According to the most recent statistics, your organization could be raising over half of your donations during the last six weeks of the year. And a full third (33%) of the donations made in December occur on the 31st of the month!
In working with dozens of nonprofit organizations on year-end giving programs, I have found that there are five basic rules that must guide your strategy if you want to steadily increase year-end fundraising each and every year:
Rule #1: Make Sure Your Message is Consistent
The first rule for strong year-end fundraising is that the message of your year-end campaign needs to be consistent with your message throughout the year.
If you’re a homeless shelter and have spent all year talking to donors about how you want to serve more homeless and thus need more money to add beds to your facility, talk about that at the year-end as well. Don’t use the year-end giving season to talk about hiring new staff, adding a new heating unit, or holding a conference on homelessness. Stick with adding beds.
The final 4-6 six weeks of the year is a great time for all of the seeds you have planted during the year to bloom with year-end gifts. The only way to achieve that end is to stay on message… the message you have been communicating all year.
Rule #2: Be Mission-Focused, Not Gimmicky
Many non-profits make the mistake of trying to use gimmicks during year-end fundraising. This applies to things like #GivingTuesday, of course, but also to the pleas that so many organizations make for “30 gifts – just 30 gifts! – by the end of the year!” or to emergency year-end campaigns that tell donors you need to raise X number of dollars just to keep the doors open next year.
Avoid the gimmicks and the hype. Instead, see year-end fundraising as a natural part of the lifelong relationship you are building with your donors. Keep your year-end asks mission-focused.
Rule #3: Make Multichannel Asks
The year-end giving season is a great time to hit all of your fundraising bases. That means you should never limit yourself to just one fundraising solicitation method during your year-end campaign. Send out letters, send out e-mails, make calls, write posts on your website, hold small group meetings…
The best year-end fundraising campaigns are multichannel affairs.
Rule #4: Cultivate Year Round in Each of those Channels
It is important to make multichannel asks during the year-end, but you want to make sure that you cultivated your donors through those channels during the earlier part of the year as well.
If you’re going to solicit through e-mail, you’ve got to cultivate through e-mail. If you’re going to make asks through direct mail, you have to cultivate (i.e. communicate) through direct mail. Don’t make the year-end the only time your donors hear from you through certain mediums.
Rule #5: Run Year-End Giving Like a Campaign
This is extremely important… your non-profit needs to treat the year-end giving season like a fundraising campaign, instead of one ask. This means you need a plan, a message, and a multi-channel asking strategy.
For your larger donors, pick up the phone and make some calls, instead of just relying on the mail. Consider holding small-group meetings, which can work very well for year-end solicitations. Send out letters, follow up with e-mail, be active on social media. Develop a message and a goal, and then get your team out there to implement your campaign plan.
Want to learn more?
Join me for one of my upcoming webinars to hear how you can amplify your year-end success!
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