FundRaising Success

You will be automatically redirected to fundraisingsuccessmag in 20 seconds.
Skip this advertisement.

Advertisement
Advertisement
 
 

Mid-Level Donors: Get ’em, Grow ’em, Keep ’em

December 2008 By Ashley Shockley
Do you need help developing long-term relationships with your mid-level donors? Do you want to launch some special mailings and tailored communications for these high-level donors but don’t know where to begin? Or is your current mid-level program in dire need of some fresh ideas?

Several organizations have made a big impact on the bottom line by attracting donors to the mid-level and by maintaining long-term, fruitful relationships with them, L.W. Robbins Associates President Lynn Edmonds said at Blackbaud’s 2008 Conference for Nonprofits held last month in South Carolina.

Bryan Terpstra, vice president of client services at Robbins, added that, “A big focus is on the creative approach used to attract the mid-level donors and how this differs from the approach used for other segments of the donor file.”

Terpstra presented a variety of strategic and creative executions that fundraisers should apply to their specific fundraising programs.

The speakers agreed there are several reasons why nonprofits should invest time, resources and money into mid-level giving programs, including:

* It helps generate significantly more gross and net revenue for mail programs.

* It allows an organization to pinpoint and effectively communicate to its best donors.

* It develops a pool of individuals that can be counted on for extraordinary expenses or projects and for special appeals.

They also offered these seven essential steps for growing a mid-level donor club:

1. Create a distinctive name and brand.
The name should be unique and meaningful. Terpstra said a good rule of thumb is to tie in the organization’s mission. “Create a logo treatment as a visual cue to boost awareness, recruitment and retention in all fundraising efforts,” Edmonds added.

2. Determine the giving levels of your program.
Giving clubs can serve as bridges between renewal programs and major giving. “It’s crucial to make donors feel like they’re part of a special group and appreciated within their level,” Terpstra said. “But also encourage them to aspire to higher giving levels by showing additional benefits.”

3. Create benefits for joining the society.
The benefits can be a combination of tangibles and intangibles. Tangible benefits include certificates, decals, lapel pins and medallions, while intangibles can be recognition in an annual report or other publication, a society-member page on your Web site, or invitations to special events.

“The benefits should be personal and tied to specific levels of commitment to drive larger gifts,” Edmonds said.
 

Companies Mentioned:

SPONSORED CONTENT

MORE ON CAMPAIGNS / FUNDING SOURCES >>

FROM THE BOOKSTORE

(PDF Download)

Direct mail, email, mobile, social media, video, search ... the marketing landscape can either be a minefield where mistakes can kill campaigns, or a perfectly integrated mix of channels that maximizes the reach of the message and gives a nonprofit the best chance to capture more donor dollars.  

<b>In <i>"The Art & Science of Multichannel Fundraising" </i> from DirectMarketingIQ, the roadmap to that "perfectly integrated mix" is thoroughly laid out in over 130 pages -- <u>it's specifically created (and priced) for nonprofits</u>. </b>
  
First, 9 chapters from leading fundraisers give you the latest best practices in multichannel fundraising, including how to:  

• Choose the right channels for your campaign 
• Develop creative that works across multiple channels 
• Revitalize the direct mail component of your multichannel mix 
• Make sure email plays its increasingly important role perfectly 
• Seamlessly integrate mobile marketing into the fundraising campaign 
• Boost your online strategy with social media 
• Create a multichannel donor renewal campaign 
• Figure out that you're doing right — via testing and results measurement 
• Use all the pieces of the multichannel puzzle  

Second, in 8 robust case studies, find out the secrets behind multichannel fundraising campaigns that worked.

About DirectMarketingIQ
The Research Division of the Target Marketing Group, DirectMarketingIQ (www.directmarketingiq.com) is the marketers’ go-to resource. Publishing books, special reports, case studies and how-to-guides, it opens up a new world to those who seek more information, more ideas and more success stories in order to boost their own marketing efforts. DirectMarketingIQ has unparalleled access to direct marketing data – including the world’s most complete library of direct mail as well as a massive library of promotional emails across hundreds of categories – and producly produces content from the most experienced editors and practitioners in the industry.

<b>Note: You must have Adobe Acrobat Reader in order to read , The Art & Science of Multichannel Fundraising which is in PDF format.</b> The Art & Science of Multichannel Fundraising

(PDF Download) Direct mail, email, mobile, social media, video, search ... the marketing landscape can either be a minefield where mistakes can kill campaigns, or a perfectly integrated mix of channels that maximizes the reach of the message and gives a nonprofit the best chance to capture more donor dollars....

ORDER NOW

Your everything-you-need-to-know guide to personalized URLs, including: <b>Best Practices </b> on why they work, campaign strategy, multichannel creative, analytics, and <b>10 Case Studies</b> PURLs for Profit

Your everything-you-need-to-know guide to personalized URLs, including: Best Practices on why they work, campaign strategy, multichannel creative, analytics, and 10 Case Studies...

ORDER NOW

 

COMMENTS

Click here to leave a comment...
Comment *
Most Recent Comments: