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HOW TO PUT THE FUN IN YOUR ANNUAL FUND … and achieve results.

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Presentation on theme: "HOW TO PUT THE FUN IN YOUR ANNUAL FUND … and achieve results."— Presentation transcript:

1 HOW TO PUT THE FUN IN YOUR ANNUAL FUND … and achieve results

2 THIS IS HOW WE ROLL… 1. What we want you to get out of today. 2. How we hope this afternoon’s session will play out.

3 Canisius College Annual Fund: Who We Are  Amy: three years in fundraising, four years in marketing, four years in public relations  Kirsten (rhymes with ear): six years in fundraising  Annual Fund: three full-time staff, one graduate assistant, two work study students, 30 call center students

4 Our Philosophy  The Canisius College Annual Fund implements marketing strategies using fundraising tactics to effectively and efficiently solicit donor constituencies.  Know the strengths of your team.  Don’t take yourself too seriously!  Think outside of the box – in your segmenting, letters, telefunding, direct mail tests, and stewardship.  STREAMLINE whenever possible.  HAVE FUN!

5 Our Goals  Canisius College is in the quiet phase of a comprehensive capital campaign. The annual fund’s goal is to increase giving from $2 to $3 million, a seven percent increase each year for seven years. Year two has just been completed.  Our annual goals are the same as yours:  Increase giving  Increase donors, particularly alumni participation  Try to do it both in the same year

6 Canisius College Annual Fund: What We’ve Done  During the past three years, the annual fund team has: 1.Increased donors by 22%, of which 17% is alumni 2.Increased annual giving by 14% The call center students have: 1.Increased donors by 37% 2.Increased giving by 55% 3.Decreased refusals by 52%

7 How did you do that?  Segmenting  Direct Mail:  Creative collateral & letter writing  Testing, testing and more testing!  Coordination of campus solicitations  Student Telefunding:  Three rules of telefunding  The calling matrix  Leadership Society ($1,000+)  How does it fit into the puzzle?  Volunteer Engagement  Annual Fund Volunteers  Engaging Volunteers

8 Segmenting  LOYALS, LYBUNTS, SYBUNTS, Lapsed and Nondonors  LOYALS: a donor who consistently gives for five consecutive years  LYBUNTS: Last Year But Unfortunately Not This Year OR renewals  SYBUNTS: Some Year But Unfortunately Not This Year OR a donor who have given between two and five years ago.  LAPSED: a donor who gave six or more years ago  NONDONOR: never not ever has this person given even one cent to the college

9 Segmenting… ahh, there’s more!  Class year  Reunions  50s decade  GOLD or young alumni  Constituency  Alumni: general, young, reunion  Parents  Businesses & Vendors  Faculty & Staff  Students  Leadership  Affinity  Athletics  Campus Ministry  MBA Graduate School  Department, clubs, etc. AND WE HAVEN’T EVEN TOUCHED THE SURFACE!

10 Creative Approaches to Direct Mail  The marketing approach:  What is your message? Is it consistent with your university’s brand? Is it what your donors want to hear or what you think should be said?  How is your annual fund positioned? Do you have talking points that can be incorporated into all of your solicitations – both mail and phone?  Have you coordinated your messaging with the college’s communication department?  How do you segment your mailings? AND Are you targeting your message to the appropriate audience(s)?  Is your message consistent across the board?  RESEARCH, RESEARCH, RESEARCH!

11  Fundraising tactics:  Have you personalized your letter? Can you personalize it beyond the address block and salutation?  Did you incorporate an ASK?  Are you telling donors why their support is needed or how their past support has been used? OR are you showing them?  Are you creating or building upon a relationship?  FOOD FOR THOUGHT: how many times do you thank a donor before sending another solicitation?  ANOTHER MORSEL: did you institutionalize your letter or can you make it real (humor, heart-strings, tongue-in- cheek)? Remember: don’t take yourself too seriously! Creative Approaches to Direct Mail

12 Direct Mail: The Power of Tests  Did you know that when asked, your donors will specifically say that they, themselves, do not want an incentive or recognition for a gift, but they believe others do?  TRUTH: your donors want recognition or an incentive for making a gift to your university.  Every general alumni solicitation should include a measurable incentive to test this theory.

13  Survey: 1.Mailed as part of the CYE 2005 solicitation package to alumni who graduated in odd years. 2.Results: $30,790 from 314 donors: 159 renewals, 17 new and 138 recovered donors. 3.Investment: $4000 ($3,500 consultant fee)  Luggage tags: 1.Sent to donors throughout 2005 who made a gift or fulfilled a pledge of $25 or more and provided updated business information. 2.Results: $19,614 from 122 donors: 77 renewals and 45 recovered donors. 3.Investment: $1000 Direct Mail: Example Tests

14  Address Labels: CYE 2005 1.Mailed to former givers only. 2.Results: $10,394 from 155 donors; 20 new donors and 135 recovered donors. 3.Investment: $760  Address labels: FYE 2007 1.Mailed as incentive to givers and young alumni donors whose last gift was under $50. If last gift was doubled and paid by 12/31, address labels were received. 2.Goals: increase average gift, increase cash receipts, recapture SYBUNT & lapsed donors. 3.General alumni results: 27 donors who gave $525 last year and increased to $1,150; 7 donors recaptured.  Average gift increased from $19.44 to $59.14. 4.Young alumni results: 30 donors who gave $1,430 last year and increased to $1,905; 8 donors recaptured.  Average gift increased from $47.67 to $63.50. 5.Investment: $25 (remaining labels from 2005)

15  Hearts of Fire: Praying with the Jesuits books 1.Mailed in CYE 2007 as incentive to givers whose last gift was $50+. If last gift was doubled and paid by 12/31, received book with unique bookplate. 2.Goals: increase average gift, increase cash receipts, recapture SYBUNT & lapsed donors. 3.Results yielded 63 donors who gave $8090 last year and increased to $24,575 this year  Average gift increased from $128.41 to $261.27 from same donors; 30 donors recaptured. 4.Investment: $800 Direct Mail: Example Tests

16  Static Stickers 1.Mailed in FYE 2007 as incentive to renewals to increase last gift and former givers to renew last gift. If gift was made and received by 5/15, static sticker was received. 2.Goals: increase renewal giving, recapture former givers, increase cash receipts. 3.Results yielded 126 donors who gave $4713 last year and increased to $9413  Average gift increased from $44.63 to $74.71 from the same donors; 81 donors recaptured. 4.Investment: $700 Direct Mail: Example Tests

17  No direct mail tests were incorporated into any 2006 solicitations.  Donor participation remained exactly the same from the previous year! Direct Mail: Example Tests

18  Streamline solicitations sent from various campus offices  Graduate Business Office  Athletics (16 NCAA sports)  Campus Ministry (Alternative Spring Break; five Service Immersion Trips)  Provide or assist in entire mailing process including individual reports Campus-wide Direct Mail Solicitations

19 The 411 on Student Telefunding  Three rules for success: 1.ENGAGE  Hire/recruit callers like you would your development staff.  Strategically placed, focused and committed callers will always yield higher results. 2.EMPOWER  Share with your student callers the strategic goals of your institution allow them to personalize each contact.  What do your goals mean to/for them? 3.ENERGIZE  Make certain that callers are content and excited, not just about the institution, but about their role in its success.  Thank them and always give feedback!

20 The Calling Matrix  Fall Semester 1. August – October: call all LOYALS and LYBUNTS, beginning with alumni and parents. 2. October – November: follow up with all other LYBUNTS and alumni SYBUNTS 3. November – December: fill in with all SYBUNTS  Spring Semester 1. January – mid-February: begin with SYBUNTS and LAPSED 2. February: call NONDONORS with emphasis on young alumni 3. March – April: go back to LAPSED & SYBUNTS 4. April – May: end with a thorough follow up on SYBUNTS, LYBUNTS and LOYALS

21 Canisius College Leadership Society ($1,000)  Current annual giving: $1.4 million from 586 donors  60 percent of total annual giving at Canisius  Goals: 1.Increase LS donors to 1,000+ by 2010 2.Increase average gift 3.Decrease the percentage of Leadership giving in overall annual fund 4.Incorporate and ensure annual Leadership solicitations in comprehensive campaign

22 Leadership Society: Solicitations  Direct mail:  Fall: Invitation to Leadership Society Membership  Mailed to all identified LS renewals & prospects  NEW! Mailed to all donors of $250+  Results: generated 18 new LS donors, 35 recaptured donors and 79 donors who increased last year’s gift.  CYE & FYE: segmented letters by renewal and prospect

23 Leadership Society: Telefunding  Telefunding:  Five volunteer call nights  Two in October  Two in December  One in March  Calls are primarily made to ALL renewals with the exception of donors who are being actively solicited for major gifts  Last fall, one donor in one night made $100,000

24 Leadership Society: Fidelis Circle  NEW THIS YEAR! (Thank you, Xavier!)  Giving level designed to recognize LS members who choose to support Canisius with a minimum annual gift of $1,870 per year for five years  Benefits:  All those received by LS members PLUS: 1.Limited edition lapel pin 2.Personal concierge service through a 800 line 3.Exclusive invitations to events with College’s President 4.Bottle of wine, compliments of Canisius alumni winery owners

25  Goal: 24 charter members  Results:  59 donors  40 increased pledge  16 kept pledge the same  3 decreased their pledge  $1.2 cumulative pledge total 2007-2011 (~$230,000 per year) Leadership Society: Fidelis Circle

26 Leadership Society: Peer Screening  Purpose: to find new prospects, rate them for capacity, gain additional demographic information about alumni and engage volunteers  Peer Screening Session Overview  Four peer screening events were completed during this academic year  Financial Industry  Alumni Chapter  Doctors  Athletics  Results of each are run through Wealth Engine to compare volunteer ratings  Individual solicitation plans will be created and implemented next fall

27  Annual Fund Campaign Cabinet  The campaign cabinet consists of a group of volunteers representing each constituency: alumni, young alumni, leadership society, parents, businesses and friends, Blue & Gold, faculty and staff.  Class Fund Agents  Class Fund Agents are representatives who solicit classmates through letters, phone calls and personal visits.  Strong participation in the 1940s and 1950s decades, young alumni and reunion years.  Letter Signers  Letter signers are volunteers chosen by the annual fund staff to appeal to other prospects with similar interests or circumstances.  Volunteer Callers  Alumni, parents and friends of the college who opt to make calls to their class or peers on behalf of the annual fund. Annual Fund Volunteers

28  Keeping Volunteers interested and involved :  Too often we look for “warm bodies” to fill volunteer roles – if that happens, the person or the position is a problem.  What are the strengths of your volunteer? What are their interests?  Are you creating meaningful roles? Volunteers require a sense of ownership!  Have you told them lately how much you love them? When you thank your volunteers, tell them specifically how they have made an impact.  Volunteer Recognition  Canisius College recognizes all volunteer efforts through tokens of appreciation, lunches and public thank yous, most notably the annual Volunteer Picnic. Engaging Volunteers

29 Thank you!


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