Nothing fancy about last week’s Agitator survey. We asked one question: “What percentage of your nonprofit’s 1st time donors make a second gift?” [Folks at agencies and consultants were asked to indicate an average over the clients they've typically served.]

Here are the results …

31% — Less than 30%

31% — 30% to 39%

24% — 40% to 49%

15% — 50% or more

So 62% — almost two-thirds — of groups represented by our responders don’t manage to excite a second gift out of even four-in-ten new donors.

I don’t know about you, but I find that pretty disappointing. To me, a reasonable goal might be 40% … what do you think?

Kudos to the 15% securing a second gift from half or more of their first-time donors.

A number of these respondents provided comments on how they approached their new donors. The most robust of these comments — from Stephen Best at Animal Alliance Environment Voters — The Agitator published last week. His organization is seriously into relationship-building, but it also has a somewhat unique approach to donor acquisition. I’ll come back to the donor acquisition side of the equation later this week.

As for new donor cultivation, none of the best — the 50% or more class — had any particular ‘silver bullet’ to which they attributed success. Instead, I heard three very basic ingredients in their survey comments …

1. Huge stress on a quality acknowledgment/Thank You program — fast, personal, authentic, relevant. In small, local organizations, this reaches right up to face-to-face contact. But the key is ‘not canned’. Many respond with handwritten notes and phone calls.

2. Willingness to invest in some non-fundraising communication with the donor (which means going beyond the mandatory one-size-fits-all organizational newsletter) specifically aimed at engaging the donor (e.g., a survey on priorities, a brief report on whatever specific project/program brought that donor in and how their gift made a difference).

3. And a corollary to #2. Targeting the second ‘ask’ with reference to the initial gift’s focus … that is, if possible, avoid sweeping the new donor into some broad appeal in which they might not have any particular interest. Get the second gift for the same purpose as the first one.

Hopefully, if your organization embraces these three practices, you can move your second-gift needle into the 40%+ zone.

Bottomline … if you want a second gift, show the donor you know him or her.

Tom

This article was posted in: charities, communications, direct marketing, Don't Miss these Posts, donor retention, fundraising, loyalty, nonprofit management, nonprofits.
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