It’s that time of year again! The time when seasonally driven donors often return to their preferred organizations to give their annual gift.
This year is unique. We not only await the habitual return of the quintessential holiday donor, but we also have COVID-acquired holiday donors to consider in our plans and analysis. Last year’s influx of one-time COVID-inspired giving might be akin to emergency giving and complicate the analysis of traditional holiday giving habits. The reality is that we aren’t sure yet if these folks will return to give and if the holidays will be enough to motivate them.
As you prepare to review results from your holiday and year-end campaigns, consider taking a tip from your International Relief friends. They are very familiar with the influx and attrition of disaster donor one-time gift giving. Even if COVID-acquired holiday donors don’t behave like a disaster/emergency donor, if you follow some of these tips, you’ll be that much further ahead of the game and ready to pivot on a moment’s notice.
As you prepare your year-end analysis, we recommend the following:
Once year-end data has been gathered and reviewed, think about the following factors:
Follow the performance of this audience closely for the next year. If retention rates wane for this group of donors, consider cutting them out of your plans earlier than other donors. Although acquiring a new donor is roughly 5X greater than the cost to keep an existing donor, we know that true emergency donors have a shelf life until the next emergency and often come back only for emergencies. Utilize giving history to date of these donors to project long-term value. Does the projected LTV justify additional investment in the retention of these donors?
You might find that these donors are no different from any others you’ve acquired. If that’s the case, you’re a penny richer and that much wiser. If, however, your analysis proves they are different, you’ll be prepared and ready to integrate different strategies and benchmarks to maximize return on investment.