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Channel: Marc A. Pitman, Author at FundraisingCoach.com
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The 2 things to avoid in year end fundraising

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With 4 weeks left in the calendar year, staying focused is more important than ever.

Rather than feeling like you're living out a well planned fundraising year, these last four weeks can often feel like you're missing out on everything. That you're falling short everywhere.

The 2 Things To Avoid In Year End Fundraising

It would seem that the last four weeks of the year provide a clarity for fundraising. Instead, many nonprofits err on one of two extremes: trying to do all the things or giving up and waiting until the new year.

  1. Getting distracted by all the things

    In these last few weeks of the year, it's easy to get distracted by all the things happening around you. There's Giving Tuesday. There are holiday parties. And there are executive directors, staff, and even board members who have never been aware of fundraising but are now thinking they're the experts. At this time of they year, it's common to hear them clamoring for gimmicky online fundraising pushes and email only solicitation drives and t-shirt sales and showey billboards.

  2. Waiting until next year

    The other extreme is to get distracted by the thoughts in your head. Thoughts like "donors are too busy this time of the year" or "it's not a good time to ask right now" or the killer "we should just wait until next year." It's enough for you to throw your hands up and stop all asking, isn't it?

Stay Focused

It would be hard to not get distracted. But it's vital. Your mission needs funding. Your staff deserves to get paid. And your donors are giving to nonprofits right now.

But they won't give to yours if they're not asked.

For the financial health of your nonprofit, this is the time your expertise as a fundraiser needs to shine. This is where you show your discipline. These last few weeks are where:

  • You make sure to do one more well written fundraising letter. Yes a printed letter in an envelope sent through the mail.
  • You look at your major donor solicitation plans and make sure you're up to date and following through on each of them.
  • And you study your lists of people who gave last December but not yet this year, and last year but not yet this year, and two years ago but not yet this year. And you reach out to those who haven't given.

Go ahead and do #GIvingTuesday if you want, but if your nonprofit doesn't have a history of #GivingTuesday being a big fundraising day, don't bet your entire fundraising goal on that day. Make sure to have the fundamentals in place first: direct mail, specific asks, clear, compelling, equitable solicitation language.

A Word to Nonprofit Leaders Who Don't Study Fundraising

Nonprofit leaders, unless you regularly study the field of fundraising and fundraising systems that work for your nonprofit, this is your time to trust the expertise of your fundraisers. Selling t-shirts and doing gimmicky fundraising shticks are less likely to benefit you then investing in one more well-written direct mail letter and in you personally making lots of major gift asks.

You may be more focused on fundraising now because it's in the air. But as a leader, you should've been asking about year end fundraising plans in July or August. (Put that on your calendar for next year.)

If you're not sure that your fundraising team is doing their study, then make plans to fix that.

If your organization is dependent on fundraising for some portion of its budget, it's crucial that you get to know as much about that as you know about your other revenue streams. It's important that you know as much about solid fundraising strategy as you know about the programs your nonprofit offers. You may not like fundraising, but by choosing a leadership position, you chose to do things you don't always enjoy. So learn fundraising.

A Word to Fundraising Professionals

If you're not studying on how to be a better fundraiser, this time of the year will be particularly stressful. You accepted a position that is responsible, at least in part, for whether the rest of the team gets paid and whether your nonprofit has the funds to continue doing its good work.

So just like any professional needs continuing education, you do to. Commit to it. And try to get it from a variety of sources so you can figure out the good from the bad, the what works for you and your nonprofit's values from what is out of sync with them. Groups to look at are many: AADO, AFP, NPSC, CCF, BA, ISP, VGT, CCT, RC, and our own NPA. (How is that for acronym soup?)

And commit to continuing education so you can have confidence in push back against enthusiastically delivered bad advice. And commit to continuing education so you have a network of people you trust to go to with questions. You may be the only fundraising person on your staff, but you don't have to be alone.

But in these last few weeks of the year, focus on the fundamentals. If you're not clear on what your fundamentals are, try: direct mail and major gift solicitations.

People are incredibly generous. And people are thinking about giving right now in ways that they aren't at other times of the year. So focus.

The post The 2 things to avoid in year end fundraising appeared first on FundraisingCoach.com.


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