Fundraising Letter Reply Devices: Are You Making These Mistakes?
Fundraising letter reply devices--also known as reply coupons,
donation coupons, reply slips, response forms and gift
forms--are the instruments that conclude your request for funds.
If your reply device doesn't work, your appeal letter doesn't
work--and you don't get the gift.
Here are some tips for getting your reply devices right.
General Guidelines
* Assume the reply device is the only piece in the package your
donor will read. This forces you to make a strong case for
giving.
* Ask donors to do as little as possible in returning a gift to
you in the mail--make the process as quick and easy as possible.
* Involve the donor in some way (placing a check mark in a box,
answering a survey question or two) that moves them closer to
making the gift.
* Restate why you are asking for funds now--keep selling the
idea of making a contribution.
* Reiterate the benefits the donor receives by making a donation
(membership in your organization, for example, or a free book
that you will mail upon receiving the gift).
* Contain an "acceptance statement" written in the voice of the
donor (Example: Yes! I'll help in the fight to end clear cutting
in Puget Sound. Here is my gift. Send me your free newsletter."
* Leave lots of room for donors to write.
* If the reply device is designed to solicit large gifts, don't
call it a reply device. Give it a name that communicates
importance and value, such as "Memorandum of Acceptance."
* Include your organization name and address, just in case the
reply device and reply envelope get separated.
* If you are requesting gifts by check, tell the donor who to
make the check payable to.
Mistakes to Avoid
* Introducing new ideas or taking a new direction
* Making the donor do too much
* Leaving insufficient room for donors (particularly elderly
donors) to complete the form
* Using the same reply device for every appeal. Because they are
printed several at a time on a sheet of paper, reply devices are
inexpensive to produce. So design one for each appeal so that
each reply device supports the case for support and appeal for
funds in each appeal package
* Forgetting to include the donor's unique identification number
* Printing the letter and reply device on the same sheet of
paper. Testing over the years has demonstrated that a separate
letter, reply device and reply envelope generate better
responses and more gifts than reply devices that must be torn
off the bottom of a letter.
* Designing your reply device so that donors are confused and
unsure of what to do to make a donation.
* Including information on the reply device that donors want to
keep but that must be returned with a donation. Print any
information that donors will likely want to retain on a
perforated portion of the reply device that donors tear off and
keep.