ones who need to be constantly reminded about your organization and should receive more communication pieces annually
- Research and test what works best for which group of donors
- Use data mining to determine affinity for giving. Some donors have a higher propensity to give than others. You could determine this by researching their lifestyle behavior and or just by noting their postal or area codes
- Track your donors’ giving history in terms of size and frequency of giving
Know your Donors
New Donors are first time givers.
Transition Donors are those who give sporadically. They have a history of giving once in a while in a 16-24 month period.
Core Donors are those who have given a gift to the charity regularly either each year or within sixteen months.
High Value Donors are those who give big gifts.
Lapsed Donors are those who have stopped giving. They fall into two categories:
- Recently Lapsed donors who have not given in the last 13-24 months;
- Deeply Lapsed donors who have not given in the past 25 months.
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Excerpted from The Handbook of Direct Marketing for Non-Profit Organizations, by Billy Sharma. Available in paperback from www.expertfundraiser.org
How Angry Are Your Donors With You? Take this Quiz and Find Out.
By Alan Sharpe, CFRE
Have you upset one of your donors recently? Just how mad do you suppose they are at you, on a scale of 1 to 10? Take this quiz and find out. [Read more...]
Answer the Only Question Donors Have and You’ll Raise More Money Fundraising

By Alan Sharpe, CFRE
Your donors have only one question that bothers them. If you want to acquire more donors, you have to answer it. If you want to raise more net revenue, you need to answer it. And if you want to increase the lifetime value of your donors, you must answer it.
Here’s their question: “How will my donation change the world?” [Read more...]
How to Get a Second Gift from a New Direct Mail Donor
By Alan Sharpe, CFRE
If your charity is at all typical, you will lose 65% of the donors you acquire by direct mail in the first year alone.
In other words, only 35% of the donors you acquire through direct mail will give you a second gift. Most donors acquired through the mail are acquired at a net loss (you must spend money to acquire each donor), so you can see how important it is for you to do all that you can to encourage first-time donors to give again.
Here are the main reasons new donors do not give a second gift: [Read more...]
Why You Will Lose Donors Today, Guaranteed
By Alan Sharpe, CFRE
What does your charity have to do to guarantee that some of your donors will stop giving today?
Nothing.
You are going to lose donors today whatever you do. Or don’t do.
Donor attrition is a fact of life at every non-profit organization. No matter how long you’ve been around, no matter how large your base of support, no matter how popular your cause, no matter how much your donors love you, some of your donors will fall away today and never give you another cent. [Read more...]
Is Your Returned Mail Costing You $481 a Piece?
By Alan Sharpe, CFRE
You have a costly problem with returned mail. All non-profit organizations do. You mail perfectly nice letters to donors who have supported your cause for years, and then, one day, without so much as a by-your-leave their mail comes back to you marked RETURN TO SENDER. [Read more...]
Reduce Your Direct Mail Fundraising Costs and Attrition Rates with NCOA
By Alan Sharpe, CFRE
What would you do if I broke into your office at midnight, sat down at your computer, and jumbled the mailing addresses of 1,200 of your current donors so they became undeliverable? [Read more...]



