Author Archive

12
dec
0

Annual Fundraising Seminar

On Friday December 9, we had the pleasure of hosting the Annual Fundraising Seminar at WDM together with the Fundraising Network.


Daryl Upsall put up a one-man show in two appreciated sessions. During session 1, Daryl reminded us of some basic truths in this profession. A good fundraiser needs to understand why donors want to give. When asking, tell your donors a true story about people, explaining your mission in a direct way. Get to know your donors: are they “Dorothy Donors”, i.e. direct mail acquired middle-class, educated, well-off 55+ women, or are they “Felicity Donors”, i.e. 18-55, educated, connected, mobile, in debt, and acquired through various channels, be it F2F, telephone, internet, sms… Are you taking these profile data into account in your communication? Upgrade yourself as a fundraiser, taking advantage of blogs, internet debates, case study websites, conferences, etc. Get the most out of your data analysis. Breakdown silos in your organisation and strive for fully integrated supporter-led fundraising. Dare to innovate and embrace new media and new technologies.


In session 2, Daryl passed on insights on how to be successful in F2F-fundraising and telephone fundraising. Some of his tips and tricks? Invest in training and best quality fundraisers to hit the streets. Update and upgrade your show card and underline your story with tangible material. Prepare a powerful donor follow-up programme, since the first few weeks, months and even the first year are crucial. Monitor all your data all the time. Communicate with F2F donors in a consistent way, don’t treat them as donors acquired through other channels. Measure no-shows and attrition differently. Attrition is inevitable but here are some ideas to fight attrition: a thank you SMS to the donor within 24 hours, a welcome call in the first days, a MGM call in the first months. This may actually deliver a double result: less attrition and new donors. Install a dedicated 24/7 telephone line for your donors. Be creative…


Please join us next year for our 2012 edition, probably on the first Friday of December.

We’ll be happy to see you there again!




Posted by IsabelBaert
02
nov
0

International Fundraising Congres

Friday night. I'm just coming back from the International Fundraising Congress, my head packed with new ideas and new insights, fragments of strong networking moments and of good fun with fundraisers from all over the world. As I experienced before, the conference offered an excellent organisation and networking environment, and we were spoilt with some very interesting workshops. The closing plenary sent all attending fundraisers home with a big challenge: if you look at long term results on a global scale, of course many good things have happened, but mankind has not made a giant leap. There is more poverty today than ten years ago, in spite of all the efforts of charities, which face large scale challenges but do not achieve large scale solutions. Public opinion wants charities to solve the world's burning issues, but expects this to be done spending as little as possible on overhead costs, salaries and marketing investments. To change the world it might be necessary to change charities and public thinking about charities. There is a lot to learn from the commercial world, such as taking risk, daring to invest, accept trial and error, and make the profession of changing the world attractive to today's brilliant young minds.

Throughout this three-day conference we learnt more about the way fundraising is likely to change in the coming years. Traditional direct mail is not dead, but is just one little element in the fundraising mix, amongst face-to-face asking, telephone fundraising, DRTV, online fundraising, events, community fundraising, advocacy, making your social network work for you, mobile, video, gaming... 

Some buzzwords: the gaming layer, or fluffers opposed to biters (those who communicate softly with donors, and those who brutally go for the ask) need to find each other halfway. Is there a need for a social CRM solution, capturing individual social network behaviour? Probably, but at the same time, it is clear that donors/consumers are in control and marketers are no longer. Contact points are growing rapidly, and it seems impossible to monitor all these entry points and get actionable intelligence on what's happening “out there”. This “out there” being the internet, where huge opportunities are to be had for those who know how to use it. Social media are not the magical fundraising trick many hoped it would be, reeling in loads of funds in an effortless, fun way. "Everything on the internet is like accelerated direct marketing" is an often heard quote. Facebook does not offer direct result, but indirectly it can be a great tool to get support for your cause, and get in touch with your supporters. And why not let those supporters do some of the work for you? Every share of a donation on Facebook is potentially worth 12 dollars.  A smartphone or a laptop with internet card can bring donors and beneficiaries in direct contact.

How to use all these new tools? In the end of the day, it's all "just" new channels, but the same ingredients: tell a compelling story, convey emotion, present a clear and achievable goal, repeat the ask frequently (without getting a bore), put the donor first, thank people for their help and give them a good feeling in return. The IFC surely succeeded in sending its attendants home with a good feeling, and charged batteries to confront their daily mission.
Posted by IsabelBaert