Drawing by Amanda Swadlo, Senior Designer atTrueSense Marketing. All rights reserved.
In fundraising, the unicorn goes by another name: growth planning.
Even seasoned fundraising professionals have all but given up on planning for growth in any meaningful way. Much of development is about “hoping for last year’s numbers, plus a few percent more.” Sound familiar?
True fundraising pros have discovered that, though the unicorn is a myth, growth planning is real. Growth can be planned and — in generally every case — achieved.
Knowing where you’ve been is essential to visualizing where you want to go. Here are essential questions you need to ask (and the reasons why):
Once you have a sense of your organization’s unique donor movement, you can begin to see the path more clearly. There is a natural order to the acquisition, investigation, commitment, and eventual disappearance of donors. It is, in most times and in most climates, very predictable. The more mature and trusted the brand, the more you can count on this predictability.
There is an expression in marketing that goes: If you want your customer base (donors, in the case of nonprofits) to stick around and even grow, feed them what they eat.
This means finding fresh ways to serve what they like, because they love what you’re making. Too often, fundraisers want to deviate from the basic tenets of their stated existence because of some imagined idea of cause-fatigue.
There are a lot of organizations worthy of support, but you happen to have one that your donors love. Why? Because you’ve told them over the years about the work you do — the real, life-changing, daily work in the lives of people THEY want to reach — not because of anything else. Keep telling that story, because it’s real.
NOTE: Donors never grow tired of hearing how their gifts made an impact. Keep serving them stories that prove their generosity is making a difference.
Because the veteran donors — those who have supported you for three or more years — have TWICE the value of rookie donors, you need to wait until your rookies become veterans, and that takes investment and patience. Is it worth it? Of course it is!
But guard against complacency. Many organizations have been losing their best donors for years without much worry. Perhaps they were confident in a few angels coming to the rescue with large gifts … or that those donors who left would miraculously return … or (the worst possible alternative) they cut their programs, thereby inhibiting the very reason their organization exists: to serve others.
The answer? Make a plan, and stick to it!
Here are the three truths to growth planning:
These plans are proven. It’s why some organizations have grown and others have not.
Growth planning is all about understanding the numbers, and applying both the logic and the fortitude to see it succeed. It’s a tricky and delicate business — one that entails science (data-driven analytics, high-level planning) and art (innovative offers, resonating stories, warm affirmation). It requires a balance between a confident patience and the agility to mid-course correct when needed.
Like the unpredictable but magical unicorn, growth planning is hard to capture. But once tamed, its value is priceless.