Four Goals of Every Renewal Fundraising Letter
by Alan Sharpe
Published on this site: August 16th, 2005 - See
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In the fundraising profession, appeal letters that you mail
to existing donors are called renewal letters. They are designed
to solicit a gift, but, more important than that, they aim
to persuade your current donors to renew their support of
your organization. Donors renew their support with their cash,
of course, but they also renew it with their commitment-with
their hearts and minds. And that's why renewal letters are
so vital. They help you maintain your broad base of support
year after year, cost-effectively.
Renewal letters are part of a year-long program that is usually
called the Annual Giving Program. "Annual" does
not mean that you mail just one letter a year (you shouldn't).
It simply means that you look at your fundraising efforts
as a year-by-year activity, one where you must persuade your
active donors to renew their commitment each year.
- Renew donor commitment
The primary goal of your annual appeal letters, then, is
donor renewal. Some donors give only once a year. Others
give regularly. And others send a few gifts during the year,
but sporadically. You cannot expect that any of these donors
will stay with your organization until death, theirs or
yours. "Donor renewal is not automatic," says
James Greenfield, in his book, Fund Raising: Evaluating
and Managing the Fund Development Process.
This means that each letter you mail should aim to re-motivate,
re-invigorate and rejuvenate your donors, encouraging them,
explicitly or implicitly, to renew their commitment to your
organization, or, more accurately, to the people that your
organization serves. This is often done with the first appeal
letter of the year, but donor renewal is really a year-long
activity that takes place with every contact you have with
each donor, whether it's a phone call, a personal visit
or their presence at a banquet or other event.
- Renewed gift
Naturally, your goal with every renewal fundraising letter
is also to raise funds. So you must ask for a gift in each
renewal letter you mail. Wherever possible, make a mention
of the last gift that your donor sent, and thank them again
for their support. And remember, the most effective renewal
letters are those that ask for funds for a specific need,
usually a project.
- Upgraded gift
This goal is optional. In some of your letters during the
year (usually at year-end), you have the option of asking
your donors to renew their support at a higher level. This
usually means asking donors to increase the size of each
gift. For example, as Christmas approaches, you can mail
your donors a letter that says, "I am inviting you
to renew your commitment by 10 percent this year, to help
us keep pace with inflation, and to meet our ambitious goals
for the coming 12 months."
- Conversion to monthly giving
Does your non-profit organization have a monthly giving
program? If you do, then you know how gratifying it is to
have donors who send you a gift each month automatically
from their bank account or credit card. Annual renewal letters
are a perfect way for you to convert your annual givers
to monthly givers. There are a few ways to do this:
- Send a letter whose primary goal is to persuade annual
givers to join your monthly giving program. Spell out
the benefits that the donor and your organization enjoy
from monthly giving.
- Use your postscript (your PS at the bottom of each
letter) to invite annual givers to join your monthly
giving program.
- Include a buckslip or liftnote in your letters, describing
your monthly giving program and inviting donors to sign
up.
Asking recent donors to send you another gift is a lot easier
and less expensive than acquiring a new donor. That's why
renewal letters play such a vital role in helping your non-profit
raise funds affordably. Most donors who respond by mail do
not send with their first gift enough money to recover your
costs of acquisition. That's why their second gift and subsequent
gifts are so crucial. My hope is that your fundraising letters
will persuade your donors to stay with you for a long, long
time.

Alan Sharpe is a professional fundraising letter writer.
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