Donor-Centered Newsletter Stories Increase Income, Boost Donor
Loyalty.
Your donors read your donor newsletter to discover news about
themselves. You are of secondary interest.
Like you, your donors and members read what interests them.
They donate money to causes that interest them. They read about
people that interest them. That's why they support your
organization--because you interest them. Your donors read your
donor newsletter to learn what kind of difference they are
making in the world, through your organization.
This is why the donor newsletters that generate the highest
readership among donors and members--and attract the most
gifts--are the ones that focus on the needs of donors and
members and not the organization. They are donor-centered. A
donorcentered newsletter inspires donors to act. It
motivates them to give. And it encourages them to remain loyal.
This doesn't mean that every newsletter story you write has to
be about your donor. It simply means that you must make the
donor the hero of every story possible. Here are some practical
ways to do that.
Write stories that show recent gifts hard at work
Donors give to make a difference. They want their financial
contributions to right a wrong, change attitudes, eliminate a
problem that keeps them awake nights, and help the downtrodden
and underprivileged. When your donors pick up your newsletter,
they are looking for stories that demonstrate that their gift is
accomplishing their goals.
So make sure your donor newsletter contains plenty of news
stories that show donations at work. Show the link--explicitly
or implicitly--between the donor support you received and the
good you are accomplishing because of it.
Describe recent successes
Whenever possible, publish news stories that describe
accomplishments that interest your donors. Some accomplishments
(staff promotions, for example) will interest your staff or your
board of directors more than they interest your supporters.
The closer the accomplishment is to the heart of your mission,
the more likely your donors are to find the story appealing.
Your challenge with each newsletter issue is to uncover these
accomplishments. And if you can't find any obvious ones, you
need to turn mundane accomplishments into donor-centered
accomplishments.
Inspire readers with your vision for the future
Would you vote for a political party that had no platform? Or
invest your life savings in a public company that had no
strategic five-year plan for improving profitability or
increasing market share? Or send your children to a college that
hadn't changed its curriculum since the Internet was invented?
Informed donors want to support museums, universities,
hospitals, women's shelters and other non-profit organizations
that are thriving today--and have a plan for thriving tomorrow.
Avoid "Nonprofit Navel-Gazing Syndrome"
Some non-profit organizations suffer from what Jeff Brooks,
senior creative director at the Doman Group, a direct marketing
fundraising agency, calls "Nonprofit Navel-Gazing Syndrome."
This condition causes non-profits to believe that donors must
see the world the same way they do. This leads to a lack of
respect for donors who do not share their vision, and an elitist
attitude that prevents effective fundraising.
Brooks lists a number of symptoms of Nonprofit Navel-Gazing
Syndrome:
- news about back-office staff
- photos of wealthy (non-typical) donors presenting giant
cheques to your organization
- photos of people standing around (maybe holding wine glasses)
at your fundraising event
- articles that have the sole purpose of educating your donors
(instead of trying to stir their emotions)
- stories about your methodology
The proven remedy for Nonprofit Navel-Gazing Syndrome is
newsletter stories that put your donor--not you--in the center
of the action.