You know that when a donor gives a gift, your first job is to say thank you, as quickly as possible. Amazingly, colleagues in our industry (including Richard and myself) have written, conferenced, and webinared this subject to death. And it still hasn’t sunk in.
But today, just for kicks, let’s say we’ve all got this down. A donor gives and we’re all over the thank you thing. Good, you’ve got it.
Now, written about almost as much as “thanking the donor” is reporting back and telling the donors how their gift made a difference. I know for a fact that our industry has been talking about this for over 15 years. Just Google it. You’ll have enough content to never stop reading for a month.
Often, when I’m presenting this, I see a couple of folks across the table look at each other in that knowing way, indicating, “See? I’ve been saying this forever and no one is listening.”
The bottom line is that whenever Richard and I talk about it, everyone agrees how important it is. But it is rarely ever done right. Why? I think a few forces are at play:
We’re a people that, once we get the “sell” or the “win” (i.e. the gift), we tend to think about getting the next one from someone else. We like the new stuff.
Reporting back to donors takes a lot of work, money and time from multiple staff. So, because most non-profits don’t have a culture of philanthropy, they don’t “spend” enough on the resources needed to adequately report back and tell donors how they helped change the world.
If you read any surveys on why donors stop giving, the top reason is always related to the organization’s failure to tell the donor how his or her gift made a difference. I don’t know how else to get this point implanted in your brain and make this an absolute priority.
Richard and I have story after story of how donors stop giving to an organization because they never heard back from them after they were thanked. It was crickets. Nothing. Nada. All after giving some very large gifts.
When Richard and I delve into a prospective client’s major gift data, we continually see value attrition rates in the 40-60% rate. Often millions of dollars are lost from donors who, at one time in their relationship with your organization, were telling you they loved you so much they were willing to part with thousands of dollars. But then something DIDN’T happen. And they left.
What didn’t happen? Well, what’s #1 in those surveys I was talking about?
So here are some ideas on how you can effectively report back to donors about how they’re making a difference:
I’m not going to lie. It’s not easy.
You have to put in a lot of thought, time, and resources and get your staff on board to be really effective at this. But in my mind, you have no choice – not if you want to grow, and not if you want to make your donors happy.
This is important stuff. You can do it.
Jeff
This post originally appeared on the Passionate Giving Blog on December 23, 2020.