It was 1966. I had just passed my test from the Federal Communications Commission, which allowed me to operate the equipment and be a full-fledged announcer at a local radio station. I had been hired to be an on-air personality. Back then, at least in smaller stations, you ran everything — the turntables where you played music, the cartridge machine for commercials and all the switches and knobs controlling the microphones and other equipment.
I will never forget my first encounter with all of the equipment in that elaborate studio. It was intimidating. The station engineer had been tasked with teaching me how it all worked. And once I got the basics, he turned me over to the program director.
I will never forget his first words.
He walked in the door and said: “Richard, before we get into all the details or good programming, I want to point out one very important thing you must never forget.” He reached out and touched the microphone and continued. “This mike right here is not a mike. It is one person. Not many people. Just one. You are talking to one person. I know you will have it in your head that when you open this mike and speak that there are thousands of people listening. That may be true. But you are only talking to one person. So, it would not be appropriate to use language like ‘many of you out there’ or ‘you all might think’ or ‘some of you.’ No. It is just you and one person. Do not forget this.”
It was one of the most important and valuable nuggets of communication wisdom I have ever learned. And so, from then on, I applied this truth to all of my communication.
- I would write direct mail copy to just one person.
- I would create a PowerPoint or video for just one person.
- When I would speak publicly, I would address one person.
- When I produced copy — whether it be for online, a book, a brochure, radio and TV ad, or documentary — it would be directed to one person.
I was in a meeting recently where we were talking about donor offers, and I was making the point that an effective donor offer is one that is personalized to the donor. It is not a one-size-fits-all thing. It is tailor made to the passions and interests of one donor.
To some of the people in the meeting, this was a new idea because “don’t we create general offers that we then take out and give donors to support them?” Half right.
We do create general donor offers, but when it comes down to presenting them to donors, it is important that you adapt them to the donor and their interests and passions.
Remember, everything you do in major gifts — everything — is just one donor at a time. One. Not many. You are talking to one, not two or more. Just one.
And everything you say to that donor must fit them like a glove and fill their hearts, minds and spirits up with content that is uniquely theirs. That is honoring. And that is effective.
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If you’re hanging with Richard it won’t be long before you’ll be laughing.
He always finds something funny in everything. But when the conversation is about people, their money and giving, you’ll find a deeply caring counselor who helps donors fulfill their passions and interests. Richard believes that successful major-gift fundraising is not fundamentally about securing revenue for good causes. Instead it is about helping donors express who they are through their giving. The Connections blog will provide practical information on how to do this successfully. Richard has more than 30 years of nonprofit leadership and fundraising experience, and is founding partner of the Veritus Group.