6 Parts of an Effective Fundraising Offer
In his video from 2015, Jeff Brooks from TrueSense Marketing explores the 40/40/20 rule of direct marketing and its role in fundraising. The 40/40/20 rule suggests that 40% of the success of a direct marketing campaign comes from the quality of your list, 40% from your request, and 20% from the creative. The video touches on all of these aspects, but focuses on the middle 40%, the offer or request. According to Brooks, there are 6 parts of an effective fundraising offer:
- Specificity. People want to know exactly what you need and where the money will be going. Don’t beat around the bush here. Ask for a specific amount of money or give a clear way to help.
- Simplicity. A strong offer omits details. Keep it simple and to the point.
- Emotional Content. People give when their heart is touched. This step is usually best done with photographs.
- What’s in it for me? Most people want to help out a fundraising campaign because it makes them feel good.
- Leverage. The audience wants to know that what they are giving is a good value or that there is a matching grant to make what they are giving worth more. For example, many food bank campaigns use leverage when they let you know that your gift will provide a certain amount of food to hungry people in need.
- Deadline. Create a deadline for your campaign. A hard deadline ensures that people have a desire to give, because they know there is a need and a time frame in which that need is going to be met.
CDS has been a leader in nonprofit fundraising for the past three decades. Contact us for more intensive help with your major gift fundraising, strategic planning, or in preparing for a capital campaign.