Posts Tagged ‘philosophy’

Another idea to think about before you write your fundraising copy

Tuesday, April 30th, 2013

Carol Pollack from Planning and Endowment Consulting had a great idea to add to yesterday’s postIt's not all about us.

 

 

Before you begin to write your fundraising copy, print this out

Saturday, April 27th, 2013

….Just a cute reminder.  Print it out and hold it in front of the mirror.

 

 

It's not about me

 

It’s not about me!

Why we love planned giving

Monday, April 22nd, 2013
80 20 rule for planned giving

80 20 rule for planned giving

So you probably won’t see much of the fruits of your labor.  And, years from now, someone else will probably get the credit for your hard work and smart strategic planning.

But we’re not bummed-out, are we?  Even if the seeds you plant and have already planted might not benefit the organization you serve for 10 to 20 years (or more)… and even if you won’t get the credit for a good bit of your hard work… you and me… we love planned giving!

Here’s why:

  • We know that the 80 / 20 rule applies to planned giving.  In other words, we know that a small number of donors (“the 20″) will leave amazing gifts (“the 80″) if we educate them about the possibilities.
  • We know that these donors are average folks.  They aren’t rich elites.  We can relate to them.
  • We know that future generations will benefit because of our hard work and conscientiousness today.
  • We know that we are already in the midst of the greatest transfer of wealth.
  • We know that the conversations we have with prospective donors bring out amazing stories of passion and love.
  • We know that we can help make the world a better place.

My hat goes off to everyone in the planned giving community every day.

Why selling planned gifts is different (the case for a multi-step cultivation effort)

Wednesday, April 17th, 2013

Planned giving marketing is different

Seth Godin is pretty smart.  He really understands marketing.

In his recent blog post he discusses why we should sometimes avoid “easy leads” and, rather, seek to qualify our leads more vigorously.  But when it comes to planned giving marketing, I feel that what he’s talking about and what we’re doing are very different.

First let me point out that my firm used to be a bare-knuckle marketing “hired gun” for some of the toughest businesses in the Washington, DC region.  Back then we were mostly doing hardcore lead generation.  One of our clients was a home improvement company.  For them, we had to find ways to find “highly qualified” leads.  The cost of sending someone out to a home to quote on a job that averaged only $3,000-$10,000 was just too high.  So, we tested adding questions to our surveys on landing pages.  Then we arranged for telephone calls to follow up on every lead (to ensure that both decision-makers of the household were present before sending a sales rep out the door).  Then just before the sales person left to go meet them, again we’d confirm that all the decision-makers would be present.

Now, for our marketing planned gifts, the “sale” is very different.  We’re not selling a product but rather a life choice and a large investment.  We’re aiming to help people align their legacy mission with that of the nonprofit we serve.  So we need to widen the funnel a lot.  Then we need to cultivate the relationships (possibly for many years) with financial/educational information, mission-oriented information and conversion-oriented options (to get folks to raise their hands) because:

1- You never know which ones of these leads are just tire-kickers and which ones will leave a gift.  Some people might say they will not leave a gift only because they don’t want phone calls.  They just want to be anonymous.

2- For most folks it’s a HUGE jump forward to request this information at all.  By doing so they are moving from the avoidance stage to the consideration stage of a very long and emotional, non-measured (even erratic) decision-making process.  Considering the fact that over 50% of Americans never create a will at all, the fact that they are requesting this information is simply tremendous. This point should not be overlooked and all of these leads should be treated like gold.

3- It takes time.  Some people will act right away to make a legacy gift decision.  But most people will skim the information an organization sends out in response to requests and soon put it all in a drawer.  Hopefully it’s near their tax information or their legal stuff.  But, yes… that’s right… it will probably sit in a drawer.

4- Here’s where the magic happens.  When your organization takes the effort to remind these leads about the planned giving concept and seek ways to get them to educate themselves further about the benefits they would enjoy (for their soul and their pocket-book), something special happens.  I know it’s time consuming and tedious.  But the largest and most impactful gifts happen in the minds of your donors when you are not there.  It’s a slow process.  It requires frequency and repetition.  It requires well-conceived messages.  And it always must include easy ways for people to move to the next step in the consideration process.  In planned giving marketing we must treat each lead as if it holds the potential for a $1 million gift.  Cultivate a relationship with each one properly over time and, because it’s a numbers game, you WILL end up with boatloads of money for your organization.

5- Most importantly, this “sale” usually happens when no one from the organization is around.  Simply stated, most folks don’t need to involve you and your staff in order to make this kind of gift/investment.  That’s the hardest part to grasp but the critical reason why this “sale” is so different from what Seth Godin is talking about.

For more on the slow sale concept, read about the tortoise and the hare in planned giving marketing here.

If you can ask for likes on Facebook, you can ask for legacy gifts everywhere

Tuesday, March 19th, 2013

It drives me a bit batty every time I see an organization put the following words on the bottom of their emails or advertisements:

     “Like us on Facebook!”

It drives me even crazier if I see the following on the bottom of their emails:

     “Please consider the environment before printing this email.”

Why?  Because this is valuable real estate that could be used to say the following:

     “Please consider a gift to <<your organization>> in your will or financial plan.”

The financial benefits your organization will receive will unquestionably be tremendous from my message.  So, why not include a button just like mine everywhere?  And have it link to your planned giving pages!

A list of some humongous bequests that should get your planned giving team psyched up for only 3 seconds!

Thursday, March 7th, 2013

I give you permission to read this list but only if you’ll count to three afterwards. Let it sink in.  Then DELETE IT!  Forget about it.

Why? Because your organization will probably never get a gift as large as any of these.

So why am I showing it to you?  Two reasons.

1- It’s fun to think about the potential of your planned giving program.

2- It’s important to come back to earth with the realization that most planned gifts come from ordinary people— NOT THE WEALTHY.

So go ahead and dream for a moment.  Then get back to work.  Call, write letters, send emails and meet with regular folks who care about your mission so deeply that they are willing to make your organization a member of their family by including you in their estate plan.

Here’s the list of some very large individual bequests:

Note: These are nominal values and have not been adjusted for inflation.  This entire list was found on Wikipedia.

Trillions and trillions of dollars.

Tuesday, October 30th, 2012

planned giving marketing with smartgiftmakerBetween 2000 and 2050 $12 trillion is expected to go to charity in the form of bequests.

That’s $12 TRILLION!

Or, 12,000 X ONE BILLION.

Imagine a pile of a billion dollars.  Now imagine 12,000.  Hard to do, huh?

Here’s some help thanks to Susan DameGreene’s website.  A six inch pile of $1,000 bills equals $1 million dollars.  Stack those piles as high as the Washington Monument and you get $1 trillion dollars.  So you’d need twelve of those to envision $12 trillion dollars.

Got that?

All that is going to charity.  But how much will go to your charity?  Now— that depends on how much time and effort you spend promoting planned giving.

Trillions of dollars planned giving transfer of wealth

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