Tag Archives: non-profit

Fundraising For Social Change

Buy This Book If you work for (or with) a non-profit, this book is a must-read. Kim Klein (the editor) focuses on key problem all non-profits face: acquiring, retaining, and upgrading donors.

Acquiring is the process of getting new people to donate to your organization. Typically this is done with direct mail, web site asks, and some special events. The goal is to create an impulse donation.

Retaining is the strategy of converting an impulse donation into a habit.

Upgrading converts the “regulars” to give more than they have before. Typically this is done via a personal call, letter, or special “insider” event.

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Finding Donors. Did you know that in 2004, 75.6% of contributions came from individuals (11.6% of foundations, 8% bequests, and 4.8% corporations)? Or, 7 out of 10 adults in the US and Canada give away money?

Asking For Money. What’s the #1 way to get donations? Ask for them! You need to identify people who: are able to make a gift, believe in your organization, and can be contacted. Formally, you ask for letter first with a letter detailing your organization and a request for monies for a specific need, following up with a phone call, and ending with a face-to-face meeting. Informally, a phone call followed by a letter would suffice.

Special Events. A special event is a two-fer: a fund-raising opportunity plus increased publicity. During the event, there must be a pitch to let people know now is the time to donate. Consider having some friends of your organization purposely start the donation process to break the ice.

Direct Mail. Use direct mail to: get someone to give for the first time, get donors to repeat their gift, and get donors to renew their gift. On a direct mail piece, expect less than 1% response (higher quality lists produce greater response) – so you’ll need to play the numbers game. Before starting a direct mail campaign, calculate the cost of the mailing vs. the likely result of the donation to arrive at a net income per donor. There a lot of information in the book about crafting the copy of the mail piece.

This book is a gold-mine of non-profit fundraising strategy. If you work with non-profits, read it often.

How Can I Attract People To Art Classes?

I am working on a proposal for a not-for-profit community based arts education and exhibition center. I’m looking for some creative ways to reach the target audience, which is 50 years of age or greater, economically comfortable, sophisticated, with an interest in, but not necessarily experience in the creation of art and live in identified geographic areas. Has anyone worked with this segment of the population as it pertains to marketing art classes, and if so, what did you find worked best in reaching them? The center is looking to grow student enrollment by 15 percent per year.

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If you’re looking for new students, figure out WHY your target would want to create art: improve their business? family? creative outlet? new career? therapy? community? Each of these goals have different messages and would appeal to a different subset of your target.

Here are some general ideas:

  • student art shows in public places (community center, city hall, etc.)
  • take class into public place (town square) and let people walking by participate
  • involve your non-profit with your local chamber of commerce
  • co-market with other art non-profits in your area (opera, chamber music, art shows, etc.)
  • showcase your student’s works in a raffle