FundRaiser Blog

The FundRaiser Software Blog is an excellent resource for nonprofit organizations looking to learn more about fundraising, donor management, membership management, and much more.

7 key components for donor cultivation you should be tracking in your donor management software

The true secret of happiness lies in taking a genuine interest in all the daily details of lifeFund-raising has many engaging and inspiring sayings. Three that give insight into donor cultivation are:

  • People give to people.
  • You don't raise funds; you raise friends.
  • Fund-raising can be summed up in just three words - relationships, relationships, relationships.

At its heart, donor cultivation is about an organization's staff and leadership developing relationships with those capable of giving support and making them friends of the organization.

I define donor cultivation as an organization-wide strategy and process to learn more about each donor's interests, desired professional and social contacts, lifestyle, and philanthropic desires so that we can better initiate and respond to contact with a donor in order to develop a stronger relationship with that donor.

I can't stress enough how important this definition is - how important it is to the future of an organization's fund-raising efforts. Every successful fund-raising operation cultivates its donors - builds relationships with them. The most successful do it constantly and systematically.

Let's parse this 48-word statement and examine its key components. Again, the definition, this time with its key components in bold type:

Donor cultivation is an organization-wide strategy and process to learn more about each donor's interests, desired professional and social contacts, lifestyle, and philanthropic desires so that we can better initiate and respond to contact with a donor in order to develop a stronger relationship with that donor.

1.  Organization-Wide

To be successful, donor cultivation must be embraced by the entire organization. It is not just a tool to be used by the development department. In order for an organization to cultivate its donors successfully, and grow more and larger gifts, it must become donor centric. It takes the commitment and involvement of an entire organization to cultivate successfully donors.

2.  Donor Interests

The things people are interested in are important indicators of how and to what they will give.  How well do you know your larger donors? Do you know enough about each to conduct an engaging conversation about something other than your organization?  There are many bits and pieces of information you should be capturing about them:

  • How they earn their living
  • What they do for pleasure
  • What clubs they belong to
  • Who their friends are
  • What authors or subjects they read
  • Where they were born
  • Where their children go to school
  • Where they went to school

These are just a few possibilities. But I guarantee if you had this information at your fingertips each time you spoke to or contacted a donor, your connection with that donor would be stronger, your relationship greater, and the amount that donor would give to your organization would be larger.

3.  Desired Professional and Social Contacts

Nearly everyone has professional and social pursuits they wish to further. When it comes to donors capable of making large gifts, do you know what business introductions they would like to have and whom they would like to meet socially?

4.  Lifestyle

How people live can tell you a great deal about how to approach them for gifts. What do you know about the lifestyle of each of your donors?  Does he or she:

  • Inhabit a house, condo, or apartment?
  • Have more than one home?
  • Prefer to dine in or eat out?
  • Give parties and receptions?
  • Own a boat?

Once again, these are only some of the data you may want to consider collecting about donors. But imagine what you could do if you had it at your fingertips.

5.  Philanthropic Desires

How about some donor knowledge that would seem obvious - their philanthropic involvement? Different people give to different organizations for different reasons. Keeping in mind the old 80/20 rule, that 80% of your money will come from 20% of your donors, do you have answers to each of the following for the top 20% of your donors?

  • Why each gives to your organization
  • How each prefers to make a gift
  • What other organizations each gives to
  • How each wants to be recognized and thanked
  • What causes matter most to each

6.  Initiate and Respond to Contact

Our sixth key component is initiating and responding to donor contact.  You need to have contact with donors at times other than during a campaign. Organizations that focus their donor contact on periods of donor solicitation are transaction oriented. They're like the son or daughter away at college who only calls home to ask for money. Donor dialog that begins and ends with a request for a gift is a guarantee of fewer and smaller gifts. Your organization must:

  • Be willing and able to initiate conversations with donors and have a plan to do so
  • Treat any contact with a donor as the most important thing happening to the organization at that moment
  • Have a plan for responding to donor requests quickly and effectively

7.  Relationship

The last key component is relationship. Relationship is connection. We cultivate donors in order to strengthen the connection they have with our organization. The stronger that connection is, the deeper the relationship. The deeper the relationship a donor has with an organization, the more likely that donor is to make larger and more frequent gifts.

In a nutshell, Donor Cultivation is about everybody in an organization working to build the organization's relationship with each donor in the knowledge that a better relationship will result in more frequent and larger gifts.

To learn how FundRaiser Software can help you cultivate better donor relationships

Enjoy an online guided tour of the software

Creating a Culture of Fundraising at Your Organiza...
How Much Foundation Funding?

Related Posts

Wait a minute, while we are rendering the calendar
spare fields volunteering legacy giving GoFundMe project Alternative Addresses donor advised funds donation history arts donor prospects NCOA processing Constant Contact user interface annual campaign disaster relief Codes Crowdfunding Campaign new version Importing Data pledges community broadcasting spreadsheets security fundraising correspondence capital campaign upgrade premiums Thank You repeat donors flash sales holiday grants holiday letters entering auction gifts New Year customer portal password protection technical support add ons vacation campaign management salutation major donors membersip benefits new leadership new features lapsed donor transparency FundRaiser Hosted campaign Thanksgiving support case study event management social media pictures building donor relationships passwords new nonprofit online donations annual maintenance plan large donations GivingTuesday change of address updating gift acceptance policy importing csv how-to videos Facebook donor attrition rate corporate sponsors mailing data analysis Reminders advanced tab Company culture Volunteer module moves management donor relations training development director foundations appeal letters email community arts nonprofits grassroots campaign merge notes motivation word processor donor attrition accounting software Resiliency data entry product news anonymous donors donor charity golf tournaments segmenting donors letter prospects endowment campaign customer service major gift prospects office alumni online donations upgrading donors donor retention End of Year Letters gift notes field mode code updates relationship tracking memorial giving fundraising letters user spotlights look and feel Congratulations operational costs texting donors government grants donor profile Excel backing up data how to handle auction gifts understanding giving trends solicitors happiness features giving history the Ask Network for Good Snow Birds planned giving donor retention rate raffle Cloud communications Personalizing correspondance LYBUNTS reports board members Donor Portal general donor targeting publicity materials data conversion mission driven tribute gifts merge fields announcements planning holiday giving Tickles volunteers tech tip increasing giving amounts animal rescue Facebook campaign adding personal notes to letters ticketsales Reporting to IRS nonprofit fundraising gift entry FundRaiser Spark National Change of Address custom page PayPal operating systems donor recognition FundRaiser Basic training tip donor engagement on site training appeal SYBUNTS giving levels budget in honor of donations follow up Groupings auction brick campaign membership benefits In-Kind gifts welcome packet targeted mailings Task List banquet donor slip letter templates new donors #GivingTuesday recurring gifts donor source thank you letters community supported gardens monthly giving overview small donations phoning donors tax summary letters motivation code donor preferences role of nonprofits membership programs donor loyalty direct mail ticket sales ROI personalizing letters donor contact information

Connect With Us

  800-880-3454 ext 3
  Email Us
  Request More Information
  Monday-Friday
      8:30AM-5:30PM CST

Customer Portal Login Form

   

The customer portal is unavailable. If you need support please reach out to support@fundraisersoftware.com Thank you.

 

  User Name:
  Password:

If you are not sure about your Customer User Name, please call 800-543-4131 and we will be able to help you.

Or you have lost your password, Request Password