Successful Non-for-Profit Fundraising Letters Share Eight
Qualities
by Alan Sharpe
Published on this site: August 10th, 2005 - See
more articles from this month
You'll be encouraged to know that the art of writing effective
fundraising letters can be learned. I learned it. So can you.
Successful fundraising letters share a number of things in
common. Once you know what these things are, your letter is
already half-way written. Before I share what they are, let
me explain what I mean by a "successful" or "effective"
fundraising letter. I mean a letter that generates a gift,
certainly, but I also mean a letter that builds upon the relationship
you have with your supporters. You can easily craft a guilt-inducing
letter that brings in a donation for now but repels a donor
forever. Successful fundraising letters take the long-term
approach, knowing that donors need to be nurtured and educated
over time.
So here are some things that all successful fundraising letters
have in common. Include as many of them as you can in each
letter you write.
- Is personal
Effective fundraising letters sound as though they are written
by a human being, not an institution. Unlike grant proposals
or special events, they are person-to-person pieces of communication.
With the exception of a phone call, fundraising letters
are the closest thing that you can get to a face-to-face
meeting with a donor.
- Is conversational
Again, unlike grant proposals and charity auctions, effective
fundraising letters read like a conversation (though admittedly
a monologue) between two people. Wouldn't you agree that
good letters involve the reader? Like you, I believe that
effective letters involve the supporter in the message whenever
possible without sounding contrived.
- Is addressed to a person by name
Don't send form letters to make friends. Friends don't mail
form letters. They send personal letters. Letters addressed
to their friends by name. My wife never sends me a letter
that begins, "Dear Friend." Neither do my friends.
I realize that personalization costs more. But personalization
is the right thing to do. And it boost response, which is
a bonus you get for doing the right thing.
- Describes the case for support in human terms
The best fundraising letters translate institutional needs
in terms of people, not programs, remembering that people
give to people to help people. So instead of saying "we
need $10,000 for our general fund," a savvy fundraising
letter says "our soup kitchen aims to help over 100
needy toddlers this Christmas Eve, and your gift today will
make that possible."
- Is donor-centered
The best-received fundraising letters say "you"
more than they say "we." As Jeff Brooks, senior
creative director at the Domain Group, says, "Donors
are interested in you because of what you help them do.
You are their agent in their personal mission to make the
world better. That should be the topic of all your fundraising.
Not the inner workings of the organization. Not the accomplishments
of notable others. Not the need for raised consciousness
or philosophical buy-in."
- Asks for the gift
I've read letters that were so high-pressure that I kept
my donation in my pocket. And I've read others that were
so vague that I wasn't sure if the sender wanted my gift--or
expected it. In the fundraising profession, we say that
if you don't ask, you won't receive. Which is a true statement
most of the time, because sometimes you'll receive gifts
unsolicited. But with a fundraising letter, you need to
ask for a donation, and more than once in the letter, if
you expect to cover your costs.
- Educates donors
The best fundraising letters leave donors better-informed
than they were before they opened the envelope. They give
donors more reasons to support your cause by describing
how your organization helps its constituents, how a donor's
past gifts are changing lives, or in other ways reinforcing
your case for support.
- Appeals to the heart
Donors give to causes that win their hearts and their minds,
usually in that order. Good appeal letters stir feelings
of compassion, mercy, empathy, altruism and more so that
the donor identifies with your cause on more than a cerebral
level.

Alan Sharpe is a professional fundraising letter writer.
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