eNewsletters
and the Path to Donor Happiness
October 25, 2012




www.luttrellcommunications.com
Presenter

            Karen Luttrell has been leading digital marketing
              initiatives for 13 years. She has launched and
              managed email newsletters for local, national and
              international charities and not-for-profits. Karen is a
              member of AFP and IABC and she volunteers as VP
              Communications for the Professional Writers
              Association of Canada Toronto Chapter. You can tweet
              to her at @karenluttrell or visit her at
              www.luttrellcomunications.com.
Urgent Problem: Donor Retention

Only 1/3 of charities surveyed inspired a
 second gift from at least 4 out of 10 new
 donors.
   The Agitator Donor Retention Survey Results (2011)
   http://www.theagitator.net/communications/donor-
    retention-survey-results/
eNews & Donor Retention
Relationship building is the key to retaining
  donors. An effective eNewsletter can be an
  important part of your donor retention plan.
        immediate
        frequent (and affordable)
        personalized
        easily integrated with other channels and rich media
         (audio, video)
4 Steps to Take with Your eNews

1   Get opened
2   Get read
3   Build relationships
4   Refine and Repeat
1. Get Opened

Only around 20% of nonprofit e-mails
 are actually opened.
   From Reason Digital article written in 2010, citing
    mail chimp international as source for the stat
   http://www.reasondigital.com/better-charity-
    emails/
Step 1: Get opened
1. From line
-   make it from a real person
-   never from info@ or no-reply@

2. Subject line
-   make it topic-specific, not just “newsletter”
-   clever is good, but clear is better
-   tell what readers will get out of opening & reading it
-   Aim for 50 characters or less so it doesn’t get cut off
eNewsletters and the Path to Donor Happiness
Step 2: Get read
6. Design for legibility
5. Use photos and captions
4. Use language that is simple and easy to read
3. Use great headlines and subheads to capture &
    keep attention
2. Personalize it (name, type of support)
Get Read cont’d
The #1 way to get read is…
Provide quality content that donors WANT
   to read.

Quality content:
        Provides value
        Informs & inspires
        Creates a personal connection
        Builds relationships****
Step 3: Build Relationships

Great content provides “donor love”
   Tom Ahern in presentation for past AFP Congress, gives one of
    the best explanations I’ve heard of how to speak to donors to
    create connection and good will
   Donor love is his term in the presentation – Great way to think
    of it!
Build Relationships cont’d
   Say thank you early and often
   Speak directly to a single donor
   Give the donor credit
   Use “you” and “your” (not “us” “our” “we”)
   Tell stories that show howyour donor made a
    difference
   Use numbers – with care, and perhaps not in the
    way you would think
   Use two-way communication (engage)
Build Relationships cont’d
Sample phrases for “creating donor love”
   Thank you
   Because you helped
   Your gift made the difference
   You helped prevent…
   You helped build…
   Your investment, your support, your generosity
   You made it possible
   You helped so many people

See also:
How to Write Successful Fundraising Letters, by Mal Warwick (Appendix C, 90 Ways to Use the
   Word “You”)
Showcase of fundraising innovation and inspiration (soffi.org), particularlty the Women’s Royal
   Voluntary Service face-to-face postcard at http://www.sofii.org/showcase-
   item?hall=274&id=39&pos=1
Email by Canadian Women’s Foundation, used with permission.
Building Relationships con’td

Telling Great Stories
   How, and where, to find your organization’s stories
   Point of View
   Questions to ask
   Caveats
Building Relationships cont’d
2-way communication and encouraging action
 Ask for input

 Provide a series of actions that require increasing

  involvement
 Recognize action

 Integrate with other channels
Back to our sample email
eNewsletters and the Path to Donor Happiness
eNewsletters and the Path to Donor Happiness
eNewsletters and the Path to Donor Happiness
Step 4: Refine and Repeat
•   Listen
•   Test and track
•   Revise and continue
         frequent, consistent communication

      Split testing info: www.marketingprofs.com
      Tracking & measuring online marketing: Search
        the TechSoup Canada blog
Summary
Make Your Donor eNewsletter:
 Brief

 Frequent

 Easy to read

 Personal

 Informative

 Emotional

 Overflowing with gratitude to the donor***
Resources and Reading
Sofii.org The Showcase of Fundraising Innovation and Inspiration: http://www.sofii.org/

Association of Fundraising Professionals Member Resources (presentations from Congress)

The best times to send email for opens and click-through (MarketingProfs)

How to get your email newsletter opened and read (blog post)

Using your newsletter to create an ambassador corps (blog post)

The Non-Designer’s Design Book, by Robin Williams (book on graphic design concepts)

Picture Perfect Communications (article at charityvillage.ca)
Questions?
Questions welcome. And please keep in touch.
   @karenluttrell
   karen@luttrellcommunications.com
   www.luttrellcommunications.com
   www.facebook.com/LuttrellCommunications
   Tel. +1 647-287-4344
Thank You
   Thank you for being great participants today.

   Thanks Kiran and Claire and Artez for inviting me
    and for hosting and giving us all the chance to be
    here and share together today.

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eNewsletters and the Path to Donor Happiness

  • 1. eNewsletters and the Path to Donor Happiness October 25, 2012 www.luttrellcommunications.com
  • 2. Presenter Karen Luttrell has been leading digital marketing initiatives for 13 years. She has launched and managed email newsletters for local, national and international charities and not-for-profits. Karen is a member of AFP and IABC and she volunteers as VP Communications for the Professional Writers Association of Canada Toronto Chapter. You can tweet to her at @karenluttrell or visit her at www.luttrellcomunications.com.
  • 3. Urgent Problem: Donor Retention Only 1/3 of charities surveyed inspired a second gift from at least 4 out of 10 new donors.  The Agitator Donor Retention Survey Results (2011)  http://www.theagitator.net/communications/donor- retention-survey-results/
  • 4. eNews & Donor Retention Relationship building is the key to retaining donors. An effective eNewsletter can be an important part of your donor retention plan.  immediate  frequent (and affordable)  personalized  easily integrated with other channels and rich media (audio, video)
  • 5. 4 Steps to Take with Your eNews 1 Get opened 2 Get read 3 Build relationships 4 Refine and Repeat
  • 6. 1. Get Opened Only around 20% of nonprofit e-mails are actually opened.  From Reason Digital article written in 2010, citing mail chimp international as source for the stat  http://www.reasondigital.com/better-charity- emails/
  • 7. Step 1: Get opened 1. From line - make it from a real person - never from info@ or no-reply@ 2. Subject line - make it topic-specific, not just “newsletter” - clever is good, but clear is better - tell what readers will get out of opening & reading it - Aim for 50 characters or less so it doesn’t get cut off
  • 9. Step 2: Get read 6. Design for legibility 5. Use photos and captions 4. Use language that is simple and easy to read 3. Use great headlines and subheads to capture & keep attention 2. Personalize it (name, type of support)
  • 10. Get Read cont’d The #1 way to get read is… Provide quality content that donors WANT to read. Quality content:  Provides value  Informs & inspires  Creates a personal connection  Builds relationships****
  • 11. Step 3: Build Relationships Great content provides “donor love”  Tom Ahern in presentation for past AFP Congress, gives one of the best explanations I’ve heard of how to speak to donors to create connection and good will  Donor love is his term in the presentation – Great way to think of it!
  • 12. Build Relationships cont’d  Say thank you early and often  Speak directly to a single donor  Give the donor credit  Use “you” and “your” (not “us” “our” “we”)  Tell stories that show howyour donor made a difference  Use numbers – with care, and perhaps not in the way you would think  Use two-way communication (engage)
  • 13. Build Relationships cont’d Sample phrases for “creating donor love”  Thank you  Because you helped  Your gift made the difference  You helped prevent…  You helped build…  Your investment, your support, your generosity  You made it possible  You helped so many people See also: How to Write Successful Fundraising Letters, by Mal Warwick (Appendix C, 90 Ways to Use the Word “You”) Showcase of fundraising innovation and inspiration (soffi.org), particularlty the Women’s Royal Voluntary Service face-to-face postcard at http://www.sofii.org/showcase- item?hall=274&id=39&pos=1
  • 14. Email by Canadian Women’s Foundation, used with permission.
  • 15. Building Relationships con’td Telling Great Stories  How, and where, to find your organization’s stories  Point of View  Questions to ask  Caveats
  • 16. Building Relationships cont’d 2-way communication and encouraging action  Ask for input  Provide a series of actions that require increasing involvement  Recognize action  Integrate with other channels
  • 17. Back to our sample email
  • 21. Step 4: Refine and Repeat • Listen • Test and track • Revise and continue  frequent, consistent communication Split testing info: www.marketingprofs.com Tracking & measuring online marketing: Search the TechSoup Canada blog
  • 22. Summary Make Your Donor eNewsletter:  Brief  Frequent  Easy to read  Personal  Informative  Emotional  Overflowing with gratitude to the donor***
  • 23. Resources and Reading Sofii.org The Showcase of Fundraising Innovation and Inspiration: http://www.sofii.org/ Association of Fundraising Professionals Member Resources (presentations from Congress) The best times to send email for opens and click-through (MarketingProfs) How to get your email newsletter opened and read (blog post) Using your newsletter to create an ambassador corps (blog post) The Non-Designer’s Design Book, by Robin Williams (book on graphic design concepts) Picture Perfect Communications (article at charityvillage.ca)
  • 24. Questions? Questions welcome. And please keep in touch.  @karenluttrell  [email protected]  www.luttrellcommunications.com  www.facebook.com/LuttrellCommunications  Tel. +1 647-287-4344
  • 25. Thank You  Thank you for being great participants today.  Thanks Kiran and Claire and Artez for inviting me and for hosting and giving us all the chance to be here and share together today.