7 Characteristics of an Effective Thank You Letter

Full Platform Overview Chat With Us
Full Platform Overview Chat With Us
For the first time in years nonprofits are enjoying gains in giving…but continuing to lose donors faster than the speed of light. According to the annual Fundraising Effectiveness Project survey, for the first time in five years nonprofit respondents saw positive gains, amounting to $769 million in gifts.
But those gains were offset by losses of $735 million through reduced gifts and lapsed donors. The upshot? “Every 100 donors gained in 2012 was offset by 105 donors lost through attrition.”
While you certainly don’t want to ignore new donor acquisition at the expense of retention, you’d be daft if you didn’t create a plan, one that focuses on solid customer service and making them feel like the hero that they are. AND, while redoing your thank you letters isn’t the be-all end all solution to the donor retention problem, having a great thank you letter is a start.
When so many nonprofit letters read like a deadly tax receipt, why would you miss the opportunity to lift your donor’s heart?
Redoing your thank you letter isn’t rocket science. It merely requires factoring in a few key factors, including:
Once you begin the process of rewriting your thank you letters, how often should you be updating them? In her Simple Development Systems call a few years ago, Lisa Sargent noted that she has updated thank you’s as often as quarterly for one of her national nonprofit clients:
“But I would say the minimum to revisit them in their entirety at least a couple of times a year and it doesn’t mean that you may do a complete overhaul of your letter you just look at them to see if anything is stale. Do any of the numbers that you have in there they need to be updated?”
One way to do a quick refresh if your letters can stand the test of time is to use your PS to freshen up the content.
Resources:
Comments
Our Top 10 Posts of 2013
Steve Rudick
Claire Axelrad
Elaine Fogel
Monday Morning Miscellany & Muffins | colludo
Pamela Grow
Gayle Gifford