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Direct Mail Fundraising Arithmetic: Avoid Blunders By Knowing Your Numbers.

By: Alan Sharpe

Article Word Count: 832 words  [Comments (0)]
Total Views: 89 Views






Your direct mail fundraising results never lie. But they mislead



you if you let them.















I worked as Director of Development for a national charity that



held a lavish fundraising banquet each year. The staff, from the



executive director down to the receptionist, including the



development staff, thought this banquet was the organization's



most successful fundraiser.















Shortly after being hired, I conducted a comprehensive



development audit that measured the profitability of the



organization's fundraising methods, including this annual



banquet. I added up the cost of the venue, catering, table and



chair rental, lighting, sound, speaker honorarium, invitation



printing, postage and every other related cost and subtracted



this number from the gross income.















What a surprise we got!















What looked like a successful fundraiser was actually the



organization's least-effective fundraiser. In 1999, they spent



89¢ to raise one dollar. They didn't realize that their "best



fundraiser" was a financial flop, year after year. Why? Because



they always published and celebrated the gross income generated



by the event and never looked at the net income.















Two is better than one







You see, the problem with direct mail fundraising arithmetic is



this--you need to understand and use more than just one



measurement. You don't buy a bunch of bananas based on price



alone. You wouldn't choose a lifelong mate based on looks alone



(at least I hope you wouldn't). And you shouldn't measure your



direct mail fundraising success by one ratio or formula alone.















Consider, for example, the most well-known number in direct mail



fundraising--the response rate. Everyone knows that generating a



high response rate is a good thing and that generating a low



response rate is a bad thing. That's why one of the first



questions that prospective clients ask my firm is usually this:



"What kind of response rate will your direct mail fundraising



packages generate for us?"















That's a good question.















But the answer I give, if I simply quote an average response



rate, will mislead. It will mislead because high response rates



do not necessarily mean profitable results. And neither do low



response rates necessarily mean poor results.















* I could craft a direct mail package that generates a 20%



response rate but an average gift of only $2. Not good. You'd



lose money.















* I could craft a package that generates a response rate of



only half of one percent but generates an average gift of



$2,000. That's better. Probably.















Look beyond today's numbers







You need to look beyond each campaign, looking back to previous



results and looking forward to anticipated results. After all,



you could be satisfied today with a direct mail program that



generates an average gift of $35 but never realize that over



half of your donors give you just one gift and never give again.



Your average gift doesn't tell you the whole story any more than



your response rate tells you the whole story.















You can avoid their mistake--and plenty of other mistakes--by



learning the most common ways to measure your success, and then



using as many of them as you require to arrive at an accurate



picture of your accomplishments. The knowledge is in your



numbers. All you need to do is uncover it--and use it to your



advantage in carrying out your mission.















© 2006 Sharpe Copy Inc. You may reprint this article online and



in print provided the links remain live and the content remains



unaltered (including the "About the Author" message).



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