The unique folds on this brochure for a Jewish educational nonprofit organization allows the user to see all the panels from one side of the paper.
Continue readingDonor Brochure Showcases Organization’s Innovation
Conceptual themes help promote organization’s vision.
Continue readingAttracting Sponsors for a New Environmental Event
A new environment event attracts sponsors through effective design.
Continue reading10 Steps to Creating an Effective Nonprofit Website
In today’s increasingly tech-mediated world it is absolutely essential that your company or organization have an effective and compelling website. Your website serves as the public face of your organization and in order to place your organization in the best light possible your site needs to be informational, aesthetically pleasing, and user-friendly.
Continue readingIncarnation Camp Alumni Magazine Raises Funds for Organization
Magazine kicks off the alumni association for the oldest camp in the United States.
Continue readingPull Out Fundraising Event Invitation Engages Audience
We developed this interactive gala invite for a nonprofit educational organization that helped to attract a crowd and introduce the organization’s new name and tagline. Read more.
Continue reading10 Ways to Wake Up Your Nonprofit Brand
Here are 10 ways that nonprofit organizations can wake up your brand to strengthen their appeal to donors, improving their website and gaining visibility.
Continue readingSo You Have a New Logo. Now What?
In addition to serving as the key identifying mark, your organization’s logo can tell people a lot about your organization, its values and philosophy. But that’s only half the story. Once you have a logo, how do you use it? This article explains.
Continue readingPromotional Campaign for Student Advocacy’s Overcoming the Odds Awards Dinner 2011
To promote this inspirational fundriasing event, we created a save the date postcard, invitation package, website graphics, as well as the ad journal
Continue reading5 Ways to Improve Your Fundraising Event Invitation
Your fundraising event invitation is often an over-looked method for promoting your nonprofit organization. Consider this: If you mail out 2,000 invitations and expect to get 200 people to attend your event, then you are doing a mailing to 1,800 people you are know are not going to attend (you just don’t know which ones).
Don’t waste that opportunity to promote your organization to 80% of the people on your event list. Take advantage of your event invitation mailing to engage these potential donors in your organization.
Here are 5 things that an effective event invitation can do for your nonprofit organization.
1. Create awareness for your organization.
Tell people what your organization is all about. Believe or not, not everyone on your mailing list really knows what your organization is about. They may have given a donation once or be on your mailing list for many reasons, or may have last heard from you last year, and may have forgotten. If your invitation only mentions your event, but not much about your organization, you are missing out on creating awareness about your organization to many people who will not be attending your event.
2. Present a professional face to the world.
For some organizations, this is the only printed mailing they do (or one of very few), so why waste this opportunity to create a positive impression on your donors? The overall look of the design of the invitation, the quality of the printing and the paper, reflects the professionally-run people perceive your organization to be and how seriously they should take your organization. If a staff person who is not a designer creates your invitation, is it really going to have a level of professionalism that stands up to all the other professionally-designed mail that your donor is receiving that day and create the positive impression that you want to convey?
3. Convey your impact.
Donors are more likely to attend your event when they understand the impact that your organization has on people’s lives, so use your invitation as an opportunity to let them know. The fact that you are honoring a specific person at you gala, might interest a few people, but showing how you help lift thousands of kids out of poverty will appeal to a much wider audience.
4. Arouse curiosity about your organization.
If your invitation looks mundane, then unless they have a strong affinity for your organization to begin with, they probably won’t give it a second glance. Every opportunity to catch a potential donor’s interest should not be wasted. Since you are going through the expense of printing and mailing, why not create something dramatic to intrigue those who don’t know much about your organization to learn more about it.
5. Connect with your donors.
Your invitation is not a stand alone mailing. It is part of an ongoing communication you have with your donors. Instead of just seeing the invitation as a way to promote the event, you can use this mailing to deepen your relationship with your donors. If they can’t attend the event, provide other ways to engage them with your organization. Ask them if they would like to see photos from the event, sign up for your email newsletter, become a fan on Facebook, or refer someone they know to your organization.
• • •
As you can see, your event invitation can accomplish much more than simply collecting money from a small percent of people on your list. With some foresight, it can be a strategic tool in your overall marketing communications tool box. Don’t waste the opportunity – use a professional designer to maximize this opportunity to build your brand, connect with your donors, and drive results.
FUNDRAISING INVITATIONS
LINKS
Poorly designed ballot is a travesty to democracy
I received the mailing showing the new paper ballot and I am shocked how poorly designed it is. The fill in dot is in the bottom of the box for each candidate and is actually located closest to the name right under it. Given the huge white space separating the candidate’s name from fill in dot and the proximity of the dot to the next candidate, it is entirely logical that many people will assume that the dot is for the candidate closest to it (the one below). I wonder how many people will make that mistake. Unfortunately, we will never know.
Also, why is all the type set flush right? That is counter to the most natural and most common formatting. For a piece of communication addressed to the widest possible audience and lowest possible literacy level, it would make sense to use the most common conventions that most people understand.
After the fiasco around the design of the butterfly ballot in the 2004 election, one would assume the utmost of care in the design of the ballot. It is reprehensible that our democracy is jeopardized by such short-sightedness. It just shows you the importance of good design. What do you think?
Fundraising Brochure Helps Social Service Agency Tell Its Story
CLIENT: Jewish Federation of Greater Middlesex County, NJ
We helped a local Jewish Federation transition their organization to address the changing needs of their community, update their mission, and develop new fundraising messages and communication tools.
Brochure
How do you help tell a cohesive story for an organization that works in so many areas? We created a compelling fundraising theme, brochure and materials to promote this Jewish Federation. With the headline, “Why should I support the Jewish Federation?,” the inside panel of the brochure answered with, “For the good you can see around every corner.” This was used as the overall fundraising theme to show the impact that the Federation has in many areas around the county. The inside of the brochure presents a virtual walk through the community, visually showing all the ways in which the Federation was supporting the institutions that people rely on.

Ad
The ad presented the concept in one panel – a visual reminder of all the institutions that the Federation supports and a powerful appeal for support.
Presentation
We then created a presentation that allows the organization to delve into the story at a more personal level, exploring the impact based on the values and institutions that donors could identify with.
Brand Manual
While the national organization, the Jewish Federations of North America, had developed a new logo, we adapted it for local use. To help the staff implement the brand successfully, we adapted the national Federation’s brand manual. The manual contains all the messaging elements, shows all the versions of the logos – with and without the tagline, in color and grayscale, and in print and web formats — along with guidelines for logo usage, typefaces, colors, stationery items and other marketing materials.
Email Newsletter Templates
To help the Federation’s recipients quickly identify emails, we created a consistent system for the email templates, with headers for a general, news, and events emails.
Related Stories
Read the full case study and get the inside scoop.
Read “Lessons from Branding a Jewish Agency”
Links
Red Rooster Group is a New York based graphic design firm that creates effective brands, websites, and marketing campaigns to increase your visibility, fundraising, and communications effectiveness. Contact us at info@redroostergroup.com.





















