Imagine hosting a fundraising gala and getting to your big fundraising appeal and all you see is a sea of hands in the air. Donors who are ready and excited to give to your organization. This could happen to you, but it won’t happen by accident.
Preparing your donors for your Fundraising Appeal
From the very moment you come in contact with your guests (the save the date) you should be walking them through the necessary steps to becoming a die-hard donor to your organization. I go over all of these steps in my free “Fund-A-Need Framework,” but here are some practical ways to apply this framework before your event even begins so that guests come to your event prepared (and excited) to give!
Introduce your guests to a problem
In all of your marketing materials, address the problems your organization solves. On everything from your save the date to the invites, educate the guests on the problems that exist as they relate to your intended Fund-A-Need.
In your save the date and invite, share statistics about the demographic you serve, so that they become aware that there is a problem before they even RSVP.
I work with a wonderful community center in Saint Paul that hosts a Fund-A-Need only event every fall. They have many different programs, but every year they focus on one program at their event. Last year they focused on their senior programs.
On their invitations and save-the-dates and on their social media communications about the event, they shared statistics about the seniors in their community. How many don't have access to healthy food, how many suffer from Alzheimers and dementia, and how many have have health problems directly related to lack of activity.
When their guests show up to their event, they always know what the needs in their community look like.
Get your guests to care about the problem
Once invites and save the dates are out, start sending stories of people you serve either via email or through social media. Add pictures and video if you can. These stories will help you make a connection and build a relationship with your guests. You should have testimonials and stories at your event, but you serve so many people every week, month and year that you should have a wide selection of stories to share about.
If you don't have access to a videographer, share a picture and a short write up of the person you helped or even a quote.
Leading up to the event, after guests RSVP, you can follow up with a story a week or every other week. Share these stories on your social media and have them listed on the event page on your website. There are so many ways to get your stories into the hearts of your guests before they even show up.
Empower them to be the solution
Remember, you are not the solution, you are the tool that your guests will use to solve the problem on their hearts. To prepare them, you can send out your Fund-A-Need donation levels before your event so that they can take a look at what it actually costs to deliver the programs and services to the people they care about.
This will help them set a realistic and generous budget, while also setting the expectation that they are expected to give. You will likely receive additional donations from supporters who may not be able to attend your event. Remember, you are hosting a fundraiser, not a party. Nonprofits are often very shy about asking for money. This is why I love this approach (aside from the fact that it works so well), all of a sudden you are not asking people for money. You are providing them a solution to a problem that is on their heart. If you do the first two steps well, they are going to want a solution, and at your event, you are going to give it to them.