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Easier Said Than Done : Choose Your Budget-Cut Battles Wisely

Offer up your advertising and branding initiatives as a sacrifice, but fight to the death for your donor-acquisition efforts.

June 2009 By Jeff Brooks
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Every fundraising campaign you launch will do worse than it should because you’re missing those donors. It’s not just fewer bodies. It’s fewer committed supporters. And that empty donor class continues to echo through your fundraising. The pain tends to peak three to four years after the cuts, but it will be meaningful and measurable for seven to 10 years.

Do your budget-cutters know this? Would they still make the “easy” cuts to donor acquisition if they did? They might think that cutting acquisition is no worse than getting a bad haircut. But it’s actually more like amputating your legs.

The one to let go
You might do better in the critical battle to protect donor acquisition if you’re willing to give the knife guys something they can slash without a huge fight.

This is going to make me spectacularly unpopular in some quarters, but I’m putting the whole class of branding and awareness activities in the go-ahead-and-cut category. That’s because there’s no direct, measurable connection between those expenses and any meaningful impact on your bottom line.

Spending on advertising is largely an act of faith. Faith can be a beautiful thing, but it’s not the best basis for business decisions. In hard times, you’ve got to put your dollars into measurable activities.

Some brand advocates will tell you their work is measurable. They’ll cite a metric like “unaided recall” — meaning that when surveyed, more people mention your organization’s name than did before — or “aided recall,” where people claim to have heard your name when they hear it.

Pardon me, but do you mind if I roll my eyes? Measuring “recall” and things like it is almost completely bogus.

It’s possibly true (though it can’t be proven) that someone who’s heard of you is a bit more likely to give a gift than someone who hasn’t heard of you. But that’s not a fact you can take to the bank. For one thing, nobody writes a check when she tells you she’s heard of you — it’s just a thought, an idea. For another thing, as all direct marketers know, the divide between what people say and what they actually do is wide. Since we’re talking budgets here, stuff you can take to the bank is pretty much the whole thing.

Think of it this way: Would you rather move 100 people 10 percent of the way toward giving or move 10 people 100 percent of the way toward giving?

In the first scenario — which is a branding or awareness campaign — your revenue is zero, no matter how much you spent. In the second scenario — a classic direct-response fundraising campaign — you end up with revenue. The only question is whether it came at an acceptable cost.

In flush, easy, noncutting times, you might be able to spend money on speculative ventures like branding and awareness and be OK with the nonmeasurable benefits that could come as a result.

But not these days. So hand it over to the knifers. You’ll make almost everyone happy.

Bonus recession-time savings
Slicing away programs isn’t the only thing you can offer the knife boys. During a recession some significant savings are possible — savings you can’t make at other times.

Most printers, broadcast media and print advertising outlets are suffering serious losses to their businesses right now. There are deals to be made — if you’re willing to look for them. Don’t be evil. But negotiate. The savings can be significant. FS

Jeff Brooks is creative director at Merkle and keeper of the Donor Power Blog. Reach him at jbrooks@merkleinc.com


 

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COMMENTS

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Most Recent Comments:
ed - Posted on June 12, 2009
I like the article alot. I am new to fundraising so I beg toask this question: Can you define 'donor acquistion'? I easily follow the concept of growing your donor base, but I am unclear about what sounds like a zero-sum situation between growing, acquiring new donors and the cultivation/development thru time (as you mentioned, having the donors move progressively more supportive from years 2 thru 4+). How do you characterize the need to use the branding/awareness campaigns to reach out & motivate those acquired donors in tough times? I think your thesis is good, but I would really like to hear you expound more on it. I'd love to hear more details & perspective. Thanx!
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Archived Comments:
ed - Posted on June 12, 2009
I like the article alot. I am new to fundraising so I beg toask this question: Can you define 'donor acquistion'? I easily follow the concept of growing your donor base, but I am unclear about what sounds like a zero-sum situation between growing, acquiring new donors and the cultivation/development thru time (as you mentioned, having the donors move progressively more supportive from years 2 thru 4+). How do you characterize the need to use the branding/awareness campaigns to reach out & motivate those acquired donors in tough times? I think your thesis is good, but I would really like to hear you expound more on it. I'd love to hear more details & perspective. Thanx!