Maybe you’ve heard of the “Sandwich Man” in Minnesota, who hands out sandwiches to the homeless each night. That amounts to an incredible 700,000 sandwiches per year! Suffice it to say, this guy’s driven.
Seventeen freezers in his apartment help him store supplies. He doesn’t sleep more than two hours most nights because there are too many people to help.
The Sandwich Man’s motivation is as direct and pure as charitable giving can be. What keeps him engaged? Simple. He sees the faces of his hungry neighbors in the community — and he sees the difference he is making.
That should be our goal in direct marketing. Your prospects and donors may not see hungry faces in person, and they’re not packing sandwich bags themselves. But the closer we can come to them feeling that they are, the more fulfillment they'll get — and the better support you'll receive.
If you're fundraising for a food bank, and you could get every donor to the school where you operate a Kids Café, garnering donations would be a piece of cake. You would probably fully engage — and most certainly motivate — your donors after they see the tired, worried faces of the little ones who didn’t eat much over the weekend — and hear their “thank yous” for a simple sandwich and banana after school.
You may already be doing this for your major donors. You prepare a proposal designed precisely to pull at their heartstrings and propel them to give more. You carefully time your request for a meeting (at a program site, if possible), and you share an especially touching story about a problem that needs solved and how much it will cost to solve it. Once they give, you offer special recognition and stay in touch, updating them — with more stories — of the people they helped feed. They feel something like the Sandwich Man.
Now, let’s do the equivalent for $25 donors.
Don’t let fear of time and cost stop you. This CAN be done in direct marketing channels — at no more cost than you’re already spending!
Strategies should all be designed to shorten the space between donor and recipient. The best way to have donors who are as loyal and passionate as the Sandwich Man himself — is to remove what is sandwiched between them and those who they bless!
The Sandwich Man is named Allan Law, and you can read about him here.