Archive for May, 2012

13 stages of the consideration / evaluation process for making a planned gift

Monday, May 28th, 2012
  1. Prospective donor buys into your mission
  2. Has a clear understanding of the future needs of your organization
  3. Sees the organization as a good investment because you manage funds well
  4. Willing to support the needs of the organization
  5. Understands what a planned gift is and how it works
  6. Realizes that they can make a planned gift
  7. Is clearly asked for the gift
  8. Consults with advisers and/or family to garner support and counsel
  9. Has all objections and concerns answered thoroughly
  10. Makes the gift
  11. Alerts the organization they have made a gift
  12. Gets thanked and recognized based on how they want to be thanked
  13. Considers whether to keep the gift in their plans and increase the size of it (or remove it from their plans)

Now you can determine where each of your prospects are in the consideration and evaluation process.  Once done, you should send them the relevant communications that would make sense to them at that particular stage in order to move them forward.

An example of a real-world thank you that worked!

Tuesday, May 22nd, 2012

We needed a display for our booth.  We needed it quick.  We got it on-time and it looked fabulous!

Then we got this nice, personalized, hand-written note.  Do you think I’ll buy from them again?  I highly recommend displayit.com.

What could you do to improve your thank you’s and increase donations or revenues?

SmartGiftmaker booth displayThank you noteThank you note

 

 

Innovative possibilities are right in front of your face.

Sunday, May 20th, 2012

Most of the time innovation is possible simply by taking what has already been created and mixing it up a bit.

Let’s play the game.

Mastercard- credit card payment

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Paypal- allows payments to be made on the internet

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Starbucks- uses a scanner to debit your prepaid card

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iPhone- connects all the above

Starbucks often has long lines.  If they could move people through the stores faster, they could sell more coffee.  So Adam Brotman (Chief Digital Officer, Starbucks) created an app that serves as a virtual Starbucks card.  By doing so, he connected all of the above and 42 million mobile payments were made in March, 2012 alone (and that number keeps growing every week).

Now the lines move faster, customers are happier, and Starbucks’ profits are larger.

What’s right in front of your face that could create value for your customers, clients or donors with just one more ingredient?

Marketing innovation

 

 

 

 

 

Marketing innovation

Marketing innovation

Start with the end in mind.

Friday, May 18th, 2012

Begin by deciding where you want to be.  Goals and strategies come before tactics every time.

If you don’t know where you’re going… you’ll end up going nowhere.

The rope theory of life.

Wednesday, May 16th, 2012

Everyone gets a rope.

Some are shorter than others.  Some are thicker than others.  Some have notches.  And others are a little bit slippery.

Each of us has a choice.

You can either climb up the rope, dangle on it, or hang yourself with it.

What have you chosen to do?

Just imagine what the world would be like if all of us spent a lot less time examining the rope we were given… and a lot more time examining how we’re going to climb up them.

Seven neat planned giving marketing quotes

Monday, May 14th, 2012
 

“Even if I knew that tomorrow the world would go to pieces, I would still plant my apple tree.”
- Martin Luther

 

 

“A man has made at least a start on discovering the meaning of
human life when he plants shade trees under which he knows
full well he will never sit.”
- D. Elton Trueblood

 

 

“Blessed are those who can give without remembering, and take without forgetting.”
- Princess Elizabeth

 

 

“When I chased after money, I never had enough. When I got my life on purpose and focused on giving of myself and everything that arrived into my life, then I was prosperous.”
- Wayne Dyer

 

 

“Unless someone like you cares a whole awful lot, nothing is going to get better. It’s not.”

Dr. Seuss, from The Lorax.

 

 

“In everything I did, I showed you that by this kind of hard work we must help the weak, remembering the words the Lord Jesus himself said: ‘It is more blessed to give than to receive.”

Holy Bible, Book of Acts 20:35

 

“I resolved to stop accumulating and begin the infinitely more serious task of wise distribution.”

Andrew Carnegie

 

 

The number one thing to avoid saying when you call a planned giving prospect

Sunday, May 13th, 2012

So somebody was interested in learning more about how to update their will.  You know because they sent in a reply form from one of your marketing efforts.

You sent them the information they requested making sure to spell their name correctly on the cover letter.  You entered their contact information in your database.  You set up a calendar reminder so you could call to follow-up in about 2 weeks.  You’re busy but you made sure to grab your phone and dial their number.  And, you’re in luck because they actually answered the phone.  So what do you say?

The answer I most commonly get when I ask that question to folks is, “Did you get the information I sent?”

STOP!!!  That’s it!  That’s the number one thing to avoid saying when you call a planned giving prospect!

Why?

Number one:  Because you never want to start off with a yes or no question to a prospect.  If you do, most of the time they’ll just say “no”.  It doesn’t matter what you ask them.  “NO” is the first word we learn as babies (next to mama and dada).  And people are especially trained to say “no” to strangers calling them at home.

Number two:  Everyone is so busy.  They won’t remember what you sent them.  Then they’ll say “no”.  Then you’ll have to say, “Oh, well I’ll resend it.”  End of conversation?  I hope not.  But it usually is.

Number three: Let’s face it.  You should be calling them with an objective.  What is it?  If you plan that out before you pick up the phone, you’ll have a strategy for your call.  And the strategy should be to accomplish one or all of the following:

  • Build rapport
  • Learn why they requested the information in the first place
  • Understand why they requested the information from your organization
  • Determine why they care about your organization
  • Uncover their estate planning and philanthropic goals
  • SAY THANK YOU

In the end, it’s all about them.  It’s about getting their needs, wishes and dreams aligned with your organizations’ mission.  What’s written in the brochure you sent them doesn’t really matter.  And it won’t matter if they got the brochure or not.  The brochure they requested was a door opener for you to uncover why they care about your organization and how you can help them understand how planned gifts can work.

When I make the calls (as a volunteer for my favorite charity), I start off by saying “thank you” first.  Then I go on to ask what prompted them to start giving to that particular charity.  I try to get them to tell me their story…. why they care.

I may thank them more than once for their donations and interest.  Then, after rapport has been established and sometimes after listening for 20 minutes about their life story (which is usually very interesting), I get to asking why they were interested in information about how to update their will.  Most of the time they remember.  Sometimes they don’t.

Then I may ask if they ever considered leaving money to the organization in their will.  That’s a “yes” or “no” question.  But it’s ok to ask it now.  A lot of times they’ll say “yes”.  Or at least I’ll get to hear their objections and so I can provide reasonable rebuttals that might help them understand the process better.

Even if they say “no” at this point, you can continue by asking “why not?”  The decision tree is endless for this kind of call.  But by asking if they received the information, you’ll turn the call into a short one and a waste of time for both you and your donor prospect.  That’s for sure.

Oh… And wanna’ know what else you should avoid saying when you call a planned prospect whom you have never met?  “How are you?”  Nothing could be more disingenuous than to have a complete stranger call your home and ask you how you are right off the bat.  Come on folks.  You don’t know them yet and you don’t care how they are.  It’s a waste of three words and a wasted opportunity to create rapport with a loyal donor.   But I’ll leave more about that for another post.

Stop whining and do something!

Thursday, May 10th, 2012

Warning:  This could sound like a political post. 

I’m not sure if I’m on the right or the left politically.  Sometimes I agree with one side.  And sometimes with the other.  But I laugh out loud when either side points the finger saying, “We’re right and you’re wrong.”

But one thing I know for sure is this:

There’s too much whining and complaining in America these days.  People in other countries live with dirt floors, no air conditioning and certainly no plasma tv’s.  But here in America, lately there’s a lot of talk about “fairness”.  A lot of talk about the rich beating up on the poor and holding them down.

But I still believe there is more opportunity in America than anywhere else in the world… if you’ll just do something!

Case in point.  Here’s a young man who lost his job.  He didn’t complain.  He didn’t blame the rich.  And he didn’t look for a handout.

Instead, he made an investment.  $300.  He invested in himself and took out a billboard with the words “Hire Me!” next to his photo.

And guess what?  He got a job!

Now how many people would make that kind of investment before asking the government (us… the taxpayers) to pay them to wait around for someone to offer them a job?  How many people are whining these days instead of doing something positive?  Too many in my opinion.

America was built by people who did something.  Let’s all take a lesson from a 22 year old and get this economy moving again.

Could advertising to your Facebook fans be a stroke of planned giving marketing brilliance?

Monday, May 7th, 2012

Think about this.

Planned giving marketing begins with a good list, right?

I’ve seen it time and time again.  When we look at the folks who said they already left a planned gift or are considering doing so, they are always loyal, high-affinity donors or volunteers.  And, often they are average folks.  Not rich.

Combine this with research we found online and put into our report titled 26 really interesting planned giving marketing charts, stats, and graphs.  Among other things, we found the following:

  • 43% of planned givers are under 55
  • Average age a person makes their first will is 44 while the average age of a person’s first bequest is 49
  • 31% of people never revise their wills while 75% never revise their charitable bequests
  • Top reasons people make planned gifts include (at the top of the list) a desire to support the charity and the ultimate use of the gift by that charity
  • 70% of donors who made planned gifts did so because they were asked

Now… let’s look at the people who “like” your Facebook page.  I don’t have any research to support what I’m about to write.  But here goes.  People “like” your Facebook page because:

  • They want to be closer to your organization and hear more from you because you touched them in some way that evoked a special emotion
  • They want their friends to know that they like your organization (probably because they want their friends to have the same experience and “like” your organization too)

So what am I getting at?

I’m thinking that you might want to consider planned giving advertising that is targeted solely to your Facebook fans.  It’s hyper-targeted and inexpensive.

Sure… you may not get the gift for about 30 years.  But you’ll get it.

And, if you do your planned giving marketing right… they’ll tell you about their gift soon so you can steward them properly, prevent them from taking your organization out of their will, and, hopefully, get a chance to inspire them to increase the size of their gift.

Just cut out one planned giving newsletter and you’ll have enough of a budget to target your Facebook fans for the next few years.

Am I nuts?  Or did I just find the missing link?

The arguments against this kind of advertising are my own.

  1. For starters.  Show me the money!  I think they need to make a gift of some sort in order to become planned giving prospects (although volunteers leave planned gifts even though they don’t necessarily make donations).
  2. And, what about loyalty?  Have these “likers” already exhibited (or will they someday exhibit) long-term loyalty.
  3. Plus, you may not see that gift for quite a while (although seniors make up the fastest growing segment of Facebook these days).

Facebook fans are exhibiting a high degree of affinity for your organization… publicly!  But is that enough?

I don’t know but I can tell you this:  Advertising on Facebook to your fans is pretty darn cheap.  And, if you don’t ask… you don’t get.  So I think it’s certainly worth a test.  I’ll try to get one of my clients to agree and I’ll let you know what happens.