5 Steps to Transform Your Direct Marketing Into Major and Planned Gifts
Free:
- Recognize donors at existing events.
- Relate donor stories in newsletters and on your website.
- Reference donors in general program-related and organizational news stories in press releases, articles, on your website, etc.
- Develop donor involvement as program volunteers.
Low-cost:
- Set up estate-planning seminars to find planned-giving prospects.
- Offer dedicated newsletters to donors.
4. Identify major- and planned-gift prospects by engagement first, then wealth
The wealthiest donors don’t necessarily make the best planned- and major-gift prospects — it depends just as much on their engagement with your organization. Some key metrics of engagement include:
- Giving history — years of giving, cumulative annual-giving level, lifetime cumulative giving, etc.
- Mission link/program interest
- Event participation
- Volunteer participation
Other factors that indicate the propensity for planned gifts include children vs. no children, age and gender. Studies show that donors with no children are more likely to provide bequests than those that have children and grandchildren. And the most common age for creating a bequest in a will is 40-50 years old, while 50-60 years old is the next most common. To add to that, studies have shown that a higher percentage of women left bequests for religious, health, human services and environmental organizations while a higher percentage of men left bequests for public-society benefit and education organizations. Art, international affairs and other nonprofits find little disparity between men and women.
5. Set up your relationship development and solicitation function
It’s all about matching dreams with the donor. The shared vision between your mission and donors’ dreams gives you common ground. When your organization uses a donor’s gifts to achieve her dreams, she becomes a prime candidate for major and planned gifts.
- Companies:
- DMA Nonprofit Federation