Articles with Tag ‘funding’

How To Fundraise On The Internet

Monday, July 18th, 2011

Many organizations have the misguided notion that if they just make that “donate now!” button bigger, or if they just hit on the secret formula that no one will tell them, they can raise millions of dollars on the Internet and stop worrying about grants, events, and other traditional fundraising methods.  Bzzzzt!  Wrong answer… Fundraising on the Internet should be a part of your fundraising mix, but for most non-profits, the web will never become your dominant form of fundraising.  So… what are the best ways to use the Internet in your development efforts?

Complimenting Your Activities

For most organizations, the primary development function of your website will be compliment your other fundraising activities.  Your website provides a great opportunity to offer lots of information to your donors, including reports, white papers, stats, and news.  Likewise, every school, church, and charity should be using e-mail newsletters and blasts to keep their donors in the loop.

Your website also provides a landing pad where you can send people to make donations when they can’t make donations on the spot.  For example, when you are giving a speech or working the room at a Chamber of Commerce mixer, and someone says they want to help or make a donation, pull out your card and tell them they can go to your website to donate.  Announce your web address from the podium during seminars, and invite people to go there to learn more or to donate.

The web can also compliment your non-Internet fundraising activities in more direct ways.  For example, if you are holding an  event, you can set up an event page to give information about the event, invite people to buy tickets online, do an early preview for your silent auction, and more.  Many groups that hold walk-a-thons and other participatory fundraising events have had great success with setting up a separate page for each person who is raising money as part of the event that shows progress, with a special message from the participant, and which the participant can e-mail out to their friends as part of their fundraising pitch.

Building a List

One of the best ways to use the Internet to build your fundraising base and compliment your development efforts is by building an e-mail update list.  Successful online businesses have been doing this for a long time, but most non-profits have not latched on to this great strategy.

The basic concept is to set up a sign-up form on your website for your e-mail newsletter (much like the sign-up boxes you see here on The Fundraising Authority).  Encourage people who come to your website to sign up for your newsletter to stay in the loop.  Then, stay in touch with these folks by providing relevant and interesting news and tidbits on your work, mission, and vision.

As you build your e-mail list of supporters, you will be able to incorporate fundraising into your e-mail blasts.  You can invite people to events and sell tickets, ask for donations, find event sponsors, and more.

Raising Money Directly Over the Internet

Of course, while you are likely to find that the best uses of the Internet in your fundraising operation are for complimenting your other activities and building a list, you don’t want to neglect direct fundraising through your website.  Every school, church, and charity should have a “Donate Now!’ button on their website, and be set up to accept one-time and recurring donations over the web.

Many non-profits have also found great success in running web-only campaigns, once their websites started to reach a significant number of visitors per day.  Often, the best type of campaign to run via the Internet is one that asks for relatively small donations ($10-$100) and is for a specific purpose, like asking visitors to contribute $10 to buy meals for a family for one day, or $25 to send a child to school for a week, etc.

Market Your Site

Once you’ve set up your organization’s website, don’t forget to market it aggressively.  Include your web address (URL) on all of your marketing materials, submit your site to the main search engines, optimize your site to be found by the search engines, and ask for links from complimentary sites.

Internet Fundraising Best Practices

  1. Build Your List – have sign-up forms on your website and encourage your visitors to sign up for your newsletter.
  2. Use the Web as a Compliment to Your Other Activities – Try to include your website as a complimentary tactic for your other fundraising activities.
  3. Have a “Donate Now!” Button – Accept credit card donations directly from your website.
  4. Market Your Website – Spread the word.  Without visitors to your site, you won’t receive any donations through the web.

Unique Fundraising Ideas

Monday, July 11th, 2011

Sometimes, fundraising is boring.  Monotonous.  A drudgery.  That’s bad for professional fundraisers (who wants to be bored at work?), it’s bad for volunteers (they’ll move on to another, more exciting challenge), and worst of all, it’s bad for donors.  And that’s why coming up with unique fundraising ideas matters.

Donors get tired of the same old fundraising ideas.  Annual appeal letters… big fundraising events… breakfast networking events… after a few years with an organization, donors get bored, and they move on.  Don’t let that happen to your school, church, or charity.  It’s far easier to keep a current donor than to find a new donor to replace one that moves on.  Use these 5 unique fundraising ideas to spice up your non-profit’s development efforts:

1.   The Low-End Event

This is a unique fundraising idea that turns the usual fancy-schmacy fundraising event  on its head.  Instead of holding a fashionable cocktail party at a high end hotel, hold a hot-dogs and beer event at the Holiday Inn.  Tell your donors that this year is such an important year for your organization, you want to spend most of the money you are raising on your program or mission, instead of the event.  This only works if you still charge the full amount (whatever you used to charge for the fancy event) and are willing to get a little campy with the theme.

2.   The Reverse Raffle

Are you planning to hold a raffle at your next fundraising event?  You may want to try the reverse raffle instead.  With this raffle, instead of buying tickets, every attendee gets one free raffle ticket when they come in the door.  Only instead of winning a prize, the person whose ticket is drawn will win a “gag” prize with some level of light embarrassment, like having to dance with a group of clowns, having to kiss the club’s four-legged mascot, or having to wear a funny wig and march with the band.

People can then “sell” their ticket back to the organization in return for a donation (so they won’t have to be part of the drawing).  For an even more creative raffle, you can set it up so that people can sell their tickets back on a sliding scale… the first 10 will be taken back for a $1 donation, the next 10 for $2, the next 10 for $4 and so on.

3.   Direct Action Fundraising

Unique fundraising ideas work best when they are directly tied to the mission of your organization.  That’s the idea behind direct action fundraising.  Rather than ask people to simply make a donation to your group, tie your request to a specific direct action your organization will be taking as part of its work.  For example, ask people to donate $25 each to buy school supplies for needy children, or $50 to pay for 25 bricks in the new shelter you are building.

4.   Pay to Work

Many people like to roll up their sleeves and get to work – they like to feel more involved in your non-profit than simply writing a check.  If it makes sense for your organization, hold a “pay to work” event that combines fundraising and volunteerism into one great opportunity.

With this idea, you ask people to make a donation in return for a position as part of your volunteer day.  For example, let’s say you are painting a school.  You could find 30 volunteers who are willing to pay a “reverse salary” of $50 each in order to be on the paint team.  You might even be able to find someone to donate $500 to be the “foreman for a day.”  Be creative.

5.   The Certified Mailing

If you’ve got some really big news to share and want to break through the clutter and reach your biggest donors, think about doing a certified mailing campaign.  This is one of my all time favorite unique fundraising ideas, but it needs careful planning and the right list, as your mailing will only be done to big-time donors who already support your organization.

Send out an e-mail to your top donors letting them know that you’ve got big… huge… monumental news (this assumes that you have such news, like “We’re moving” or “We’re raising money to start a new program” etc.)  Tell them to watch their mailboxes.

Then, a day or two after the e-mail, send your top donors a letter by certified mail that tells them the news, and why it is so important.  Tell them why you need money, right now, in relation to that good news, and include a return envelope.

People almost always open certified mail and read it carefully.  If you’ve got a good list, great news, and a good reason why you need the money, this might just be a great way to raise money for your non-profit.