Remove Calendar Remove Mind Remove Phone Remove Ratio
article thumbnail

How to Prevent Donor Fatigue in a Nonprofit

Get Fully Funded

If you don’t know then go back through your calendar, your emails, and your notes and make a list of everything you’ve done in the past 12 months and put it in this form: Ask Non-Asks (Feel-Good Stuff) If there aren’t 3 times as many non-asks compared to asks, you have a problem. How often are you being asked for something?

Donor 105
article thumbnail

Tech Wellness in the Nonprofit Workplace: Tips for Avoiding Collaborative Overload

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

According to Rob Cross’s research, knowledge workers spend 90 to 95 per cent of their time on the phone, responding to e-mails or in meetings. A quick glance at your calendar shows that you spent hours in meetings, answering emails, or working on shared documents but you can’t remember why. Sound familiar? Take a trend-line view.

professionals

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

How to Conduct an Honest Mid-Year Fundraising Evaluation

Get Fully Funded

If you operate on a calendar year, your fourth quarter will be your most lucrative by far. Or do you push it out of your mind? Remind yourself that you have plenty of time to make adjustments and additions to your fundraising calendar to catch up. Thank-you texts or phone calls? But do you really think about it?

article thumbnail

How to structure your nonprofit social media plan

Get Fully Funded

Start with a Social Media Editorial Calendar In order to plan out your social media, you first need to create an editorial calendar. An editorial calendar is basically just a content map or a guide that helps you map out your nonprofit’s content (including social media) for the year. Don’t let this term scare you.

article thumbnail

[VIDEO] Raising More Money By Asking (And Answering) Better Questions

Bloomerang

Harvey’s going to talk a little bit about getting inside the minds of donors. But if you can get inside a donor’s mind, I think that is the secret to reducing your attrition, which means increasing the number of people who renew and give you gifts year after year. . We’re going to do a little intro. . no, no, no.

Money 111
article thumbnail

Why is multi-channel marketing important for nonprofit fundraising?

Qgiv

That’s why we work with a group of like-minded strategic partners— BDI , DNL Omnimedia , Donorly , and Oneicity , who share our passion to help make a difference. In my mind, “relevance is as important as reach” is key – messaging is important to get right (and always will be!). In America alone, 97% of adults own a cell phone.

Channel 59
article thumbnail

[VIDEO] Exploring Cryptocurrency: Introducing New Giving Methods to Your Nonprofit

Bloomerang

So this is really causing a look at the ratio to maybe shift from 85% or maybe even more of your dollars coming from 15% of your donors. . But just keep in mind that at the end of the day it’s really up to the donor to decide how much they want to trust you. 760-803-9576 is my cell phone. So mark your calendars for that.

Method 114