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Donor recognition is an integral part of fundraising for many successful nonprofits. This is their sure-shot way of increasing retention rates and paving an easy route for future fundraisers.
How vital is donor retention for a nonprofit? Let’s take a look at an example.
Say you have 1000 donors who give an average $250 gift in the first year. Your retention rate is 45% (the average donor retention rate as studied in 2019) | |||
Year | Donors | Average Gift | Total Donations |
0 | 1000 | 250 | 250,000 |
1 | 450 | 250 | 112,500 |
2 | 202 | 250 | 50,500 |
3 | 91 | 250 | 22,750 |
4 | 41 | 250 | 10,250 |
5 | 18 | 250 | 4,500 |
By the end of the fifth year, you collect only 1.8% of the donations you collected in the first year. Let’s increase your retention rate by just 10% and see the results.
No. of donors in year 0: 1000. Average gift: $250. Retention Rate: 55% | |||
Year | Donors | Average Gift | Total Donations |
0 | 1000 | 250 | 250,000 |
1 | 550 | 250 | 137,500 |
2 | 302 | 250 | 75,500 |
3 | 166 | 250 | 41,500 |
4 | 91 | 250 | 22,750 |
5 | 50 | 250 | 12,500 |
With an increase in donor retention by 10%, you have collected nearly thrice the sum at the end of five years!
Donor retention is thus an essential job of fundraising teams.
This table of ‘Why donors leave Vs. Why they stay’ will help you understand how crucial it is to retain lapsed donors.
Top 5 reasons donors leave | Top 5 reasons donors stay |
Lack of connection with the organization | Visible impact of their contributions |
No acknowledgment/ recognition of previous gifts | Donors receive timely thank you notes |
Not asked to donate again | They feel their involvement is appreciated |
Changed priorities | Personal connections |
Changed financial situation | They trust your organization |
As an organization, you cannot change the latter two reasons donors leave. However, it is well within your powers to act on the connection, appreciation, and timely appeals to donors.
Sometimes, the solution to all three problems is one- effective donor recognition. Incidentally, intelligent appreciation also enables all points of why donors choose to stay.
What is donor recognition?
Donor appreciation or recognition is a way to thank donors, celebrate their support to you, and philanthropy in general. It strengthens your bond with your supporters and can help in reducing attrition rates. This can be done through
- Appreciative Actions (text messages, phone calls, online donor recognition posts) or
- Gifting Items (personalized gifts, awards)
For effectiveness, your donor recognition programs must be three things at all times:
- Timely
- Respectful
- Personalized
Why should you recognize a donor?
Despite knowing the importance of donor recognition, not all nonprofits are successful with it. Consider the following statistics:
- The first-time donor retention rate for nonprofits was 28.70% in 2017.
- Repeat donor retention, on the other hand, was 59.88%.
This post will help your organization fall in the “good” numbers. Here we will walk you through the donor recognition best practices and ideas that you can adopt for better retention rates.
You May Also Like: The most important questions to get started with donor retention
How do you say thank you to a donor?
An effective donor recognition strategy is one that resonates with your donors and makes them feel appreciated and thanked. It cannot be random, vague, or daunting.
To ensure your donor recognition ideas dwell well with your supporters, there are three ways you can adopt:
- Personal acknowledgment
- Public acknowledgment
- Honor bestowing
Each method is best suited for different types of supporters—like major donors, recurring donors, or new donors. Let’s look at different ways you can thank supporters under each of these categories.
Personal Acknowledgement
A personal acknowledgment is usually the first point of donor recognition. It can be a straightforward text message or an elaborate gift hamper- depending on how far up the donor is on the ladder of engagement—whether your target audience includes new donors, small donors, or major donors.
Personal acknowledgment of donors can be done via:
- Text messages
- Phone calls
- Emails
- Donor recognition gifts
The channel you use depends upon your target donors and the unique advantages they bring.
Text messages
Text messages are increasingly becoming an acceptable, even welcome form of communication among organizations and individuals.
In 2019, nonprofit text messaging audiences grew by 26%. Nonprofits, too, caught up to the trend and sent 14% more text messages to supporters than in 2018.
As an organization looking for channels for recognizing donors, this is your clue to use text messaging for donor retention and recognition.
Target donors: Text messages are appropriate for all your donors who have shared their numbers with you. For major donors, this could be an added personal touch before you send the proportionate gift.
Advantages:
- Can be extended to all donors.
- A quick way of donor appreciation.
- Non-intrusive yet personal and an appreciated way of formal communication.
Texting tools that may benefit you:
- A P2P messaging software can help you personalize your texts and have one-on-one conversations with donors.
- With MMS messaging, you can add photos or videos showing the impact of the donations or giving a peek into your cause.
Phone Calls
A 3-minute phone call can increase first-time donor retention by 30%!
However, you must remember to keep your donor thank-you calls separate from fundraising calls.
For donor recognition, you only have to acknowledge their contribution and convey the impact they are making.
Related Reading: Donor Thank You Calls: Writing the Perfect Script (Script included!)
Target donors: Depending on your donor base, phone calls can be extended to all your donors or a select few whose retention is crucial for your fundraising efforts.
Advantages:
- Phone calls have about a month-long window of opportunity for contact. Calling after that may seem like another solicitation, but 30 days is adequate to check in with your donors.
- Forming a personal relationship with donors becomes easy.
Call Centre Tools That May Benefit You:
- If you are a small organization, a Preview Dialer software may be the right fit for you. This dialer allows callers to choose the person they want to call from the list, provides their history and details for volunteers to scan through, and then does the dialing for you. Fewer chances of volunteers typing in the wrong number and fast calling in one tool!
- For a medium organization, a power dialer software can speed up the process by 5X a simple manual dialer. This tool does the dialing for you, and volunteers only have to press one button to initiate the action.
- Large organizations can benefit from a predictive dialer that calls up to 3X more numbers per hour. It filters out wrong numbers, and dropped numbers, and connects only answered calls to volunteers.
Read Next: Make Calls and Retain your Supporters.
Emails
A 2019 study showed that
- Open rates for emails by nonprofits are around 20%
- Spam rates are 0%
- Unsubscribe rates are 0.17%
Thus, sending thank you notes to donors via emails can be a good way of staying connected with them and, in the long run, keeping your attrition rate low.
Target donors: An email can be sent to all small and major donors. It is a formal way to share your thanks and can be sent in addition to other personalized donor recognition gifts.
Advantages:
- Donation receipts can be attached to the emails
- You can send long messages in a single email, detailing the impact and updates on your campaign
Related Reading: Email Marketing for Nonprofits: Best Practices and Tools for an Effective Campaign
Donor appreciation gifts
Once in a while, sending a personalized gift to a supporter of your cause makes them feel valued and appreciated. This, of course, is reserved only for those who extended that level of intimacy with you.
Donor appreciation gifts are not to retain donors or solicit another gift. They are simply a token of gratitude for donors.
Target donors: Donor appreciation gifts show the depth of your relationship with supporters and are normally reserved for
- Major donors
- Repeat donors who have been consistent with their support or
- Special occasions
Advantages:
- Personalized gifts can vary in size, depending on the level of relationship. They can be a handwritten acknowledgment letter or a gift basket shipped to their address.
- A lack of recognition or appreciation can lead to donor attrition. A token gift shows that you both recognize the donor and appreciate their contribution.
Read Next: How To Create Donor Recognition Levels For Your Nonprofit Today
Public acknowledgment
The first rule to remember with public donor appreciation is their consent is of utmost importance. Everything else is secondary.
Once you have written permission of what details your donors are comfortable sharing, you can draw up a plan for donor appreciation events and social media tagging.
Donor recognition walls
When the Bernie Sanders campaign hit the one million donors mark, they commemorated the occasion in an ambitious but fascinating way.
They printed the names of all these supporters on a donor recognition wall!
Such a donor recognition wall can make your supporters feel appreciated- even if they are one among a million! At the same time, it shows the impact you have created in terms of fundraising.
Additionally, if you are only looking for a “hall of fame,” put up a plaque or board for donation givers.
Target Donors: According to your donor base, campaign size, and budget, a donor wall can include:
- All donors (who have permitted the use of their name)
- Donor plaques for major supporters
- Repeat (small) donors who have been a constant support
Advantages:
- A donor recognition wall can be a permanent hall of fame where you keep adding new names as appropriate.
- It shows the level of appreciation for your donors without being too intrusive.
- Donor recognition walls show the impact of your work to anyone who walks into your office.
Donor recognition on social media or website
Social media is a massive platform for donor recognition. Such donor appreciation posts can be permanent (they can remain on your wall forever) and active temporarily (only new posts and those with fresh engagement turn up on your followers’ feeds).
It is interesting to note that 55% of people who engage with nonprofits on social media take up some action (donation or volunteering) in the future.
Nonprofit social media posts, thanking donors, can simultaneously engage the donors’ social media friends and followers.
Target Donors: All consenting supporters who have Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, Snapchat, or other social media accounts.
Advantages:
- An easy and affordable way of donor recognition. Social media or website recognition leaves an online (almost) permanent print of your campaigns.
- Recognition posts on your website can be shared on social media and vice versa.
- Helps you reach out to others who haven’t previously engaged with you.
Press releases
The Stratford General Hospital Foundation’s donor recognition policy includes a mention of major donors in their newsletter and a press release sent to media houses within a 100-mile radius.
Such press releases allow donors to have their opportunity under the limelight and can make them locally famous!
Target donors: Repeat donors or first-time donors who show promise of retention. These individuals have made considerable contributions and have given consent for (at least) their names and photo to appear in the press release.
Advantages:
- Helps you spread the word beyond your immediate support circle
- If you choose local newspapers or channels, press releases can be an affordable way of advertising your organization
- You can include fundraising event invitations in the press release.
You May Also Like: Donor Recognition Ideas: 10 Easy Ways To Thank Donors
Donor recognition by bestowing honor
Reserved solely for major and consistent donors, this form of public donor appreciation is:
- Appropriate for long-term appreciation
- Cost inducing
Bestowing honor to your significant donors needs you to clarify prerequisites, get permissions, and have a mutual understanding of the prize’s nature.
Naming buildings/rooms/campaigns after donors
The Stephen A. Schwarzman Building of the New York Public Library is named after the benefactor who donated $100 million to renovate and expand the main building. The famous library lions were originally named after the founders, John Jacob Astor and James Lenox.
Significant donors who have created an everlasting impact on your organization, too, can be commemorated by naming a building, room, or campaign after them.
Target donors:
- Supporters who have donated the most significant amount or items.
- Those who have created a lifelong impact.
- Memorable supporters whose work will be remembered for a long time.
Advantages:
- It gives a cost-effective yet permanent honor to your lead donors.
- Talks about the impact a significant donor can create.
- It makes the contribution everlasting in the minds of your beneficiaries, volunteers, and staffers.
Donor recognition awards
Like naming buildings, your annual awards, too, can be named after significant donors. In later years, you can bestow these awards to supporters who have contributed in a similar fashion but on a lower magnitude.
For instance, say Ms. Taylor helped you start a volunteer management program, equipping you with the infrastructure needed for it. You can name an award category after her, making the Taylor award for exceptional volunteering a regular category in your events.
Target donors: Your target donors will be significant donors whose type of contributions will be repeated, but the amount will likely remain unmatched.
Advantages:
- Acts as a positive reinforcement among new donors
- Low cost
- It can be replicated across several categories.
You May Also Like: 6 Easy Steps to Craft the Perfect Major Donor Cultivation Plan
Donor Recognition Best Practices:
“Feeling gratitude and not expressing it is like wrapping a present and not giving it.”
– William Arthur Ward, writer.
Just like you put thought into giving someone a gift, so do your donor recognition ideas must reflect your relationship with them. However, for it to be truly meaningful, here are some donor recognition best practices that you can follow.
Donor recognition best practices | Donor recognition examples |
Donor recognition should be in proportion to the generosity | A thank you text for donors who text-to-give, appreciation social media posts for recurring donors, and a personalized gift for major donors. |
Mention the impact their contributions will create | Send an email with a personalized thank you note from a beneficiary |
Take permission before thanking donors publicly | Ask for their social media handles when you send a thank you text. Mention that you would like to make a public appreciation post for them. |
When sending personal messages, mention the amount they contributed | “Hey Alex, thank you for your $10 donation. This will help Mary and her baby have full meals for two days!” |
Be timely with your donor thank you notes | Send text messages within a week, phone calls within 30 days, and personalized gifts within 45 days. |
Build a personal connection | “Hi Brad, this is Tanvi from Warm Smiles. Thank you for donating a box of clothes last week. Your winter wear will keep 15 children warm and healthy over these challenging months!” |
Let’s look at each individually and with examples.
Donor recognition should be in proportion to generosity
Here is a donor recognition example that acknowledges contributors in proportion to their gifts (from Dr. Noble Irwin Regional Healthcare Foundation.)
The aim of showing recognition or appreciation in proportion to their contributions is not to demonstrate partiality or favoritism towards anyone.
Rather, it is to respect the level of intimacy that supports have extended towards you.
Responding with too little can lead to discontent. Responding with too much may lead to discomfort.
Supporters sign-up, volunteer, or donate according to their level of interest in your cause. They should be thanked according to their contribution.
For example:
- If a donor donates via text or online, reply with a thank you message.
- If they have volunteered to your cause, give them personalized gifts (like hats, stationery, T-shirt)
- If they regularly contribute to your cause, post a public thank you note on your social media handles.
Mention the impact their contributions will create
Here is an example of how Halos of Hope, a donation coordinating organization, thanks it’s donors.
Mentioning the impact that every contribution has toward your goal can undoubtedly be tedious and time-consuming. However, it goes a step further in recognizing your donor’s contribution and informing them of their gifts in the bigger picture.
In fact, a lack of information on the impact is one of the top reasons many donors choose not to give again.
Mentioning the impact can solve two purposes:
- It adds specificity to your donor recognition note
- It gives visibility to the work you undertake.
You can adapt this method for the first time and repeat donors. It can inspire them to contribute again.
There are multiple ways you can mention the impact a donor created, depending on your cause:
- Talk about the financial impact (Eg: Your $50 gift helped towards the current collection of $1250. We only have $900 more to collect!)
- Mention the personal impact (Eg: Your $50 gift will help Rhonda purchase stationery for this school year. Thank you for supporting us!)
- Mention the overall impact (Eg: Your $50 gift contributes towards the rehabilitation of 100 victims of Hurricane Katrina. Thank you for your support)
Take permission before thanking donors publicly
Your donors’ consent is of utmost importance before publishing their names or contribution on a public forum.
Here is an example of how you can do it via text messages:
Public platforms include:
- Social media
- Your website
- Signs or boards
- Plaques
- Newsletters
- News Articles
Although most donors would be happy to give permission, some may not be comfortable doing so. To avoid conflict and ensure that your supporters are happy, take written or digital consent before thanking them publicly.
When getting the consent, remember to
- Clarify what they would like to be published and what not (name, donation amount, location, quote)
- Mention platforms you will be posting on
- Mention if the donor thank you notes will be permanently posted or will change after a period.
When sending personal messages, mention the amount they contributed
Personalization of messages is no longer about only mentioning the names of donors. You need to go the extra mile to make your supporters feel appreciated. One way of doing this is to know what they have donated and mentioning the amount or item in your appreciation message.
Adding this information will show donors exactly how they helped the cause.
When doing so, keep these points in mind:
- Mention the amount and, when appropriate, the mode of transaction
- When sending acknowledgment emails, attach the formal receipts too
- If you are using peer-to-peer texting or phone calls, be sure to mention that proper receipts are provided separately.
Be timely with your donor thank you notes
If I have to give you a personal example, think of it as your granny shipped you a nice gift on your birthday. You received it and loved it. But you took over a month to revert.
Now, if you are sending a gift back, this time is justified. But, if you were simply to call granny and thank her for this beautiful present, you’d be speaking to a somewhat disappointed and perhaps even angry relative.
Such a reaction is equally true in a donor-charity relationship.
In fact, “the charity did not acknowledge my support” makes it the top 5 reasons why donors choose not to give again. That acknowledgment is powerful only if it is within an acceptable time frame.
As an organization, you have a window to send a donor appreciation letter or message. A timely note assures the donor that their gift was collected and support acknowledged.
The window expands or shrinks depending on how you are thanking the donor. For instance, sending a gift basket allows much more response time than making thank you calls to donors.
Build a personal connection
Generic donor thank you notes are passé. They are, without a doubt, easier to draft and quicker to send. But they hardly speak of the value you have for your donors. To build a personal connection, include three things in your texting or calling script:
- Introduce yourself
- Use their names
- Include at least one unique detail about their donation (time, amount, place, etc)
While personalization can demand more effort, a good communication software can help you overcome it.
CallHub’s texting tool is one such product.
Our Peer-to-Peer texting (P2P texting) allows you to add the name, email, phone number of the recipient, and the agent’s name with a single click.
P2P texting allows you to have personalized one-on-one conversations with your contact lists and helps you look more human and approachable.
Such personalization can
- Be done at scale
- Be easy for you to adopt
- Make the experience more personal and cherished for your donors.
Related Reading: How to Get Started With Peer-To-Peer Texting
Dos and Don’ts for donor recognition
Do | Do Not |
Add survey or feedback to donor recognition messages when possible | Don’t ask for another donation in your thank you note |
Be prompt with the notes | Do not break confidentiality |
Plan different thanking methods for different donors (Emails, phone calls, text messaging, or token gifts) | Never fail to acknowledge small contributors |
Keep track of their responses and utilize them the next time | Don’t be generic |
Hold donor appreciation events (learn all about them here) | Don’t engage in just one channel to thank your donors |
Related Reading: Send Text Surveys To Contacts – Here’s How
Donor recognition is an integral part of any fundraising cycle. It shows your supporters that you care and value their contributions and helps you secure a bond with them.
Equip yourself with a suitable donor recognition plan and let your supporters feel happy and appreciated.
Feature image source: Hanny Naibaho/Unsplash