Increase Your Fundraising with Donor Cultivation Marketing
Marketing in the Nonprofit Sector
Marketing has a ways been a delicate topic in the nonprofit sector compared with the business world. Low staffing, limited budgets, lack of marketing expertise, and concerns about messaging are just a few of the hurdles faced by many traditional nonprofits. At countless colleges, universities and independent schools, marketing was considered a “bad word” for decades because it was believed to convey boasting and self-promotion. However, I have observed these concerns diminishing in education as key services like market research, branding, and social media marketing are hailed as potential cover against the effects of demographic, societal, financial, competitive and global changes.
In nonprofits outside of education, traditional thinking, budgetary limitations and a heavy reliance on inter-personal communications have limited marketing investment. The nonprofit community is wrestling with demographic shifts, changing donor behavior and an explosion in the number of nonprofits with overlapping missions. There is also fierce competition for students in the independent school and higher ed space, and consolidating health systems encroaching on each other
We will examine the types of nonprofit organizations that can benefit from leveraging increasing knowledge of an individual’s interests and preferences toward a strategic marketing program. While these groups of nonprofits share many characteristics, they also have important differences that will affect how quickly and successfully they adopt advanced marketing technology. Along with large, traditional nonprofits like the American Red Cross, United Way, and Salvation Army, there are thousands of small nonprofits such as local house and garden museums, special interest museums, and social welfare organizations as well as hospitals of all sizes, 60% of which are nonprofit,
Major Trends Influencing Nonprofit Fundraising
The upside-down world created by Covid has influenced many factors in nonprofit governance, events, and fundraising. Here are three significant trends that are reshaping the way donors give, their options for donating, and the very definition of your donors:
How Personalization Is Reshaping Marketing
Facebook knows everything about us. Google tracks our interests and movements. Streaming and music platforms understand our entertainment proclivities, while Amazon knows what products we browse and buy. Meanwhile, marketing is steadily growing more personalized, as new technologies, data tracking, and marketing sophistication mushroom.
Database marketers have understood since the 1970s that direct mail pieces with personalized salutations and references to a recent gift or purchase drive higher donations or response. The power of these individualized touches is proven repeatedly as new technologies and social mores have spawned wireless communications, laptops and notebooks, the internet, social media, marketing automation, and smart TVs and home devices.
Businesses first grasped the potential of highly targeted and personal communications, followed by education, nonprofits, hospitals and other groups. Salesforce was a pioneer in what has become a staple of business marketing: combining known demographic data and individual behavior such as website activity and consumer purchases to “nurture” the prospective buyer, sending highly personalized messages that strengthen the relationship between that individual and the company and repeatedly drive incremental sales.
How Can Nonprofits Deepen Personal Connections with Donors?
For over 15 years, businesses have used new information about their prospects and customers to personalize their emails and, increasingly, web presentations. These targeted emails have led to significant increases in sales and engagement. I have personal experience from the early days: in 2010, I co-developed a "lead nurturing" system that integrated Salesforce (Customer Relationship Management) with Silverpop (Marketing Automation) for my wireless communications company. The project was a major success, increasing new business sales by over 25% and vastly improving the efficiency of the sales team. Similar programs started in higher education admissions over a decade ago, and while many institutions have reported significant success, the adoption remains relatively slow. I believe that many nonprofit organizations can use these strategies and technologies to increase giving, especially in their annual funds – while also reducing marketing costs.
Two Methods to Personalize Donor Marketing
1. The first scenario uses known or acquired information on donor giving patterns, demographics and media preferences (primarily email vs. direct mail at this point) to determine how and when to contact donors, with the prospect of saving significantly on reduced mail costs for donors who prefer email and/or always give at a certain time of year. Conversely, nonprofits that had stopped using direct mail for cost reasons may wish to try again with highly targeted campaigns, as it is clear that direct mail is still a major factor in fundraising success.
2. The second scenario is more akin to deploying lead nurturing in sales or admissions: first learn the key areas of interest for your donors and prospects, then send emails based on that data. Why do they donate to you and what causes or projects do they support? This can be gleaned through your conversations, data from rental lists, surveys or by tracking electronic activity, e.g. what links they click in your newsletter. You may learn if they’re passionate about events, speakers, the arts, the environment, social causes etc., or give to donor-advised funds. Once you have created a "profile" (usually called “persona” in the nurturing world) of these individuals, you send four or five highly targeted messages annually to each individual, testing personalized strategies in direct mail, email, text and gradually web content and video (note: these micro-targeted communications are already expanding their scope into Facebook, print, TV and radio ads). You can also send thank you gifts related to each person’s interests. Result: these personalized messages have proven to enhance the relationship between organization and constituent, and I believe would lead to increased commitment and donations for your nonprofit.
How To Create a Personalized Donor Cultivation Programs
Option 1: Using Integrated CRM and Marketing Automation Systems
Marketing and information systems are a good illustration of where larger and smaller nonprofits diverge in their capabilities due to financial and operational disparities. Customer Relationship Management systems like Salesforce allow institutions to efficiently manage all their relationships and interactions with constituents through contact management, sales management and marketing interfaces. When paired with marketing automation platforms like Hubspot, these integrated systems allow an institution to track a wide variety of personal and institutional activities and data and then leverage this information to send highly personalized and targeted messages via emails, texts and eventually more robust media. These periodic, highly personal touches have proven to strengthen the relationships, generate more interactions between the organization and its prospects, and typically create more commitment from those constituents, whether it is buying products, matriculating at a school or college, or, we believe, donating.
Examples of Lead Nurturing in Action:
In lead nurturing, the organization uses select demographic, psychographic, and behavioral information about the customer/client/donor to create “personas” that reflect the core beliefs, goals, attitudes and interests, status, and other shared characteristics of each persona. The organization then personalizes email and text communications to those individuals, creating a closer relationship and leading the person down the sales/admissions/ donor funnel. These interactions e.g. the individual’s email or text opens, click rates, journey through the website, and actions help the organization build a “lead score” that ranks the potential of each individual relative to the organization’s goals. Here are some examples:
How Can Lead Nurturing Work in Fundraising?
Caveats to Adopting an Integrated Lead Nurturing System
Nonprofits who see the potential in personalized communications and lead nurturing must be aware of these pre-requisites for success:
1. The financial capability and/or commitment to investing in marketing technology, initial training, and ongoing support of these relatively complex programs.
2. Marketing resources with the skills to set up a lead nurturing program and develop a compelling “flow” of messages and “next steps” to drive donors and prospects to action based on their interactions with your institution. This most likely means significant trial and error and testing as you define personas, assess clicks and donations and periodically optimize your nurturing program to accelerate activity and gifts.
3. Solid technical understanding of your CRM and marketing automation tools, data structure, and connectivity between the systems. Most nonprofits can accomplish this requirement using a single person who knows the CRM and marketing technology you choose, or could be hired to help you make those decisions. An alternative is to use an outside consultant to get you started, then quickly train a full-time team member to take on those responsibilities when ready.
Many smaller or less-sophisticated nonprofits can surely attest that this level of investment and technology is unproven to achieve a positive return or not currently feasible. For those groups, there is an alternative:
Manual Personalization and Nurturing Options
For smaller nonprofits, those short on cash flow, or lacking in technical resources, there is a crude but workable alternative: recording the donor’s or prospect’s key data in a spreadsheet and creating three or four sets of personalized emails manually. Let’s explore this possibility. I see these duties being handled by an advancement rep who wants to work extra hours, or a moderately-skilled temp; the idea requires some spending but vastly less than an automation platform, and a number I expect would be vastly outweighed by incremental donations.
Executing the “Manual” Approach
The organization continues to retain key data like the donor or prospect’s interests, giving habits such as time of year, and donation medium of choice. Without a CRM that manages this data for systematic reference, the nonprofit can create a basic spreadsheet that contains the key fields to use in targeted personalization: the amount and frequency of gifts as well as timing, what giving medium the person prefers, and what interests, causes, social trends, and the like motivate him or her. Next, the nonprofit’s leader or marketer would need to determine how many market segments and content “streams” to develop (perhaps four or five), how many emails to send (perhaps three to five) and when to send them. This gives the periodic worker(s) a roadmap to create the emails, videos, stories and/or links to key activities. Then the final step is adding the gift data to your spreadsheet and analyzing it periodically to compare the success with previous activity from each of your test donors.
Best Conditions for Donor Cultivation Marketing to Thrive
Takeaways for Your Institution/Organization
· Determine if you are open to reassessing your fundraising strategies and operations in pursuit of increased philanthropic support.
o If yes, analyze your marketing, operational and financial capabilities to decide if you wish to invest in marketing platforms or prefer to test “manual” nurturing programs.
Change in marketing isn’t just coming – it’s here and spreading from tech companies and the business world to colleges and schools, hospitals, and other nonprofits. I hope this article has helped you see how personalizing your fundraising strategy can lead you to significant increases in your donor commitment and giving totals!
Acknowledgements: The author greatly appreciated to valuable insights of Geoff Handy, Jay Angeletti, Kevin Ralph, and Dutch Barhydt in their suggestions for this article.
Digital Transformation Strategist
3yGreat perspective Bully! Millenial and Gen Z are such unique segments compared to the old school approach to fundraising. How many times do you talk about something or even think about it and then see an ad for it on your phone in ecommerce? Is that the path for future and expanded donors??
Head of Mass Market Fundraising, North America, at International Rescue Committee
3yWilliam, you both make a strong case AND give solid guidance on what is needed to embrace that case, for both large and small institutions. The approach you outline puts the donor and their interests at the center of a marketing program, where they belong. I hope this is widely read, and your advice adopted.
President @ Kalix Marketing Group, Independent School/Charter/Public School Education Marketing, Market Research, Branding, Digital Marketing
3yGreat insights as always from William Bullard. Smart advice for those in the advancement world!
Another highly detailed, comprehensive article incorporating multiple marketing principles, strategies and concerns. Well done William.
Video Strategist & Partner | Monzo Media Productions🎬 | I Help Private Schools, Non-profits, and Businesses Grow By Sharing Their Value Through Compelling Videos.
3yStellar!! So many great points made William!