As marketers and fundraisers, sometimes our tendency to put donors in a box can work against us. We define donor profiles (one box), we invest in specific fundraising channels (another box), and we often give attribution to the last-touch channel that acquired the gift (yet another box). We put donors in boxes because it helps to corral planning and donor communication. It helps us go deeper in relationships with donors by channel. And it helps us report “what’s working” in fundraising to our boards and stakeholders.
The truth is that donors do not live in a box. They are like you and me. People, not donors. They are human beings who are influenced to give by many factors and don’t care about the box you put them in. They aren’t looking at your organization saying, “I’m a direct-mail donor” or “I’m a digital-only donor.” Donors just want to make a difference. They will send in a check, donate online, and give via SMS. They do this because your organization has a marketing presence in these channels and because they care about your cause.
I’m always cautioned when an organization wants to cut investment in digital, direct mail, or telephone fundraising because their approach then becomes hyper-focused on a specific channel. The fallacy is to look at ROI by channel without looking at ROI with all channels combined. What we’ve often seen at TrueSense is that investment in digital increases direct mail revenue and vice versa. If ROI is higher in digital, it doesn’t necessarily mean you should invest more in digital and decrease investment in direct-mail fundraising. Surprisingly, many “digital donors” also make gifts in direct mail.
In addition, we’ve seen cases where Facebook ads appear to have a negative ROI, but digital revenue has increased significantly. This is because Facebook ads and other forms of online media influence giving in digital overall, but may not have a high direct-response rate. When we’ve cut Facebook ad budgets for clients, we’ve also seen a decrease in overall digital revenue. Interestingly enough, when organizations have cut digital fundraising investment, we’ve observed a decrease in direct-mail revenue as well. Why does this happen?
Here are three reasons why this occurs:
Our Senior VP at TrueSense, Shawn Reed, often tells our clients that “a rising tide lifts all ships.” This is true. The tide is the combination of all fundraising channels working together. The lifting of all ships is the increase of impact your organization makes when fundraising is working at its best. When examining the tide, it gets the credit for its impact as a whole, and can be measured against the size of the previous tide. It is the result of many rivers (fundraising channels) coming together. By measuring the performance of each river, it’s easy to overlook the size of the tide that all rivers have created together. All rivers are important and play a role, but the ROI of your fundraising is best measured by the tide, not the rivers.
Donors jump between channels, so it’s important to have a continued presence and awareness in multichannel fundraising strategies that cater to their preferences, conveniences, and level of comfort of giving to your organization.