publication date: Aug 2, 2011
What are the early signs that a new donor will have a high long-term
value? US consulting firm
Amergent says
it's found two indicators: they make a second gift in their first year, and
they trust you with their email address. The "secret" to getting and keeping
multi-channel donors, they explain, is no secret at all - just good old donor
stewardship.
Ask early, ask often
Donors making that second gift within their first 12 months
are twice as likely to make another gift in their second year - an encouraging
signal for retention. Among Amergent's clients, donors who gave twice in their
first year renewed in year two at 56%, while the rate for one-time givers was
just 28%.
That means, says Amergent, that an intensive program of
thanking, welcoming and soliciting new donors is well worth it. And shorten the
time, they urge, between that first gift and a further solicitation. Their
research shows an increased retention rate if you can get a second gift from a
new donor within 100 days of the first gift. Use your most successful themes
and messages early in the relationships to encourage that early second gift.
Collect those email
contacts
Donors that give you their email address can have an average
value up to 2.5 times higher than similar donors not sharing that contact.
Amergent found that their retention rate is slightly higher, their rate of
gifts per donor is 50% better, and their average gift is 67% higher.
Having the email address gives you more ways to communicate
with the donor. It may also be a signal that the relationship is stronger right
from the start. And other Amerigent research found that using email to support
direct mail appeals can increase gifts from email recipients by 10%.
Download
Amergent's white paper, Making Virtual Friends for Life