Tag Archives: non-profits

Picture of Amy Eistenstein

Nonprofit Radio for May 3, 2013: Small Nonprofits: Raise More Money

Big Nonprofit Ideas for the Other 95%

Listen live or archive:

Tony’s Guest:

Amy Eisenstein
Amy Eisenstein
Amy Eisenstein: Small Nonprofits: Raise More Money

Consultant and author Amy Eisenstein returns. She’s the principal of Tri Point Fundraising and her new book is “Raising More With Less: An Essential Fundraising Guide.” We’ll talk about her strategies that get small nonprofits to diversify and increase fundraising revenue.

 
 


Top Trends. Sound Advice. Lively Conversation.

You’re on the air and on target as I delve into the big issues facing your nonprofit—and your career.

If you have big dreams but an average budget, tune in to Tony Martignetti Nonprofit Radio.

I interview the best in the business on every topic from board relations, fundraising, social media and compliance, to technology, accounting, volunteer management, finance, marketing and beyond. Always with you in mind.

When and where: Talking Alternative Radio, Fridays, 1-2PM Eastern

Sign-up for show alerts!

Here is a link to the audio: 140: Small Nonprofits: Raise More Money. You can also subscribe on iTunes to get the podcast automatically.

View Full Transcript
Transcript for 140_tony_martignetti_nonprofit_radio_20130503.mp3

Processed on: 2018-11-11T23:00:46.767Z
S3 bucket containing transcription results: transcript.results
Link to bucket: s3.console.aws.amazon.com/s3/buckets/transcript.results
Path to JSON: 2013…05…140_tony_martignetti_nonprofit_radio_20130503.mp3.717811393.json
Path to text: transcripts/2013/05/140_tony_martignetti_nonprofit_radio_20130503.txt

Dahna hello and welcome to tony martignetti non-profit radio big non-profit ideas for the other ninety five percent. I’m your aptly named host it’s friday, may third have you been to itunes, teo rate and review the show? If you haven’t, i’d be very grateful if you did love to reflect the fact that there’s over nine thousand listeners in among the ratings and reviews you just go to itunes, you can go to non-profit radio dot net that’ll get you to itunes and click readings and reviews. I’d be very grateful for your one two five star rating and a quick review. I hope you were with me last week. I’d suffer peptic ulcer if it became known to me that you missed a conversation with eugene fram, professor emeritus at rochester institute of technology, dr frame is author of policy versus paper clips introducing non-profits to a corporate model of board governance to cut out the minutia from agendas so that your board can focus where it should on policy and planning, he explained what the model is and how to implement it, and we talked about specific week board practices like ignoring term limits and bad meeting attendance. This week, small non-profits raise more money consultant and author amy eisenstein returns she’s, the principal of tripoint fund-raising and her new book is raised more with less, raising more with less sorry, amy, raising more with less that’s her book, we’ll talk about her strategies that get small non-profits to diversify and increase fund-raising revenue about halfway through on tony’s, take two fund-raising fundamentals for the chronicle of philanthropy remember that it’s, my other podcast on i’ll refresh your recollection, my pleasure to welcome a xero amy eisenstein easy you’re not easy, you’re amy. Tony, how are you? Happy to be here. Thank you very much. Let me give you the proper introduction. Now that we’ve got your name straight. Amy, author of fifty, asks in fifty weeks and her new book is raising more with less. Both are part of the trench in the trenches siri’s from charity channel press she’s been director of development for shelter, our sisters, a battered women’s shelter and the douglas college at rutgers university. So she’s been in the fund-raising seat now, she’s. A consultant she’s with us from westfield, new jersey. Amy eisenstein. Welcome back. Thanks, tony. All right. Um let’s. Start with the fund-raising cycle that small and midsize shops may not be familiar with what the parts of that? Yeah, there is a basic fund-raising cycle that you want to take your donor’s through, whether their grant thunders, foundation thunders or corporations or individuals, the sun, the basic fund-raising cycle starts with identification. The question is, who are you going to fund raise from the second that stage and the cycle is cultivation and that’s about relationship building so that’s about getting to know your potential donors your perspective, donors on dh educating them about your organization, but also really learning about what makes them philanthropic. What touches their heart good, good step is solicitation that’s what i call the moment of truth that’s when you actually ask for the donation on daz, i said, whether you’re asking an individual face-to-face whether you’re sending an appeal letter, whether you’re sending a grant application, that’s, the ask and then the fourth stage is a stewardship and that’s the thank you and follow-up and unfortunately, lots of organizations neglect this process or don’t do it well because they’re so happy and relieved that they’ve gotten the gift that they don’t say. Thank you or follow-up later and let the donor know how their money was used. And unfortunately, this is, you know, one of the biggest reasons for donor attrition a donor’s not returning to make a second gift so really does do significant harm to a fund-raising program. If you skip that fourth and final step, we’ll talk about these in a little more detail. How do you know which step you’re at with each prospect or each donor? Uh, well, it’s, something that a development director or an executive director has to juggle and manage that’s one of the things that they’re responsible for doing so maintaining your list and figuring out where you are with each donors, the process is an important part of raising more money, right? But all right, so suppose someone has made a gift now that they’re they’re donorsearch were stuart ing them? Yeah, but we’re going to be hoping that they’re going to make another gift. You know, thinking of the annual fund, which we’ll get to. How do you know when to start the cultivation again? Right? Well, once you have a donor who’s, you know, once they’ve made their first gift and hopefully their second gift, then the lines between stewardship and cultivation do start to blur, so you’re thanking them. You’re keeping them updated about how their gift it was used and that’s also part of the cultivation, the relationship building process so those lines, they’re definitely blurred once the prospective donor is an actual donorsearch as opposed to a non donor-centric telefund you’re goingto ask, at least annually, depending on the type of ass you’re making, you may ask more than annually. For example, if you’re sending appeal letters, you might send an appeal in the spring and in the bottle and also ask for an event or a raffle to get sale so you can ask several times a year of the same donor that you’ve done proper stewardship. Thank you and follow-up in between each act. But if it’s more something like a major gift, you’re only gonna ask once a year. If it’s for your annual fun, we’re probably not going to touch capital campaigns today, so annual fund you want to ask at least annually, right? Okay. Let’s, let’s, get some help with identifying this is ah small non-profit let’s say, i’m the ceo and on i do prefer the title ceo over executive director on and, you know, we’re just two years old, and we’re i don’t know. What should we be engaged in? What kind of work should we be doing? Yeah, all right. Let’s ah, let’s. Well, you’ve worked with sheltering victims of domestic violence so let’s say that we are ah, domestic violence shelter. We’re only two years old. We’ve only been fund-raising through events in the past two years. We don’t have a list of people to start an annual fund with what do i do? Yeah, so one of the activities that i do with organizations when they don’t have a list toe look back on first of all, i’ll say that that example that you just give gave they should act absolutely be starting to build their list. So you said, you know, they’ve had some events right over to you. They’re capturing everybody, who’s, attending what they’ve given at those events and their contact information at a minimum. Okay, do start have some donors okay, don’t list so that they can look back on them in the future in the near future for doing this type of identification. But let’s, say that there’s no list right now. So i bring staff and board members at board retreat through an exercise. It looks like a spider grid and i start with a circle in the middle and i put the organisation in the middle and i say, okay, who does the organization know? And we do spokes out like a wheel better than a spider. Think of a wheel with both the organizations in the middle. Okay, so the the organization notes board members, they know volunteers, they know clients, they know service providers. They know all these types of people. So that’s your first list, you know, who are the contracts of the organization? Know, looks so boardmember volunteers, clients, those type of things dunaj did the exercise with you as an individual staff member or boardmember in the middle? Who do you know personally? Friends, family, neighbors, colleagues, people. You went to college with parents of your kid’s friends, people at church, etcetera, etcetera. So i asked boardmember sze to make this type of wheel and lift all the group of people they know and then pick one or two people from each group so to friends to family members, to colleagues, to neighbors that they’re willing to start building a relationship with you for the organ on behalf of the organization on these people may or may not become donors, but their perspective donors amy amy let’s say that i on we just have about a minute and a half before a break let’s say that i’m a fairly savvy ceo, so i did capture all the people from that have attended the events through the two years, but we would do this spoke exercise spoken well, exercise anyway, right? These vendors and friends of non-profit friends of board members and it’s, several community leaders. Okay, we’re still going to do this. Yeah, absolutely. And add them to your list. Okay, s o just in about a minute, we have left or so before we go away for a couple minutes, what? How are we going to identify the cultivation strategy for these people? Yeah, well, it’s going, we’re going toe pick probably depending on who you’re looking at. But if we’re looking for potential individual face-to-face type of donors, so are bigger donors for the organization, whether that means five hundred dollars or thousand. Dollars or ten thousand dollars and up um, i encouraged small organizations that are just getting started with this toe pick their top twenty list so people that they think all good donors need to things. They need capacity, which is the ability to give so they need some money on. They need inclination so they need an interest in the organization or the cause. Um, and so looking at these lists that you’ve come up with whether it’s event attendees or people that your board members know where members now and saying, who has who has the best potential in both those categories, who do we think has has money based on what we know about them, what their jobs are and where they live, etcetera and who’s shown an interest in the organization or the cause? Okay, amy, we got we got to go away for a couple of minutes. We’ll come back and we’ll continue talking about the fund-raising cycle. Stay with all right, stay with us. Talking alternative radio twenty four hours a day. Are you confused about which died it’s, right for you? Are you tired of being tired? How about improving your energy strength and appearance? Hi, i’m ricky keck, holistic nutrition and wellness consultant. If you have answered yes to any of my questions, contact me now at n y integrated health dot com, or it’s, six for six to eight, five, eight five eight eight initiate change and transform your life. Are you concerned about the future of your business for career? Would you like it all to just be better? Well, the way to do that is to better communication, and the best way to do that is training from the team at improving communications. This is larry sharp, host of the ivory tower radio program and director at improving communications. Does your office need better leadership, customer service sales, or maybe better writing, are speaking skills? Could they be better at dealing with confrontation conflicts, touchy subjects all are covered here at improving communications. If you’re in the new york city area, stopped by one of our public classes, or get your human resource is in touch with us. The website is improving communications, dot com, that’s, improving communications, dot com, improve your professional environment, be more effective, be happier, and make more money improving communications. That’s the answer. Hey, all you crazy listeners looking to boost your business? Why not advertise on talking alternative with very reasonable rates? Interested simply email at info at talking alternative dot com dahna welcome back to big non-profit ideas for the other ninety five percent. I wish i could send live listener love, but we’re not live this week. Sorry, but, you know, you know that the love is out there for all the live listeners throughout the country and and the world lots of listeners in asia, i’m sure of that they’re always there always are in china, japan, taiwan, korea welcome amy let’s. See, now we’ve we’ve thought about who these people are, and we know that they have we know are top our top people in each category have capacity and and willingness, what’s our next step, the next step is building relationships with them off cultivation. So i always joke around with people that non-profits try and build relationships with people without ever meeting them. So they send the mail, they send them e mails, but that’s not really relationship building. So you have to pick up the phone on schedule a meeting with them as nerve racking as that may be for the first time on on game me the person to do that, we’ll vary based on who our prospect is, right? Yes, absolutely can be development. Staff members that can be the executive director or board members if they know the perspective donorsearch or even if they don’t quite frankly, everybody is part of the development team, the fund-raising team and depending on who has the relationship and if there’s no relationship there than it’s either development staff boardmember or executive director. Okay, okay, on dh building, that relationship is going to be inviting them to events or maybe a one on one meeting or it’s going to vary. It’s going very right, right? One on one meetings is always going to be the most effective in terms of really getting to know the person on answering their questions and learning about their philanthropic needs and tendencies. So you always want to take somebody out to coffee or meet them at their home or office wherever their most comfortable. It doesn’t have to be for lunch, which is something. Ah, a lot of novice fundraisers make the mistake of they think it must be for lunch, but it can be a twenty minute meeting and somebody’s office or at their home. And, of course, you always want to invite people on tours of your organization and two events there’s all different types of cultivation, but definitely a one on one should be in there during the course of the year. Ok? And then as the relationship develops, um, well, and also based on your scheduling of your annual fund appeal, you’re going to know when the right time is teo to solicit the person. Yeah, it’s actually, based on the relationship with the donor and how that’s going so it doesn’t donordigital really care about your annual fund cycle. So so you should really take your cues from your donor on dh. Ask honestly, i tell organizations task as soon as possible because usually people who are an x variants and nervous wait too long. So i asked as soon as possible and then on and then go from there, all right? And then when the gift is made, we you know, we talked some about you mentioned the importance of stewardship. Yeah, so a thank you letter and the tax letter needs to go out right away. Best practice, or is within forty eight hours. But i like to tell small organizations if they can get it out within a week. That’s perfectly acceptable and then, of course, it’s about really telling donors what impact there gets made and why there made the difference. Now believe thank you. Letter. Now, believe it or not, you you’re treading within jargon jail. Very close. At least with the tax letter. Thank you. Letter in the tax letter let’s. Explain what? That i think we know. What the thank you letter is. The tax letter has to be separate on dh. What do you mean by the tax letter? Yeah. So in my experience, most organizations combined them, which i personally think is ok. It just needs to be appropriate tax language. About what? That it’s a five a one c three. And that it’s a tax deductible gift on dh. Then you can thank the donor within the context of that letter as well. So it doesn’t have to be two separate letters. Okay, andi, as you’re saying that it’s tax deductible, you wantto say that, you know, it’s tax deductible. Something like to the maximum extent allowable by law, you know, check with your advisors, right? Absolutely. Absolutely. Keep me. Keep me honest. Okay. Well, yeah. I mean, i don’t wanna get people in trouble, but i’m you know, you’re thinking that way, ok, thank you. All right, let’s, let’s talk about the different players that we’ve already you’ve already alluded to them, but what’s the ceo’s i’m the ceo what’s my responsibility around this new new individual fund-raising initiative. You know, i have to say it’s going to be different at every organization because it’s going to depend if the organization has any fun paid fund-raising staff members and how engaged and involved the board members are but that’s practice, and in theory, the executive director has a very significant role in fund-raising because, honestly, the donors want to meet with the ceo, the person who has the vision and the ability to implement that vision. And so the ceo is going to meet with most of the major donors, even if there’s development staff around just because you’re able tto hyre your first development director doesn’t mean that the executive director ceo can cy ah big sigh of relief and then say, i don’t have to do fund-raising anymore that’s just not the case. So the development director i like to think of as more behind the scenes and coordinating the visits, providing the information on the donors to the ceo before they go out and do the meetings. The development director certainly will meet with lower level, lower tier donors. Andi help with training and coordination of board members. Okay on dh there was something in the chronicle of philanthropy back in january january twenty ninth, there was an opinion piece called development directors are not a miracle worker, i don’t know. Did you see that? Do you remember it? I don’t remember saying ok, well, it goes to your point of the ceo sitting back and saying, oh, we have we have a director of development now so my responsibility is done. The money is just going to start coming in because we have our miracle worker. Yes boardmember sze, make that mistake a lot too let’s talk about the board what’s what’s their responsibility. So board members are responsible for helping with fund-raising. And the first thing that board members need to do is make their own personal contribution. And we call this one hundred percent participation. So we want every organization tohave every boardmember making a personal gift to the organization. And the reason that this is so important is that other thunders grantmaker sze primarily but also individuals want to know that the board of the organization is supportive of the organization and investing in the organization, because why should any other donor invest in the organization if don’t if their own boardmember sze won’t invest? So that’s the first thing duitz we also need boardmember to help with fund-raising because they’re the most effective fundraisers in terms of peer-to-peer solicitation, they can ask other individual donors without having any perceived or really all terrier motive like they’re not getting a salary from the organization. Their motive is completely voluntary and pure and so very persuasive when you say as a volunteer as a boardmember i made my contribution, and now i’m asking you to support the organization as well. So the most effective fund-raising campaigns i’ve ever worked with are where volunteers and board members are deeply engaged. What do we do with the boardmember who says? And maybe you have an example if you have a real life one. Well, welcome it, but the boardmember who says, you know, i either i can’t give or i won’t give i’m giving my time, i don’t need to give money also, i haven’t in the past two years, let’s put this person on my board, they haven’t given they’ve come to the event, they’ve come to some of the events that we’ve had over the years, but they’ve never made an outright gift. What are we going to say there? Yeah, you know, i so two examples one is i was working for a literacy volunteers organization here in new jersey a couple years ago, and we had a situation where a boardmember wouldn’t give and the executive director had applied to a foundation for a grant that required one hundred percent participation and the rejection letter said, the only reason we’re not giving you this grant it’s because you don’t have one hundred percent participation. Murcott and we showed that letter to that boardmember on dh, he made a twenty five dollar gift, and then he resigned off the board and quite frankly, most of the time when boardmember sze aren’t e-giving anything, they’re usually not productive in terms of volunteering or helping, and they’re not that valuable in other respects either where you get into sort of ah, piccoli situation is when you have a very active very committed, hardworking, dedicated boardmember who won’t give on dh, then you don’t want to lose that person, so then you have to sit down and have an honest conversation about how it’s hurting your mother. Fund-raising but i was actually on an airplane going to the, uh, speak at the conference just last week, and i was sitting next to a guy, and once i told them what i did, he said he’s on a board, and he doesn’t want to be told that he has to give um so it was very interesting hearing it and sitting on a plane for six hours next to someone who was very adamant again. E-giving he says it gives him time, and at the end, we agreed that he didn’t want to be told how much to give, but he was okay giving a donation and and i agree with that. Frankly, it should be up to the individual boardmember to give, in my opinion a significant gift for their personal budget, as opposed to a specific amount when you said you have a conversation with the boardmember did you say honest or ominous? Honest? Ok, well, it could be ominous. Also also, sure, but boardmember needs help with fund-raising because they can leverage gift that the staff can never get their hands around andi organizations that have boardmember that participate raised significantly more than organizations that have boardmember that don’t let’s move to recruiting the right board. Now, we my guest last week, eugene fran, we talked a lot about boards and the corporate model, but i want some of your advice on just a couple of points around onboarding croup, mint the you recommend great meetings. What? What makes a great meeting for boards. Yeah, well, let me start by saying what makes a terrible mistake. And i think that’s when the staff just reports out and reads reports, or even if boardmember zehr handed reports by staff and they read them, um and that makes for a boring board meeting and that i mean, you just cut out there after you said, and that makes waiting. Ok, about that. And so what makes for sorry? What makes for a great meeting is going to be when boardmember zehr engaged in discussion and so making sure that on the agenda there’s, meaningful discussion point toe have so that you are tapping into their skills and expertise, that’s the reason that you have them on the board so that they can discuss the hard issues that the organization might be facing? Ah, a second way to have a great boardmember thing is what we do is integrate what we call a mission moment, so bring a testimonial or a client or a letter from a client talking about the importance of the organization and what difference it made in that client’s life so that the board members who may be removed from the mission slightly can get back in touch with it. Maybe one of the women from my from our shelter is willing to come and talk, really, and it just has to be brief, right? Like five or seven minutes or something at a board in five, six minutes that’s it on dh. That really does amplify. What? What eugene fram recommended last week. You like to see annual retreats also, i dono i think that the most effective board’s always have annual retreat. It’s important to have a meeting once a year that has a totally different agenda from your regular board meeting agenda and that’s really? What i mean by a retreat and usually it’s, you know, slightly extended meeting, so it might be a half day it might even be a full day and there’s usually two things on the agenda to items on the agenda of a retreat, big items one is planning strategic planning and the other needs to be fund-raising and development on dh so many organizations don’t have retreats at all, and of the ones that do many just focus on planning and neglect the fund-raising and i strongly encourage organizations tio have these annual retreat and include both pieces. So as you’re doing your bored, look, rooting, you can assure perspective boardmember is that you have great active meetings that you’re going to tap into their expertise, they’re not going to be looking envelopes on dh that there’s an annual retreat to look forward to and that all of these things together, we’re goingto mean a meaningful boardmember experience for them, exactly. Let’s, let’s just remind listeners that i’m talking to amy eisenstein and she’s, the principal of tripoint fund-raising which your pine find it tripoint fund-raising dot com, we’re talking about her latest book, raising mohr with less amy. What are the what of the three points in tripoint? Are there three points? You know, there were ages ago. I started his business, and now it is morphed. And i’m embarrassed to say that there is not trust three points anymore. Well, what were the big three originally? I think of them after the break. Oh, my gosh. Okay. Okay. I don’t even know anymore. That’s. Horrible. I will. I will try and get back to you. All right, all right. Well, it’s multi point fund-raising. Yeah, exactly. Right. Weii, just have about a minute and a half before we go away again. Let’s. Introduce the idea of the annual fund. How do i know that? It’s it’s. The right time for me to start an annual fund or should i have started one two years ago when i started the organization? Yeah, i do encourage all organizations have an annual fund. What annual son really means is that it’s money used to pay your annual operations. So whether it’s, programmatic money or administrative money, a combination of them both. So anything that you’re raising for an annual basis is comprising your annual fund. And that can include events. Because that is going to fund your annual operations so that’s, the ball that an annual son really means. I guess many people think of it as a mail campaign. I include everything that you’re raising annually for annual operations. All right, we’re going to talk a lot more about the annual fund when we return. And, ah, right after we return, it’ll be tony’s take to stay with us. You don’t think that shooting the good ending, you’re listening to the talking alternative network, get in. Thing. Good. Are you suffering from aches and pains? Has traditional medicine let you down? Are you tired of taking toxic medications, then come to the double diamond wellness center and learn how our natural methods can help you to hell? Call us now at to one to seven to one eight, one eight three that’s to one to seven to one eight one eight three or find us on the web at www dot double diamond wellness dot com way. Look forward to serving you. Hi, i’m lost him a role, and i’m sloan wainwright, where the host of the new thursday morning show the music power hour. Eleven a m. We’re gonna have fun. Shine the light on all aspects of music and its limitless healing possibilities. We’re gonna invite artists to share their songs and play live will be listening and talking about great music from yesterday to today, so you’re invited to share in our musical conversation. Your ears will be delighted with the sound of music and their voices. Join austin and sloan live thursdays at eleven a. M on talking alternative dot com. You’re listening to the talking alternative network. Geever if you have big ideas and an average budget tune, tony martignetti non-profit radio we dio i’m jonah helper, nari team in co founders of next-gen charity. Welcome back time for tony’s take two fund-raising fundamentals that is my monthly podcast for the chronicle of philanthropy, it’s different than this one and that’s first only once a month, and it’s also much shorter. Each episode sewed is only about ten minutes and that a podcast is devoted to fund-raising topics my guests have talked about online giving and grant seeking ira e-giving events using volunteers smartly. Your end e-giving amy eisenstein has been a guest on that show. You will find fund-raising fundamentals on the chronicle of philanthropy website, also on itunes, where you can subscribe and there’s information about it on my block. There’s a link my blog’s is that tony martignetti dot com and that is tony’s take two for friday, the third of may eighteenth show of the year. Easy, easy. You’re still there time here. Okay, i know you were, um all right. We are broaching the topic of the annual fund. I’ve a fairly savvy board ceo, but we did not start the annual fund two years ago, but i feel like we’re ready now. I feel like we need a steady a source of fund-raising and i just want to diversify. Away from strictly events, so i’m on the right track in that respect, right? Yeah. I mean, i do want to diversify. Yeah, we talked about building the list already, but that list needs to be sort of personalized, right? Yes. Most effective annual campaign is when you’re going to be sending mail or email or communications with an individual as personalized as possible. Okay, mail or email. And how do we how do we start personalizing? So, depending on what resource is you have in terms of list on dh revenue and money to start mail campaigns can be more expensive at the beginning than they generate. And so it is an investment at time. Encourage organizations, tio have a multi pronged approach of both male and email solicitations. Um, and also, you strongly want to consider monthly or recurring giving programs. So investing in the technology to have, uh, bank withdrawals and automatic credit card charging so that you know, instead of having one hundred dollars, a year donor-centric e for fifteen dollars a month or twenty dollars a month and that significantly increases what individuals are able to give or willing to give to your organization. Okay. So let’s, there’s a lot in there. That zone pack some of this let’s start with the direct mail way. Certainly, we wantto personalize by using their name in the letter. And and not dear friend of the organization, something like that. What more can i do around direct mail? Tto make it personal? Uh, well, first of all, on the outside envelope, you wantto look att make it look as less less bulky as possible. Bulk mail. So, using a live stamp, a supposed teo bulk mail stamp. Okay, well, let’s, start with that. I’m gonna now there are i mean, i for planned e-giving mailings that i do for clients. I always prefer live stamps. Absolutely. But sometimes people will say, well, you know, there’s research from direct mail gurus that the life stamp doesn’t pull as much or doesn’t necessarily pull to the to make it worthwhile over a bulk stamp. Ah, bulk mailing or ah, something that’s. Ah, maybe not. Bulk mail. But it’s it’s ah, a male looks at a male indicia what’s. That stamp called. I’m blanking on the world, but a meter metered male sam thank sam. Thank me. Thank you. Yeah. What? Do you? What do so what do you say when you get those objections? Well, i have to say, i’d like to see those studies because i would bet they don’t exist. My guess is that stan envelopes that don’t look like bulk mail that looked like their personal mail, which is a live stamp. Uh, get opened it significantly higher rates and if you’re direct mail piece, no matter how good inside the envelope is going in the trash before it’s opened, it doesn’t matter what’s inside that’s for sure. And so i actually also encouraged my client’s hand right envelopes teo as many as they can maybe fifty or a hundred of their top donors or perspective donors so that they really increase their chances of getting that mail open because it looks like personal mail. Oh, hand, write thie outside the address on your side. Ok, ok, do you? Ah, do you use first class pre sort to save money sometimes? Yes, so definitely you can work with your post office. I don’t know all the ins and outs of reducing the prices, but there are all sorts of ways to reduce the postage by working with pre sort and your post office, but still having that live stamp, basically, yeah, the details are pretty arcane, but basically you’re doing some of the sorting that’s what called pre sort so you’re saving labour for the post office, so they give you a reduced rate on each piece, but it still is alive stamp, and if you’re working with a male house, they’ll do that, and your database will sort by zip code and whatnot, so hopefully you’re not actually hands sorting it. It should be automated at this point, whether you’re doing it in house or whether a male house is doing it for you. All right now, if we’ve got, i don’t know a couple thousand pieces, maybe in our list or eventually, if we get there, maybe not in our inaugural list, but forget there, then it may be worth paying a printer or male house. Yeah, i mean, i encourage organizations usually i think they wait too long, and they’re spending hours and hours with dozens of volunteers on dh taking over their whole conference room for weeks at a time to get a big mailing out when it’s cost effective to use a male house so i would definitely look into that because some of what you spends paying the male house you save in postage and what they’re able to dio in terms of pre sort another thing. All right, do you have advice around how to find the right male house to work with you? You know, i would call other local non-profits and see who that they use and then get two or three quotes that’s what i would do all right, how about inside the inside the envelope? How can we personalize their aside from just saying, using the person’s name and addressing them as their name in the in the greeting write a couple things to do is if you have the technology to sort by interest or certainly donorsearch non donor-centric donors differently than people who have never given before. So that’s one way of personalizing by saying, you know, we acknowledge that you’ve given before, and we thank you for it, and we’re asking you again versus people who have never gotten given which you would address slightly differently. So the bulk of the letter can be similar, but you’d change a few lines and that’s to personalize it, other bigger organizations even sort personalize it by programs. So if we know that this donor is interested in our children’s program and that donor is interested in our senior citizens program, you know, we’d send them slightly different letters. But that’s, you know, once you get down the road, you’re more sophisticated, okay? And that all falls under segmentation, right? Okay. Would you recommend addressing the person as formally mister or missus, or using or using first name in the letter? You know, i i’m on the fence with that one. I think it depends on the organization and the donor base. And so, depending on what you know about your donors, i would start formally on dh. Then as you get to know them, maybe get less formal. Okay. Now, when i was in the air force there’s something that i think could apply to fund-raising, too. And i’ve seen clients do it when there was a formal greeting. You know, dear colonel, whatever. If the person from who was going to be signing the letter i knew the person, they would cross it off there. Just put a line through dear colonel smith and they would write the person’s name in, you know, fred, right a za personal touch as far as i know that that’s still the appropriate protocol. And that brings up a great point in terms of personalization. You wantto put personal notes on as many of these letters as you can, and especially by people who know the person that it’s going to the recipient. So ifyou’re boardmember can put personal notes on letters to people that they’re sending these letters teo than the rate of return increases significantly. Alright. And i love all this detail. Thank you for getting into detail with me. How about who’s going to sign the letter? Should should everybody sign the should the same person signed all the letters or since we’ve segmented shouldn’t vary, or if there’s relationship should that vary the signature? Yeah, i mean, yes, based on relationships, if somebody knows the person that’s the signer often the board chair will be the signer of ah campaign. Like this ilsen annual appeal campaign. But also maybe the executive director and the keyboard chairs signature it’ll be a dual signature at the bottom. Ok, dual signature. Ok. Interesting. Um anything else that? You want to suggest about direct mail before we move teo using email? Yeah, i think the best piece of advice i ever got actually came from thomas hearns on direct male paces. And that is to go through your letter and circle all the time you read, write i or we and replace them with you and make the little letter donor so you don’t want to don’t the letter to be about the organization as much as possible. You want it to be about the donor? What the donor’s done to support the cause in the organization and how much the donors of importance does that make sense? Yeah. You want to emphasize also what the donor’s gift is going to do for the organisation? Absolutely. Okay. Okay. So that’s. Interesting. Right? So change them all to teo. You a donor? Focusedbuyer er, do you have advice around? Does this matter whether it’s one page or more than one page? Some people get hung up on one on the lens. Do you have a concern about that video? All the research i’ve ever seen shows that a longer letters better. And that means four pages now there can be a lot of white space in your letter and pictures and pulled out quotes and all sorts of interesting things. So it’s not four straight pages of text, but that would be good if you could argue for a shorter letter. You know they don’t have the research to back this up. And so organisations listen to these loud board members who say i only want a one page letter but all the studies show that for paid daughters do better. Okay, so if i say to you, i wanted what you said to me earlier. You want to see the studies? You have the study’s? Yeah, you do. Okay. Okay. Interesting. All right. Ah, couple minutes about two minutes before we go away briefly let’s switch online email. If we can personalize email also. Can’t we? Absolutely as much as possible. So the same sort of segmentation can happen. You can send one set of emails to your donor’s versus your non donors toe. Add those quote unquote personal notes email. They can you can have them coming from board members who know the recipients. So you might take you know these twenty e mails and asked this boardmember to send them to their left. Okay, so, it’s okay, it’s okay? If it comes from someone’s personal email, then that’s better aren’t you more likely to open an e mail from a friend? And you are from an organization? Yes, i am, but okay, okay, but it’s so and then replies, going back to the person also, you know, that’s a tricky one, because technology and programs that have it go back to the organization, but if you’re small, start up, you’re not going to invest in that, and you’re just gonna have to rely on your individual volunteers to get that information back to you, but hopefully they’ll be following a donation now linked to your website on, and they shouldn’t be replying to your boardmember anyways, okay on, i want to put in ah little caveat that donate now button on your web site triggers the charity registration laws i’m always always aware of this, so you need to make sure that you’re in compliance with the state laws and all the states across the country. When you donate now, button goes live doesn’t matter if anybody ever clicks it from wyoming or in nebraska, you need to make sure you’re in compliance in those states and all the states because you’re deemed to be soliciting when that donate now button goes live that’s, the solicitation that’s. What triggers those registration requirements and i’ll say, if i have time for one last thing about direct mail, email and direct mail is that it’s not a solicitation if it doesn’t have a reply macken mechanism. So that means it has tohave a donate now button, and it has to have a reply envelope in your direct mail. Otherwise you won’t get any response. Okay, you do. You do want to see a reply envelope in the direct mail, absolutely it’s worth spending that money. Yes, and you need to be able to accept credit cards online and have that donate now button. Okay, we take a break, and when we come back, amy and i are going to start talking about the individual solicitations, maur, face-to-face and helping you overcome your fears for those. So stay with us. You’re listening to the talking alternative network. Are you stuck in your business or career trying to take your business to the next level, and it keeps hitting a wall? This is sam liebowitz, the conscious consultant. I will help you get to the root cause of your abundance issues and help move you forward in your life. Call me now and let’s. Create the future you dream of. Two, one, two, seven, two, one, eight, one, eight, three, that’s to one to seven to one, eight one eight three. The conscious consultant helping conscious people. Be better business people. Have you ever considered consulting a road map when you feel you need help getting to your destination when the normal path seems blocked? A little help can come in handy when choosing an alternate route. Your natal chart is a map of your potentials. It addresses relationships, finance, business, health and, above all, creativity. Current planetary cycles can either support or challenge your objectives. I’m montgomery taylor. If you would like to explore the help of a private astrological reading, please contact me at monte at monty taylor dot. Com let’s monte m o nt y at monty taylor dot com. Talking alternative radio twenty four hours a day. Durney welcome back to big non-profit ideas for the other ninety five percent again live listener love let’s see the states that usually are listening live california, texas, north carolina, virginia those are the most common going abroad almost always have listeners from japan, konnichiwa, china and taiwan knee how and very often from korea on yo haserot you know, i’m thinking about you, even though we’re not live today, okay? Amy eisenstein, i’ve never as the ceo, i’ve never faced somebody done somebody asked somebody face to face for gift whether it was fifty dollars or five thousand dollars. I haven’t done it. Help me overcome my fear of asking somebody fate, looking in their eye and asking them it’s, it’s terrifying me, it is terrifying. And i have to say part of the issue is that we come from at least here in the united states a culture of where money is taboo. We can’t talk about it, right? Yeah, some people would rather talk about death and and sex than than money. It’s absolutely true. I say that all the time and so talking about money is very hard because we were raised to think talking about money. Is rude, and so we have to overcome that. So i like to encourage people to think about a time that they gave to a charity, and how did it make them feel it made them feel great, not horrible. We have to get away from the idea that fund-raising is like arm twisting or begging, right? Okay on and think of it as investing in the community. And i like to think of fund-raising as helping somebody do something great that makes them feel good. So it makes me feel good too. Okay, how do i put that into action? I’ve i’ve called the person they’ve agreed to meet with me. I won’t make the novice mistake of doing it over lunch, although i will add parenthetically, i do like to meet people over lunch. I don’t know, i just like the sharing the space and the meal together, but that’s just me that’s just me. Let me just say about that. I think taking someone to a thank you lunch after they’ve made the gift is a wonderful idea because we do like to eat with people and break bread with them. But the problem with asking for a donation in a restaurant is that it’s often loud, you are having a private, confidential converse station. You are talking about money the waiter can interrupt at the wrong time and it’s hard to talk with your mouth full. So good reasons not actually asked in a restaurant. Okay, maybe i’m more skill. Can we say? I’m a little more skilled maybe and i’ve overcome those i’ve overcome those things and i go to restaurants where the service is bad so the waiter never interrupt now, okay, but i’m not fighting use i’ve i’ve made my appointment and i’m meeting the the prospect where she’s most comfortable in her office, which makes me uncomfortable. Help me out. Well, hopefully, first of all, you’ve been through the cultivation process with her, so you’ve met her in her office before, so it shouldn’t be as uncomfortable as you may think, okay? And during that cultivation process, you’ve asked her a lot of questions about your organization. Why she’s been a supporter in the past? Why she might like to support in the future and what types of things she might like. Thie open ended questions that you recommend in the book yeah, so she’s not surprised. This isn’t a surprise visit that she doesn’t know why you’re coming or that you’re going to be asking her for support. You know, nobody wants to be surprised, not the askar and not the donor. So when you set up the appointment, make it clear that you’re coming to talk about increased support in the future and that you want to talk about ways that they’ll get more involved in more supportive financially so that nobody’s caught off guard. Ok, ok, okay. Help me out a little more what’s what’s. Next. Okay, so you go. You want to have a specific amount in mind, you need to ask for a specific amount because if you ask for a gift but our donation and don’t say an amount, they don’t know what you’re thinking about and when they give you fifty dollars bill, thank you. They’ve done what you asked and you’ll be totally disappointed. So you’ve got to ask for an amount we like to say. A good good phraseology is we’d like to ask you to consider a gift in the range of five hundred dollars or a thousand dollars. Now you’ll notice. I didn’t actually give arrange it and say five hundred to a thousand because what happens if you actually asked for a ranger? They go to the low number, correct? They goto the low number, so to give them a little wiggle room, you say i’d like you to consider a gift in the range of a thousand dollars then if they come in, you know, seven fifty, they’ve done what you’ve asked, and everybody feels great, okay? Okay, no one asked for something specific, uh, program salary support a ban on these will be things that we are. We should be pretty confident they isa touchpoint for them it’s something that they like because of the previous meetings and all the cultivation we’ve done. Okay, so that shouldn’t be a surprise. Also you like you like rehearsals? Can you say something about rehearsing briefly? Yeah, because it’s such an uncomfortable thing when you’re just getting started with fund-raising i strongly encourage rehearsal and role play rehearsal is what you can do in front of the mirror, but yourself alone, we’ll play is what you do, especially if you’re going with a partner. So maybe the boardmember and the ceo. Are going together task? You absolutely need to know who’s opening the meeting who’s doing the ass who summarising who’s, making a follow-up plant at the end all of these important roles so that everybody knows what they’re doing. All right, we have to leave that topic there. You have a major gift challenge on your blogged that is free for people to get your advice. Why don’t you share what’s up there? Okay, great. This year, i’ve decided to dedicate my block for the full year tio what i call the major gifts challenge, and i’m encouraging people at all types and sizes of organizations to get involved with face-to-face individual asking, usually for the first time, and i’m taking people step by step through the process of doing everything we’ve talked about in terms of getting to a major gift or a personal ask it’s totally free, and i just encouraged people to spend two hours a week on the weekly tax that i suggest, whether it’s getting your list together or making a cultivation call up until we get to the ass. Alright, you’ll find amy and information on the major gift challenge at tripoint fund-raising dot. Com if you think of what those points are, amy, you’ll have to share them. Did you think of the three points you got the right? Same fast, same, very fast hyre empower a team. Okay, excellent. Her book, the latest is raising mohr with less. Get that book. Amy eisenstein, thank you very much for being a guest sharing your expertise. Thanks for having my pleasure next week. Make money when you move and kayman ceo of new york grant pany shares ways that non-profits all over the country can tap into grantspace loans and other financial incentives around real estate, and our legal contributor, jean takagi returns also, we’re all over the social web i’ve given up on the italian were just all over the social web itunes if you’re listening live, consider eyes my solicitation consider going toe itunes and subscribing so you don’t miss a show when you can’t be with me on a friday because you know it’s bound to happen, especially during the summer. Why take that chance? You can go to aa itunes at non-profit radio dot net. Our creative producer is claire meyerhoff sam labor, which is our line producer, an assistant. Producer is janice taylor. Shows. Social media is by regina walton of organic social media and the remote producer of tony martignetti non-profit radio is john federico of the new rules. I hope you’ll be with me next friday, may tenth, twenty thirteen, one two two p m eastern at talking alternative dot com dahna i think they’re getting sick. Do you? You’re listening to the talking alternate network duitz get him. E-giving you could hi, i’m donna, and i’m done were certified mediators, and i am a family and couples licensed therapists and author of please don’t buy me ice cream are show new beginnings is about helping you and your family recover financially and emotionally and start the beginning of your life will answer your questions on divorce, family court, co parenting, personal development, new relationships, blending families and more dahna and i will bring you to a place of empowerment and belief that even though marriages may end, families are forever join us every monday, starting september tenth at ten a m on talking alternative dot com are you suffering from aches and pains? Has traditional medicine let you down? Are you tired of taking toxic medications? Then come to the double diamond wellness center and learn how our natural methods can help you to hell? Call us now at to one to seven to one eight one eight three that’s to one to seven to one eight one eight three or find us on the web at www dot double diamond wellness dot com way look forward to serving you! You’re listening to talking alt-right network at www. Dot talking alternative dot com, now broadcasting twenty four hours a day. This is tony martignetti athlete named host of tony martignetti non-profit radio non-profit ideas for the other ninety five percent technology fund-raising compliance, social media, small and medium non-profits have needs in all these areas. My guests are expert in all these areas and mohr. Tony martignetti non-profit radio friday’s one to two eastern on talking alternative broadcasting are you fed up with talking points, rhetoric everywhere you turn left or right? Spin ideology no reality, in fact, its ideology over intellect, no more it’s time. Join me, larry shop a neo-sage tuesday nights nine to eleven easter for the isaac tower radio in the ivory tower will discuss what’s important to you society, politics, business and family. It’s provocative talk for the realist and the skeptic who want to know what’s. Really going on? What does it mean? What can be done about it? So gain special access to the ivory tower. Listen to me. Very sharp. Your neo-sage tuesday nights nine to eleven new york time go to ivory tower radio dot com for details. That’s ivory tower radio dot com everytime was a great place to visit for both entertainment and education. Listening tuesday nights nine to eleven. It will make you smarter. Com. Hyre

The Stuff Behind Charitable Gift Annuity Rates

acga_logo_150pxThe American Council on Gift Annuities announced last week that its suggested rates for Charitable Gift Annuities, or CGAs, would remain unchanged from last year. Here’s a look at the assumptions that lead to the rates.

The Council meets at least annually to review its rate recommendations and consider adjustments to its assumptions.

Clients often ask where the rates that 95% of charities rely on, come from. They come from five assumptions.

1. Your charity will realize 50% of the face value of each gift. At the death of the one or two people receiving income from a CGA (the annuitant/s), what remains from the face value of the gift is transferred to your charity. If it’s a $25,000 gift annuity, you should get $12,500. For that to happen, the other assumptions have to hold. What’s your experience been?

(The annuitants are usually the donors, but not always. Think of a donor couple arranging for an adult child to receive payments for life.)

2. Annuitants will comply with mortality assumptions. I know people who I hope long outlive their projected mortality. There are a few others who are welcome to go at any time.

ACGA uses the Annuity 2000 Mortality Tables. (Click the link to see how long the National Association of Insurance Commissioners says you’ll live.) There are two tables, for male and female. To be conservative, ACGA assumes all annuitants are female (live longer) and one year younger than their real age (so they’ll get a lower rate of payment).

Mortality is a complex subject. It’s based on large numbers and doesn’t apply to individuals, so if you don’t like what you see in the table above, there’s still considerable hope for you. But, for gift annuities to work there has to be an assumption around each annuitant’s life expectancy, and mortality tables are the best we’ve got.

3. Your charity will pay administrative fees of 1%. That’s taken as a percentage of your gift annuity reserve fund, which many states require. My clients are small- and mid-size charities. For their gift annuity programs 1% is wildly low. Five to 8% is more what I see.

What’s your experience?

4. The reserve fund will earn 4.25% annually. The reserve fund has to be invested and the Council assumes you’ll earn 4.25% each year. That’s been highly unlikely for the past 3 to 4 years because all but the largest reserve funds are conservatively invested. Deduct fees from earnings and that’s your earnings net of expenses. For a lot of charities it’s a negative number recently.

What do you see?

5. Annuitants are paid quarterly. Payments can also be monthly, semi-annual or annual. Quarterly is most common in my experience. If payments are less frequent then your reserve fund will enjoy a higher balance as money remains in longer. Most charities allow donors to choose their payment frequency.

Those are the assumptions that translate into the Council’s suggested rates for immediate payment gift annuities. I haven’t covered deferred payment annuities.

A history lesson: in the mid-90’s there were two federal antitrust cases naming ACGA as defendant and alleging price-fixing in the rates. Congress twice stepped-in with laws to protect ACGA, gift annuities and all the charities (and others) that rely on the recommended rates. Check out this short summary of the legal drama.

An image of the promotional postcard for Nonprofit Radio showing Tony Martignetti in the studio.

Thank You! Nonprofit Radio Testimonials

An image of the promotional postcard for Nonprofit Radio showing Tony Martignetti in the studio.Tony Martignetti Nonprofit Radio has been getting terrific testimonials from our 9,000+ listeners. I’m very grateful.

Here’s a sample of what you’re saying recently. (Older–still very cool–listener comments and guest videos.)

Blogger Cheryl McCormick named it her Top Podcast.

“Your podcast is inspiring and a staple in my rotation!”
@BonnySouthworth from Twitter

“Simply the best nonprofit radio show . . . period.”
SmartGiftmaker on iTunes

“Nothing but valuable content and fascinating guests.”
Crownview on iTunes

“The show provides insights and information in an entertaining format, and Tony asks pointed questions to bring them to light.”
Urbansquaw on iTunes

“Tony’s questions are perfectly targeted . . . He allows the listener to learn.”
Beseeched on iTunes

“You pick the experts’ brains and I don’t leave my office.”
— I can’t find who said it, but I know I thanked her

“One of the best kept secrets on nonprofit best practices.”
Sunny2Peachy on iTunes

We need to expose the secret to more people in nonprofits. Can you think of one person who should try out Nonprofit Radio?

Point them to iTunes to listen! Here’s an email. Just address and send!

Want to add your own review? Go to iTunes and click “View in iTunes.”

There’s always Facebook and YouTube too.

Many, many thanks for listening and supporting Tony Martignetti Nonprofit Radio. I appreciate it and I’m grateful.

Amy Sample Ward

Nonprofit Radio, April 19, 2013: A Conversation With Amy Sample Ward, Part Deux

Big Nonprofit Ideas for the Other 95%

Listen live or archive:

Tony’s Guest:

Amy Sample Ward
Amy Sample Ward: A Conversation With Amy Sample Ward, Part Deux

She’s our social media contributor and her new book is “Social Change Anytime Everywhere.” We pick up where we left off on March 15, to talk about your fundraising plan: scheduling; testing; staffing; budgeting; and tips for your website campaign. Amy’s dad Tim joins in to share what it’s like raising a social media scientist.

 
 


Top Trends. Sound Advice. Lively Conversation.

You’re on the air and on target as I delve into the big issues facing your nonprofit—and your career.

If you have big dreams but an average budget, tune in to Tony Martignetti Nonprofit Radio.

I interview the best in the business on every topic from board relations, fundraising, social media and compliance, to technology, accounting, volunteer management, finance, marketing and beyond. Always with you in mind.

When and where: Talking Alternative Radio, Fridays, 1-2PM Eastern

Sign-up for show alerts!

Here is the audio link: 138: A Conversation With Amy Sample Ward, Part Deux. You can also subscribe on iTunes to get the podcast automatically.

View Full Transcript
Transcript for 138_tony_martignetti_nonprofit_radio_20130419.mp3

Processed on: 2018-11-11T22:58:07.497Z
S3 bucket containing transcription results: transcript.results
Link to bucket: s3.console.aws.amazon.com/s3/buckets/transcript.results
Path to JSON: 2013…04…138_tony_martignetti_nonprofit_radio_20130419.mp3.901631311.json
Path to text: transcripts/2013/04/138_tony_martignetti_nonprofit_radio_20130419.txt

Zoho welcome to tony martignetti non-profit radio big non-profit ideas for the other ninety five percent i’m your aptly named host feeling a little raw today little tender it’s friday, april nineteenth, and with what happened on monday in boston and then on early wednesday in west texas, the explosion in a fertilizer factory, of course, monday was the marathon bombing and now today, all kinds of craziness in boston, and maybe now, even on a train between boston and new york, we’re not really certain least that’s the latest i’ve heard as of, uh, one o’clock eastern, so yeah, i was goingto ah, i was going to implore you, teo to goto, itunes and ratan review the show, but that just doesn’t seem like it’s. Ah, really has a place today. We’ll deal with that another time. Just give your thoughts. Teo to boston and and watertown, massachusetts. Also a lot of stuff going on was bullets and explosions over in the overnight onda also thinking about west texas? I do hope you’re with me last week because i’d suffer it would hurt if it came to my ken that you had missed followship with alison fine she’s the co author of the network to non-profit and has been thinking lately about opening organizational culture to allow non-profits to be more reactive to the interests and motivations of their followers while still keeping goals in sight she shared her thoughts on followship and social media boundaries are legal contributor jean takagi from the non-profit and exempt organizations law group in san francisco suggested rules for your use of social media it can’t be a free for all for your employees and volunteers and jean had helped to keep you out of trouble this week a conversation with amy sample ward part do she’s our social media contributor and her new book is social change anytime everywhere we pick up where we left off on march fifteenth to talk about your fund-raising plans scheduling testing staffing budgeting and some tips for your website campaign and i’ll be chatting with amy’s dad also between, uh, well, between the half. Ours uh, roughly thirty two minutes into the our tony’s take two my block this week is keep your marketing simple. I’m always pleased to welcome amy sample ward to the studio she’s membership director at non-profit technology network and ten, as i said, her most recent co authored book, social change, anytime everywhere about online multi-channel engagement the forward is by two time guest of this show, craig mark, the founder of craigslist and craigconnects no, sorry work that in there that has been on the show twice, her blogged is amy sample, ward dot or ge and she’s at amy r s ward on twitter welcome back, kayman sample work. Thank you for having me back. It’s. Always a pleasure. Um, i guess my one of my first my first question is on the cover of this book the word’s, any time and everywhere. I’m showing her the cover now to remind her of the are separated. But they are not hyphenated. Why? Why aren’t they hyphenated the way proper english would be any hyphen time? Because they’re in different lines and every hyphen. Where where is the copy editing on this? On this cover? Yep. I don’t think i’m gonna let you just go by with this job. It’s it’s apparently thie design aesthetic. Okay, which you had no control over, i guess. Hyre okay. Okay. I think this should be hyphen. I mean, i think these things are important in a language, all right, but it helps you enunciate the title very well. Any time, every right. Trying to learn how to spell her. You would think that any time was two different words. And and it’s, not it’s, not everywhere is not two different words. It’s. True. Okay. Um let’s. Ah, i like to reflect a little bit. Okay. We talk all the time about online engagement and with what’s been happening this week. If you are engaged online on your charity, does nothing at all related to anything around violence or maybe victim or family support or politics of guns. Your charity has nothing to do with any of that. How do you respond? What do you do online, too? Let people know that you’re conscious of what happens in the world. That’s outside your own. Sure. I think i mean first i would say i understand the argument of, you know, we don’t work on the politics of gun issues, however, you probably work with people and ultimately in any crisis or disaster, people are involved, you know, and reminding your own staff that it’s not just about bombs or terrorism, this is still about people and treating whatever response, whatever communication you have next in that light that there are people involved in this, i think helps you just take the right tone regardless of where you go next, because you’re then being responsive to what if it was you, you know, you would want someone to treat you are your city or your issue like people were involved. Next, it’s a great opportunity to go check any scheduled messages you have any tweets or facebook post that air maybe already scheduled about something else. Also, look at your content calendar. You know where we planning on sending out an email appeal this week? That was, you know, using the story of this great little kid, and now maybe we don’t i want to do that story or maybe not that message it all this week, you know, not that you have to completely shut down. Every organization didn’t stop this week, but trying to be responsive, teo, the fact that, you know, even in your own goals, you’re probably not going to get the analytics or the metrics you wanted, you know, no one’s going to be clicking through that email anyway, if that’s not what’s on their mind. So looking at not just scheduled tweets, but what’s on your what’s scheduled to go up on your block what’s scheduled to go out and email looking at all of that immediately so that you can either put things on hold, readjust change, maybe which story was going to be in a newsletter? You know, there’s things like print ads or direct mail that that that’s already out there, you know? But people also don’t look at the newspaper and think, i can’t believe that this ad ran like because in our minds, we know that that’s not like a real time media, and we know that that’s program six weeks in it, right? Exactly, but when you see something go up on twitter, you know, when you everyone else is just watching twitter for news updates it it really does feel a little bit more. Careless because they know that you let it happen. You know, you could have changed that tweet. We talk a lot about engaging with people online. Not so dissimilar lee from the way we engage with people face to face, you know? And when when i saw you earlier today, we you know, i told you that i was feeling raw and sensitive and you know, that was that was really basically after right after hello. Yeah. So, you know, i’m doing that in it, you know? I’m sure i’ll do that with friends. I meet for dinner tonight. It’s not it’s, not unlike online when you can have a conversation about this or at least share your feelings when it really it just doesn’t deal with your data your day to day world, right? It’s it’s never going toe. I mean, i don’t want to say never as if any statement could ever be, you know, all all encompassing. But for the most part, it’s not going to hurt your organization to say something like, our hearts are going out to the victims and here’s a link to resource is or hears, you know, the the google spreadsheet that was created to help, you know, people say i found this person or this person is missing, you know, like that it doesn’t hurt your brand, it doesn’t hurt your cause, even though you might work on a totally separate mission to say, hey, we know this is happening, and we want to make sure that we’re one more post in your facebook stream that’s pointing to resource is instead of to something else, okay, excellent. Sabat well, we’re going to pick up with where you and i left off last month. It was march fifteenth with the fund-raising plan, we have just met and a half or so before we go away for a couple of a couple minutes, why don’t you just tease a little bit? Share what, what we might be talking about with respect to a fund-raising plan? Sure, i think last time we talked kind about the components of the plan and this time we can get and i think to the nitty gritty, a little bit more like what does a bee testing really look like in a campaign, especially in real time? How do you figure out what’s working and keep kind of iterating as you’re in the middle of the campaign and then also what does that look like for your organization? Who’s involved once the campaign is live, is it just that development director or other staff? You know, playing into that campaign on then even what does it look like on online? What is what is your website need to do to be responsive to the campaign? Okay, maybe testing. Yeah, i don’t i’m not sure that that really qualifies for jargon jail, i’m not really feeling like putting buy-in jargon, and it probably doesn’t even really qualify. But why don’t you just explain what a be testing is? Sure. So for the most part, you could test everything on your website just by saying, well, it’s, their people are clicking on it, they like it, but it’s a little bit more scientifically valid. If you say have two buttons and people when they came to your website, they’re being presented with one of two buttons, and then you can just leave it up for a few days and say, gosh, anyone that saw the blue button clicked three times more than anyone that saw the red button, for example. So, it’s, just changing one component at a time with two versions, so that you can figure out which works better and then start changing the next thing. And you’re directing people to both of them? Yes, simultaneously. Yep, i guess, randomly, exactly. Okay. And you, you have an excellent example in the book about the the clinton bush haiti fund, and we’ll talk a little about that. Ok, we go away for a couple seconds. When we come back. Amy and i will continue this conversation about about her book and and your fund-raising plan. Stay with us talking alternative radio, twenty four hours a day. Are you confused about which died it’s, right for you? Are you tired of being tired? How about improving your energy strength and appearance? Hi, i’m ricky keck, holistic nutrition and wellness consultant. If you have answered yes to any of my questions, contact me now at n y integrated health dot com, or it’s, six for six to eight, five, eight five eight eight initiate change and transform your life. Are you concerned about the future of your business for career? Would you like it all to just be better? Well, the way to do that is to better communication, and the best way to do that is training from the team at improving communications. This is larry sharp, host of the ivory tower radio program and director at improving communications. Does your office need better leadership, customer service sales, or maybe better writing, are speaking skills? Could they be better at dealing with confrontation conflicts, touchy subjects all are covered here at improving communications. If you’re in the new york city area, stop by one of our public classes, or get your human resource is in touch with us. The website is improving communications, dot com, that’s, improving communications, dot com, improve your professional environment, be more effective, be happier, and make more money improving communications. That’s. The answer. Hey, all you crazy listeners looking to boost your business? Why not advertise on talking alternative with very reasonable rates? Interested simply email at info at talking alternative dot com welcome back to big non-profit ideas for the other ninety five percent, not too many live listeners today, i’m suspecting that a lot of people are if they’re online, they’re looking at cnn or some other some other news source that they trust. But i will say, live listener love out too. Forest grove, oregon and new bern, north carolina also since shu taiwan ni hao and for korea, we have listeners in seoul and young in korea. Buy-in yo haserot glad that you’re very glad, very glad that you’re with us. Thank you. Um okay, kayman sample word let’s talk about some of these details of of a be testing. What does this look like? Well, you can do it. I mean, even though we used the example before of your website, you can do it on anything. You know, you could do it in an email. Newsletters on little microsite, it’s. Just a page essentially, whatever. Wherever you’re trying to put content out, you could do a be testing. So it could mean different photos, different buttons, that text it could also mean having a photo or no photo. You know? Ah lot of organizations will do a b testing specifically around fund-raising with on that on that donation page, does it have a photo or does it just have the form or, you know, does it show maybe a image of some sort that shows, like, how they’re using the funding, for example, or what the project looks like that they’re asking for money for or again, is it just the form, you know? So and that’s it it’s going to change it’s not going to be the same for every single organization? You know, you have to do that testing because if especially if you’re an organization that’s used a lot of images in your campaign in your appeals that’s, you know, that it’s driving people to remember what, what this is all about maybe having that photo there again, we’ll just keep that emotional tie to the campaign. But if it’s your raising money for something that you haven’t been using, that kind of graphical support for, well, maybe people would get there and say, why do you have this random photo of a child up here? You know, so so you want it to be consistent, but you also want a test to see. What’s going to get the most completion on that form. Okay. And so i just said quickly before the break. But you are you are you randomly? Your technology is randomly assigning people too different a and b version that’s what? They be testing it first of a and b version. Is that right? What happens? So there are all different levels of sophistication, so you may be using a tool. Google has a, uh, baby testing tool. Optimize. Lee is another pretty sophisticated tool to use for that, especially around your website. But with email marketing, you could just say we want to send, you know, half the list, this message and half the list. This message or say you have a thousand people on your email list, send the the first one hundred message a the next one hundred message be and then wait two hours, see which one had more opens and then say, great, we’re going to go with that message to the other eight hundred. Okay, so this could be that instantaneous. We’re just a couple of hours. Exactly. Okay. Okay. Now, an email, a popular thing to test is a subject line, right? You could be having different versions of a subject line, right? Everything else would be the same. Exactly. The message inside is the same. But having, you know, a call to action versus you know anyone, regardless of which side you support anyone that’s on a political list. You’ve seen them testing those subject lines. You see messages coming almost every day during campaign season. Sometimes it just has one word. You know, sometimes it has your name in it sometimes it’s a really long call to action and that’s just those campaigns testing out what’s getting the most people to open this on the on the fund-raising landing page side, you have the example of the clinton bush haiti fund. They changed something so subtle, just the words within the button that you click right. The red, they have a red button and i have i’ve read that red is a very powerful colors. Red is supposed to be a very good button color for donate now for donation buttons or buy buttons. So they changed it from submit that the word in the button was submit to support haiti, and they got a fifteen percent increase in dollars per page view just something so subtle is that exactly and part of that, you know, some organizations think, well, we don’t want to write submit because normally, you know what we want them to do is donate or whatever their word choice, maybe, but if you have all throughout your website, if you keep using the word support, support us through your donations, support us by taking this action, and then someone gets to a page where there’s a button that says donate well, it feels really weird because you’ve already been consistently using this it’s other word, so that consistency is important, you know? And again, if if you go look on your website now and you see that on your your donate paige it’s the only place you say the word donate but the rest of the time you really are talking about, support us financially. That’s an opportunity to do some testing because maybe donate works for your organization, and you should change those other places where it says support or the other way around. Okay, excellent example, right of potential testing. Another thing they did there. There’s. This little geo trust verified icon. I guess that it’s a trustworthy site, right? Forgiving? Is that what that is right? And there are all different kinds of those, you know, whether it’s charity navigator, geo trust like all those different things that say, basically, we’re not goingto take your money and do something else with it, i guess again, there’s different levels of what these other certification sites mean to, but some places have found, you know, some organizations found that by putting those kinds of seals of approval, i guess you would say on the donation for more on the button, they saw a big increase, but others have found like they did. You know, when you when you take it away, you actually haven’t they well, they decode, they had to do when they when they took that away, they lost five percent revenue right per page view. Exactly. There’s a trusted icon similar to papal, verified on the commercial side. Exactly. So people have gotten really used to even if people don’t necessarily know what geo trust is or they don’t know what you know, charity navigator is they don’t know what they are, but the fact that it says it’s verified, you know, someone’s looked into these people, give some amount of trust, some of the things that you suggest it could be changed on dh tested form fields, how many form fields you have the donation amounts that air suggested those little radio buttons that you click ten, twenty five, fifty hundred and that’s a really big into change especially, you know, certain campaigns have found easy ways to to mix that up because if they had a number involved in the campaign, you know, if if the campaign was around ah, holiday and it was on the thirteenth or it was a military campaign and they wanted to use the six as there number, and so then you just have increments of six, and you, maybe you say sixty is the default. Whenever organizations test that out, often they find people that the hyre number really does get donated because they’ve just mixed it up a little, you know, they didn’t defaulted to ten, you know, they put it up there a bit because people will still put it down if they want to have a smaller number, you know, but showing kind of the idea with where that preset radio button. Selection is is basically trying to say this is the average gift. This is the normal donation. So it’s not, you know, we’re expecting you to do this, but, hey, most people are doing this one. Thats why its preset on sixty. You know, eso it just encourages people. Tio not think oh, this is just a ten dollar or that’s. Just the twenty five dollar normal donation, you know, so putting different numbers in there that are, like, thirty three and, you know, throws people a little. We have. We have tim sample on the line, tim samples called, and this is amy’s. Dad, he called in last month. Tim. Tim sample. How are you doing in oregon? I’m doing good. Doing good and plays it’s it’s already done, or or a gun or gone where? There’s no evil or we’ll help you. Oregon. All right, there you go. You go. Oregon. Are it’s not gone? There’s? No e at the end. Oh, thank you. Alright, oregon, but i’m right in the middle of work right now, but i’ve had an opportunity to come down on my desk and lock the doors. Nobody bought it. I’m at your disposal. Thank you, tim. You know, i wanted to ask you. I have here with me. You know, this little kind of sort of shrinking kind of wallflower, you know? Never not very engaged. Not very out there. What? What? What is she always like this when she was growing up? Oh, you’re talking about my daughter? Yeah, i know. I know. It’s. Hard to tell. Yeah. Yeah, alright, now, but without the sarcasm has always been a type a personality. Yeah, and always always engaged. Like, was she in? A lot of i could’ve asked her, but it’s more fun to ask you. Was she out there? Like, in activities in elementary school in high school? I mean, she’s, the online engagement, everything poster poster will do you good. Everything she could possibly get involved with. She was involved with her mother, and i tried to give her every opportunity to try every sport, every activity you wanted, you know, you know, as parents, we tried to do that for her can. My god, you’re a good example of amy. I tell this story. He probably doesn’t remember it. But in the second grade, i said anything. You got your homework done? Well, yes. He had two next day’s homework done the whole weeks on. John had read three chapters ahead. It was the last time we ever ask her if she had her homework done. Never had to worry about amy school or anything. Okay. And always self directed, always always getting right with it. And and i feel like he is right now. I know and engaged also always engaged with the public. Yes. Absolutely. Absolutely. How did we know that she’d end up a consultant and someone that people look to for advice about online engagement? Did you see this coming? I thought he’d be president united states by now myself? No, no pressure. Thanks, dad, but i didn’t want to go into politics. I amy always had a sense of what was right and wrong, you know, always interacting with other children. You know, she always knew what was right or wrong. She never made bad decisions that i can see. And if she did, she so well, i hit way didn’t know about it. All right, we’re back, but, uh, she has a sphere of alligators. Is that is that you’re doing? Is that is that you’re doing, she has a fear of alligators. Is that you’re doing fear of alligators. You’re not aware of this? Well, we don’t have many alligators over here where we live in oregon, oregon in oregon, oregon. No, i know. I never knew he had any fears at all. It was an example after a trip to florida. And tony will let me live it down if it comes up to you. Okay. Yeah, i have a fear of snakes. Oh, i don’t think i pass that on to her. I don’t know if alligators are reptiles like snakes are alligators may or may not be reptiles. Maybe maybe look together. Alright. Alright. We’re gonna let you go back to work, tim. All right, perfect. Thank you very much for calling the opportunity. We thank you that we don’t know if your daughter by tim sample. Okay. Goodbye. All right. I want to have some fun. Do that that’s fair. Okay. This’s. Tony martignetti non-profit radio. You are in charge of the shop. Future president. I know i the bar’s pretty high now. Yeah, i in fact, when alison find was here last week, i asked her if she thought that a presidential candidate could emerge outside the two major parties from online on. And she felt that it could eventually, but that we would see local, local lance’s first mayor’s maybe governors or senators, you know, but more local than presidential right away. But i was i had you in mind. I had your president cha operations. I don’t i want to. You know, there’s. Another election coming up it’s true only only only few years it’s. Really? Not all that far away. So exactly. Okay, but she felt it was possible. Do you think it’s possible for a for their previous president there emerges online. Yeah, especially. I think around someone from a grassroots campaigning background not political, necessarily, but someone that’s that’s already actively working online to bring people together for other social issues or other co kinds of campaigns. So so someone who’s in it in that way, i think, could easily cross over to say great. Well, now i want to run for for an elected position versus i’m just going to be the organizer that keeps this. Keeps this movement going. Okay. You have anybody in mind? Apparently i need to put myself in the street don’t talk about other candidate. Exactly. Were we stupid? All right, i will go on the record. What’s up today, never mentioning another candidate. All right, um, let’s oh, there was one more thing. I want to point out that matching gif ts is another possible, maybe another another possible testing. So oh, exactly the existence of or how big a match might be, right? Especially, you know, something to think about with phrasing of matching gifts is there’s the version of, you know, if we get to this number, we get that same total matched or every ten dollars gets matched. So then people think, well, my ten dollars isn’t going to mean much to this really big pot. We have to get two of twenty thousand, but if instead you say the matches, you know, dollar for dollar, whatever you khun give, how does that affect your community? Because some communities may really get behind the idea of, like, having to get to that really big number together and other communities want to feel like they’re five dollars, was still matched and still meant ten dollars, for the organization. So think about the way you use the match in your campaign, and several weeks ago, we had a university professor on from university of chicago. John list talked about scientific research around matching gift does. Does a three to one match necessarily pulled more than a one to one match, right and where and on dh, also, in the phraseology of the match, what you’re describing and that will show was on february eighth of this year. If you want to hear discussion about the scientific research specifically around matching gift excellent, we’re going. T take more of a break, another break, and when we come back, we’ll talk more about who gets involved in the campaign, some budgeting, maybe some calendar ring and things like that, and also tony’s take, too, of course, comes before all that. Stay with me. Good evening, dick, dick, tooting, getting dick, dick, dick, dick, you’re listening to the talking alternative network waiting to get in. Nothing. Good. Are you suffering from aches and pains? Has traditional medicine let you down? Are you tired of taking toxic medications, then come to the double diamond wellness center and learn how our natural methods can help you to hell? Call us now at to one to seven to one eight, one eight three that’s to one to seven to one eight one eight three or find us on the web at www dot double diamond wellness dot com way. Look forward to serving you. Hi, i’m ostomel role, and i’m sloan wainwright, where the host of the new thursday morning show the music power hour. Eleven a m. We’re gonna have fun. Shine the light on all aspects of music and its limitless healing possibilities. We’re going invite artists to share their songs and play live will be listening and talking about great music from yesterday to today, so you’re invited to share in our musical conversation. Your ears will be delighted with the sound of music and our voices. Join austin and sloan live thursdays at eleven a. M on talking alternative dot com. Dafs you’re listening to the talking alternative network. Oppcoll lively conversation. Top trends and sound advice. That’s. Tony martignetti non-profit radio. And i’m janna agger’s, senior vice president, products and marketing from blackbaud. Durney welcome back, live live listener love for berlin, germany joined us good noggin on dh time now for tony’s take to my block this week is keep your marketing simple i’m going to try to adhere to that right now concise, informative, jargon free, i think it’s not easy to do, but i do think it’s worth striving for it just makes your communications so much simpler on the receiving end, whatever, whichever way’s you’re communicating, achieve least shoot for simplicity. My blog’s is that tony martignetti dot com, and that is tony’s take two for friday, the twenty sixth ono were who wrote this friday, the nineteenth of april, and that is the sixteenth show of the year. Amy who’s, who should be involved in this work and how are we going toe? I estimate the time that’s going to be involved in our online campaign? Sure, i think fund-raising campaigns just like any other campaigns organization, maybe running advocacy list building, you know, community engagement, etcetera can’t be thought of as something that’s completely contained within the fund-raising department, because ultimately there are e mails and there’s this a b testing on the website and all of those other components require all different staff from different departments, so it’s an opportunity to to create, i think, processes we suggest in the book where you will have regular opportunities for staff across departments, not necessarily like on all staff meeting, but staff across departments that are ultimately all creating the success of that campaign to come together, whether that’s like every week or however your organization wants to do it, to have a meeting where you’re all in the room at the same time, or all on video chat or whatever you want to do so that everyone’s talking about it. So as soon as you break that campaign down into the people that are in charge of the email never talked to the people that were in charge of actually counting how many people are coming through the form, then you’ve already said, well, we’re not even going to have the best conversation we can have with this campaign staff aren’t talking to each other, so creative process first, so that everyone involved is coming together regularly to talk about kosh. We saw that this button language was the best. Well, the email better have that same button. Language, you know, any maybe testing that you’re doing anything you’re learning about what’s working with the campaign should then be immediately reflected in all the other components. So how you either evaluate ahead of time staff time or recognize all those different pieces are maybe serving the rest of the organization. So thinking of of people in communications is not just communications staff that all they do is communicate, but they also served fund-raising and they also serve advocacy, and they also served programs. So what does that mean as far as your staff plan? And what does that mean for your value evaluation of staff? You know, those communications staff in this example couldn’t just say, well, my job is to send e mail and i sent them, but how, you know, how was your function in this organization, reflective of our success in our fundraising campaign were reflective of the success in our advocacy campaign so that it’s showing that that person isn’t just responsible for hitting send on thousands of emails but showing them even in their own evaluation, that they’re part of the whole organization success, which i think is critical for having all of you dafs buy-in toe working towards your mission. You know as soon as you say, well, your job is just the website. What their job is the web site because it’s serving the mission of helping people understand you know what your your cause is all about and so did did they lead the baby testing that help figure out that that button actually could have, you know, in increased by fifteen percent the donations that’s huge that’s, not just the fund-raising team that’s also that person who’s managing the website. What about the smaller shop? Just a two or three person arts group? I mean, how are we gonna build even ah, modest campaign into what we’re trying to. We’re struggling to keep get getting done day in, day out, right? I think, for smaller organizations, but really, the same lesson applies to everyone. Ah lot of of the components of the campaign are actually developed way in advanced. If you’re collecting stories actively as you are working with your community year and you’re keeping those stories not just on a piece of paper in your desk, but, you know, kind of like a story bank you have you have ah, bank. You could draw from of all these different stories then in that moment when you need to create a campaign, maybe it’s a response of campaign because some horrible event has happened and you want to make sure people are aware of your services. You know, for example, you have that content. You don’t have to then spend a week developing. Okay, who’s, who from our community do we want to talk to? You know, where could we get a story about our services in action? You’ve already created that content in advance. So especially when you only have two people, the more you can do to just kind of be librarians, you know, tio, cart, chronicle and archive all that you have all the time so that you can really easily just say that’s, you know the book i want that’s the story i want off that shelf and let’s put it into this email. And then again, a be testing is so, i think, critical for really small shops, because if you really can just say we’re going to send this e mail to one hundred people each and then know that the one that got more opens is what we’re going to send, even though it took you maybe an extra five minutes to go back and say, okay, now, send this list. That was a really great five minutes, because it means you’re getting that many more people opening that message let’s, look it. Ah, um, budgeting our campaign may involve some adwords. Facebook, facebook, yeah, how are we going toe? How do we figure out what what we should be spending money on is beyond the time. That also is an indirect, indirect cost, right? First, obviously, you know, you have to have the caveat of it all depends what’s your campaign about where is your community? Ah lot of people have have realized that you’re not necessarily just going to make all of your money from your fund-raising campaign on facebook, but a lot of those people that are participating as donors, maybe on your facebook page. So thinking about how you budget for promotion of the campaign versus budget, for the call to action, you know, you may want to just invest in having ads showing the efficacy of your work so that when people are then emailed a call to donate, they’re like, oh, yeah, you guys do really great stuff. I do want to donate via email because that’s, my, you know, i’ll just click don’t and go to your website, but maybe it’s different for your organ community. Maybe your community doesn’t really know, and they just need to be told, like there was a disaster and donate, you know, it depends a lot in the circumstances, i think it’s also, especially with things like facebook, where they’re changing the algorithm like every five hours you have to do so. May be testing, you have to invest in that a be testing. So you know which of these ads are working better? Do we do promoted posts, or do we do ads? So some of it is just having a reserve of that advertising budget to test with and you don’t have to spend a lot of money, you know, like facebook ads or not expensive, right? For probably fifty dollars or so you could oh, exactly, you attest? Oh, for sure, yeah, and the problem or the great opportunity that could become a new obstacle for organizations, is that when you get in there to do a facebook at our, you know, promoted post, you’re you’re presented with the opportunity to pick like which gender location, background so many details that it can either be overwhelming and you just say, well, i just want to go to everyone, and then you’re going to run out of that fifty dollars budget instantly, you know, or you get so narrow and who you want this ad to go, too, but it never really goes to anyone, so i think there’s a little bit of opportunity, teo play even just with that. That scale of who do you really want to promote this to? Who is your donor and what do you know about them? Which goes back to what we talked about months ago, about how, you know, investing and knowing who your community is first, so that you can say the right things on the right channels, and i appreciate that your advice always is. What are the goals of the campaign right now, and not only to raise the money that that? Well, actually, the campaign may not be about even about money, but may not only be the explicit purpose of the campaign, but also to grow engagement in the long term, bring some new people to the cause may not even buy-in respond to your call to action, but now they’ve joined your community exactly, exactly, and for them this you know, your campaign that maybe their friend donated to was the first time they had heard aboutyou, but they’re now hearing about you in a really trusted way, because they heard that a friend not only supported your work but gave money to your work, and now they just wanted follow along, and eventually you can. You know, encourage them up that ladder of engagement to become a donor as well. And in that respect, not everything in your campaign has to be about the call to action, right? I mean, i know i guess you want the called action to be frequent, but there can be things that are informative beyond the call to action. Exactly. I think a lot of organizations were shook about a fundraising campaign, i think. Okay, first and foremost, they are donating to this campaign. They’re going to donate to this campaign. They really get that out there, and then people donate and then there’s nothing else, you know. So people feel like, well, i did the thing, but there has to be more aiken dio so recognizing that there is always more they khun dio having that thank you, paige pushed them to the very next step. What’s, the next step for you is that great. Thanks for donating here’s the button to share on facebook that you just donated, you know, or is the email confirmation encouraging them to share their story about why they donated so that now you have one more story and your story bank? You know, so think about what people can do to still feel like they’re contributing to this forward motion because they already donated, which is huge, so don’t take someone who’s willing to take a really big action and then just dropped them off, keep them, you know, sustained that engagement and keep them engaged so that you can ask them to donate again, you know, if they haven’t heard from you, and now you’re asking again for them to donate, will they feel like don’t you remember that i already donated? But if you’ve said, you know, hey, share this on facebook? Hey, give us your story, etcetera, and then you say thank you for donating. Please help some more. They feel like yes, of course we are trying to get there together. What is ah, home page hijack for-profit it’s called many things, but basically i’m sure most people have experiences when you go to a website and you just, you know, landed on the website haven’t clicked on anything, and then something pops up. Even the new york times does this you you think you’re going to go? Read an article from the new york times that your friend just tweeted that and there’s a thing that pops up that says, don’t you want to pay for new york times content? Why don’t you subscribe? That’s that’s ah, home page pre-tax, for example, it’s basically a light box that pops up and says, whatever you thought you were here to read. This is what we want you to read and it’s great for people that if they really are just hitting your home page because maybe they were, you know, searching online for something and came to your website, they don’t know or you have directed people back to website, and it can pop up and say, this is what’s happening here is the called action here’s, that big red button that says support haiti or whatever, and obviously they could close out of the box or lorts like autumn, it etcetera, but the fact that it makes it super front and center left, literally front and center on the website helps direct that traffic into the call to action where you could maybe instead of them seeing your home page that’s, you know, normally fairly generic has lots of navigation, et cetera and drives them to a page that’s just about the campaign, you know, really focused. They can see the donate form they khun see whatever helps funnel people just to the campaign instead of accidentally clicking unlike, oh, what is this organization about? And what do you do and what’s? This other thing? I see a photo of, you know, it just helps funnel people in where you want them to go. You have advice about how frequently someone may see that home page hijack, so maybe it shouldn’t be more than once a week person and the technology will support that our exam twice a week per person or whatever you think exactly, yeah, i mean, it’ll where people out if every time they go to any page of your website, they’re getting this pop up essentially, you know, but if you can say yeah, once a week or the first time someone comes to the website because maybe outside of a fundraising campaign, you could use that for many things you could have it say, join our email list, you know, subscribe to our news, whatever you want that pop up to be so if you see that every time well, gosh i signed up a week ago, and i’m seeing it every day, you know, so just may be the first time that i p address hits the web site, you know? We’re going to take a break in about a minute. We want to have some print possibly to be in support of our campaign. I want to just open that topical bit. We’ll talk more about it shortly. Sure, i think print is actually a great medium, especially for fund-raising still one of the main drivers of fund-raising effort so looking again at that piece as a way to frame all of the content that’s going to come later because you’re going to be ableto change up at the very last minute, what you tweet and what you put in an e mail, etcetera. But if that print piece supports that overall called to action, the overall message and maybe has just won fairly general story that you can then really dig into that story of what that person’s you know, experience was or what those services mean to the community. It’s a great way to frame things as a oh, yeah, i remember this, you know, every time. They didn’t get an e mail from you. Alright, we’ll talk more about this and the fund-raising plan in general. When we return with amy, sample ward. Stay with us. You’re listening to the talking alternative network. Are you stuck in your business or career trying to take your business to the next level, and it keeps hitting a wall? This is sam liebowitz, the conscious consultant. I will help you get to the root cause of your abundance issues and help move you forward in your life. Call me now and let’s. Create the future you dream of. Two, one, two, seven, two, one, eight, one, eight, three, that’s to one to seven to one, eight one eight three. The conscious consultant helping hunters. People be better business people. Have you ever considered consulting a road map when you feel you need help getting to your destination when the normal path seems blocked? A little help can come in handy when choosing an alternate route. Your natal chart is a map of your potentials. It addresses relationships, finance, business, health and, above all, creativity. Current planetary cycles can either support or challenge your objectives. I’m montgomery taylor. If you would like to explore the help of a private astrological reading, please contact me at monte at monty taylor dot. Com let’s monte m o nt y at monty taylor dot com. Talking alternative radio twenty four hours a day. Dahna hi there again and welcome back. Uh, anything more than you want to say about print in support of this, i would i would add that prince should certainly be needs to be in this fund-raising calendar with a campaign calendar that we talked about last month and it’s something that we’ve talked about in the past, i forget what episode number, but we talked about competition and how teo, you know, if if you were doing a phone bank, for example, of donations and you and you mentioned the research shows, at least if you were to mention, you know, the previous collar don’t thisyou know people are more inclined to say, well, i’m going to do that if someone else did print is a really easy way to do that as well, because you clearly know where they live, you are mailing something to them. So say, on average, people in your neighborhood donated this last year to our campaign. Oh, my gosh, now they like now i’m going to look in on my neighbor’s like which ones of you donated one hundred dollars? Now i feel guilty, i’m going to donate a hundred dollars, you know? So so keep those same principles that you use online with making it be a riel story, having it connected to something directly when your mission have a very clear call to action. But then take advantage of that local competition that peer pressure of this is this is really, really in your neighborhood. But also this is how people are actually helping us. So you should too. We can also have competition in telemarketing right in our telephone call once just remind i think this may have been last month, but in the way that callers are greeted and encouraged or thanked for their past giving, there could be some competitiveness. Exactly. Exactly. So i’m not just saying like, oh, thanks you want to donate, but also, you know oh, you have reviews caller exactly. The previous collar donated this. And if you can, if you can hear sometimes, you know it’s it’s hard to just make a judgment. But if you could hear that it was a male calling and you could say, oh, well, the man before you donated this if you if you have that opportunity too, to be gender specific, the results or even hyre from studies that say, you know, once i’m told the previous collar was a woman and she don’t even more than me well, man, i want to donate as much as her, so all right, let’s, let’s wrap up our campaign with the thank you’s yes, thank you’s are critical and thank you don’t have to be at the end of the campaign. Thank you should be every time someone’s done something, so when they sign up for that email lists, you know, thank them if they donated, thank them, but also do that thinking in public when you can, you know, you’ll see people in the campaign putting on facebook that they, you know, because they got to the thank you page, the confirmation page, and they tweeted or they posted to facebook that they just donated, well, that’s a great place if the organization is then liking that post you, you know, privacy settings are such that you can see their post or on twitter, the organization is retweeting them to them that’s huge validation the organization noticed that i just tweeted out, you know, that i donated and i’m i got retweeted or i got thanked publicly and that certainly doesn’t take, you know, a lot of effort. You’re not creating any new content. You’re just saying thank you very much. But it can mean a lot publicly for the community to see those individual voices being thanked. How do you feel about the mailing of small small tokens? Oh, yeah, of gratitude. Oh, i think i think a hand written note, even if all it says is, you know, tony, thanks so much for your donation. Amy. It was a hand written note. It had to go through the mail. You know, it means a lot. Exactly. Could be something online, maybe maybe a little gift certificate or a discount to a site or something. Exactly how else can we say the small ways of saying thank you, right? And there are lots of ways where you know it. And ten we can say thank you by saying, you know, to thank you for what you’ve done here is a free webinar, for example, you know, web in our past. But for other organizations, it can also be an opportunity to say, because you donated, you’re now invited to this event that’s only for our donors. You know, so you’re also providing access to something that is otherwise exclusive, and you can use that as a way to say, hey, all of our donors are going to be joining us at this, you know, a local place that everyone knows is really fun or, you know, historic or whatever come join us in this, and it doesn’t have to be, you know, because he’ll be a national campaign, but you could say if you’re a donor, you’ll get the link to the live stream and you get to be there for this interview with our founder or whatever, and even if people don’t want to go it’s still saying, we know tony, you donated, and we want you as part of this conversation, just the act of inviting exact is very, very it is very gracious, exactly in larger organizations that i that i work with, well, often invite people on the other side of the country to a luncheon that we’re hosting in new york city to to say thank you right way don’t expect them to come. We know the observers are tiny that they will, but the act of the invitation what if they were going to be in town for other business where they were going to be in town meeting with someone, and now they can say, oh, while i’m there, i’m also going to go to this luncheon because i donated and that’s really cool, you know, i’ve never asked you this. You’ve been on many times. What is it that you love about the work that you do, this whole body of work that you that you’re involved with? What is it you love? I i love the people like i love that we are in a position to get to support not just one person that we’ve met, you know, and, like, help them do whatever, but we can help hold communities that’s really exciting, you know, or that you can help all of those people in the community know that they’re in a community. I mean, i think that’s the really exciting power of the internet is that people thought i’m the only person that has x y and z here on the only person it’s experienced this, and now they go online like, oh my gosh, i’m not special at all there’s a million people who’ve had this and so part of it is that that feeling of like, i’m not special, but i’m not special because there are so many of these other special people you know, and getting to find them and create community with each other, even when you can’t all be physically in the same room. Her latest book is social change. Anytime everywhere you’ll find amy’s blawg at amy, sample ward, dot or ge once again, a pleasure. Thank you for having me. Be sure and thank him for calling it. I will it’s dad, dad to you? Yes, next week policy versus paper clips a conversation with eugene fram he’s, professor emeritus at rochester institute of technology. Dr fran is author of the book policy versus paper clips introducing non-profits to a corporate model of board governance to cut out the minutia from your agendas so that the board can focus where it should on policy and planning. We’re all over the social web. One example twitter can use the hashtag non-profit radio to talk back after the show. Tell us how we’re doing. You could tell me how we’re doing. I’m at tony martignetti you can follow amy sample ward she’s at amy rs board. We know that the army’s for rene handup, our creative producers, claire meyerhoff, sam liebowitz is our line producer and assistant producer is janice taylor. Shows social media is by regina walton of organic social media and the remote producer of tony martignetti non-profit radio is john federico of the new rules. Oh, i hope you’ll be with me next week. I’d hate to contract a chronic or acute disease. In the meantime, that’ll be one to two p m eastern on talking alternative broadcasting at talking alternative dot com. Hyre oppcoll are you going to do? You’re listening to the talking, alternate network, waiting to get in. Nothing. Upleaf hi, i’m donna and i’m done were certified mediators, and i am a family and couples licensed therapists and author of please don’t buy me ice cream are show new beginnings is about helping you and your family recover financially and emotionally and start the beginning of your life. We’ll answer your questions on divorce, family court, co parenting, personal development, new relationships, blending families and more dahna and i will bring you to a place of empowerment and belief that even though marriages may end, families are forever join us every monday, starting september tenth at ten a m on talking alternative dot com are you suffering from aches and pains? Has traditional medicine let you down? Are you tired of taking toxic medications? Then come to the double diamond wellness center and learn how our natural methods can help you too? He’ll call us now at to one to seven to one eight one eight three that’s to one to seven to one eight one eight three or find us on the web at w w w dot double diamond wellness dot com we look forward to serving you. You’re listening to talking alternative network at www dot talking alternative dot com, now broadcasting twenty four hours a day. This is tony martignetti aptly named host of tony martignetti non-profit radio. Big non-profit ideas for the other ninety five percent technology fund-raising compliance, social media, small and medium non-profits have needs in all these areas. My guests are expert in all these areas and mohr. Tony martignetti non-profit radio friday’s one to two eastern on talking alternative broadcasting are you fed up with talking points? Rhetoric everywhere you turn left or right spin ideology no reality, in fact, its ideology over in tow. No more it’s time. Join me. Larry shot a neo-sage tuesday nights nine to eleven easter for the ivory tower radio in the ivory tower will discuss what’s important to you society politics, business it’s, provocative talk for the realist and the skeptic who want to go what’s really going on? What does it mean? What can be done about it? So gain special access to the ivory tower. Listen to me. Very sharp. Your neo-sage tuesday nights nine to eleven new york time go to ivory tower radio dot com for details. That’s ivory tower radio dot com everytime was a great place to visit for both entertainment and education. Listening tuesday nights nine to eleven. It will make you smarter. Dahna hyre

A sign that says "Our recipe: Simplicity, Honesty, Innovation. MIx well. Serve anywhere."

Keep Your Marketing Simple

A sign that says "Our recipe: Simplicity, Honesty, Innovation. MIx well. Serve anywhere."
photo courtesy of duncan on Flickr
This ad for ebay™ Now is running in the New York City subway:

     Thousands of items from local stores. Delivered to you in about an hour.

I admire the simplicity and conciseness. It conveys lots of information in two short sentences:

     *We’ve got plenty of items for you
     *They’re locally sourced
     *We deliver fast
     *You know how to find us

Describing my consulting, I strive for the same info density in short descriptions.

     *Planned Giving: I help nonprofits raise money through estate and retirement plan gifts.
     *Charity Registration: I help nonprofits get into compliance in each state where they solicit donations.

It took me months to hone those messages. And they’re still not as exciting as the subway copy.

Can you make your marketing brief, informative and jargon free? Your readers will be grateful. Do you do a lot of speaking? Your listeners will be even more grateful. Readers can stop reading. The people in your audiences probably won’t walk out. But they can tune you out.

Those you’re delivering to will better understand your messages–and it’s good practice for cocktail parties. The second half of this episode of Nonprofit Radio is devoted to dropping cliches.

It’s a challenge to write short and informative, and it’s a skill worth developing.

(ebay is copyright © 1995-2013 eBay Inc. All rights reserved.)