Effective Low-Cost Marketing Tactic

In Madison Square Park today, people were handing out postcards with a pack of gum taped on. Free gum was an enticing offer and got me to take the postcard. The card itself had a compelling headline that invites you to find out more. Turns out, this is a promotion for a church. It’s not the first time that innovative marketing has helped promote religion – it seems to be part of a larger trend of reaching people “where they are” rather than where the church is. It makes use of low-cost marketing tactics that you can apply to your campaign. Here’s why I think this piece is effective:

  1. It provides something of value to get your attention (the free pack of gum is nice and costs them little).
  2. It focuses on the customer’s needs rather than the church’s (the compelling headline is very different for a church).
  3. It respects the reader’s intelligence (it doesn’t patronize, insult or use fear or insecurity as a motivating factor).
  4. It provides clues as to what to expect (the photos show a diversity of young smiling people in the church).
  5. It provide specific instructions as to what to do (lists services to attend, how to enter and gives other benefits, such as “Childcare available.”
  6. It provide a link to the website for more information.
  7. It was inexpensive to produce (the gum was taped on with a loop of masking tape).
  8. It was distributed to people in their demographic (by someone who could answer questions and be an advocate for the church).

Sold Out! How to Annoy Your Donors

I recently received an invitation for a fundraising event that had the standard ticket prices already sold out. As a donor that supported the organization in the past, what do you think my response was? Not a positive one – that’s for sure. In fact, it made me feel unappreciated. I felt that as a donor, they did not value me enough to engage me at the level I was accustomed to. And it made me wonder: Who are the people who got the tickets first – and why was I not on the list? That’s not the type of response you want your donors to have.

WAKE UP CALL: Don’t isolate your donors and jeopardize your relationship with them. Show them that you value them and provide opportunities for them to give at the level they are comfortable with.

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Red Rooster Group is a New York based graphic design firm that creates effective brands, websites and marketing campaigns for nonprofits to increase their visibility, fundraising and communications effectiveness. Contact us at info@redroostergroup.com.


Free Videos for Nonprofits

YouTube
In partnership with All for Good, YouTube is launching “Video Volunteers,” a platform designed to make connections between non-profit organizations with video needs and skilled video makers who can help broadcast their causes through video. Video Volunteers will pool nonprofit, video-related volunteer postings from All for Good and then match them up with YouTubers who want to volunteer their video-creating skills to make a difference. Because many YouTubers have amassed a large online audience, the influence of their work on behalf of nonprofits can have a big effect in raising the profile of the causes nonprofits are working on and can drive others online to take action. Here’s how it works: Starting today, nonprofits can post video assignments (with the words “Video Volunteers” in the description) on idealist.org, serve.gov or volunteermatch.org; these posts will be cycled through the Video Volunteers feed of the All for Good widget on youtube.com/videovolunteers. YouTube Video Volunteers can visit youtube.com/videovolunteers to pick up assignments directly from nonprofits. Select videos will be showcased on the Video Volunteers YouTube channel and in other high-traffic areas of YouTub

From Business Wire

In partnership with All for Good, YouTube is launching “Video Volunteers,” a platform designed to make connections between non-profit organizations with video needs and skilled video makers who can help broadcast their causes through video. Video Volunteers will pool nonprofit, video-related volunteer postings from All for Good and then match them up with YouTubers who want to volunteer their video-creating skills to make a difference.

Because many YouTubers have amassed a large online audience, the influence of their work on behalf of nonprofits can have a big effect in raising the profile of the causes nonprofits are working on and can drive others online to take action. Here’s how it works: Starting today, nonprofits can post video assignments (with the words “Video Volunteers” in the description) on idealist.org, serve.gov or volunteermatch.org; these posts will be cycled through the Video Volunteers feed of the All for Good widget on youtube.com/videovolunteers. YouTube Video Volunteers can visit youtube.com/videovolunteers to pick up assignments directly from nonprofits. Select videos will be showcased on the Video Volunteers YouTube channel and in other high-traffic areas of YouTube.

Lessons from an Outreach Campaign

Lessons from a Campaign – Blog Post
I recently followed up with an nonprofit organization that produced an outreach campaign around the concept of alleviating hunger in their community. Taking a three-pronged approach of collecting food, soliciting donations, and galvanizing people to long-term volunteering, the organization partnered with other community groups to implement the campaign. Ambitious and well-intentioned as it was, the campaign did not achieve their desired outcome. Here’s what they learned.
Lessons
1. Focus on one goal. Raising $100,000, collecting food and inspiring volunteerism turned out to be too many goals for one initiative and spread them too thin. They said that next time, they would assess what is realistic and focus and channel their efforts toward that one  goal.
2. Allow enough time. With only three months to coordinate the effort, they were already short of time in coordinating all parties, lining up the right assistance and developing the marketing. Allow 6 to 12 months to work out the strategy, plan the details, galvanize support.
3. Have strong leadership. In this case, they had the laudable goal of stitching together a coalition of community groups. However in practice, there were too many chefs in the kitchen and disputes broke out about who was in charge. Strong, diplomatic leadership is needed as well as clearly articulated roles for each party that match their expertise and meet their interests.
4. Plan properly. Lack of proper planning resulted in major problems, such as not getting the requisite permission in time to distribute 140,000 flyers in schools – a huge wasted opportunity – as well as a website that was incapable of collecting volunteers names. Proper planning can help you to map the roles, responsibilities and logistics, as well as contingency plans, needed for a successful campaign.
5. The coordinator who was hired to recruit volunteers did a good job in his initial outreach, but failed to set up a campaign office to field calls. As a result, innumerable volunteers were lost and the effectiveness of the overall campaign was compromised. There are several possible lessons from this:
A. Vet your consultants thoroughly to ensure that they have the necessary expertise and capabilities to deliver on what they say they can.
B. Fully understand the scope of services that you are engaging them in and document it in writing.
C. Assign one person to take responsibility and provide proper oversight, including feedback, support, resources and monitoring to ensure the project is on track.
6. Identify your weakness and get help. The organization recognized that they lacked the expertise or connections to get media exposure for their campaign. Looking internally they found someone with a contact to a former TV reporter who was very connected to the media. They got him to volunteer his services, which proved invalable in getting media coverage.
7. Build the structures needed to ensure continuity. For this campaign, one of the goals was to inspire people in the community to become regular volunteers. Poor planning and oversight resulted in a website that did not capture volunteers names or list the ongoing volunteering opportunities with the community groups. Had this been a priority, the campaign could leveraged this asset to build on the hundreds of hours of work put into the campaign.
8. Learn from your mistakes and build on your relationships.  Unfortunately, the relationships with the community partners were left in a more strained status than at the start. Bringing together other organizations to work on a campaign serving the public interest is a good foundation from which to grow. And while success is the goal, some mistakes are inevitable. Viewed as learning experiences, these could be seen as opportunities for all parties to gain knowledge about what does work and to deepen their relationships for future collaborations.
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Postscript: In the end, the organization publicly claimed the campaign as a success, stating that it was billed as a one time event, raising 2,000 pounds of food (and justifying that it did raise the $100,000, but from community foundations that had made previous pledges, instead of the public as intended).

A nonprofit organization produced an outreach campaign around the concept of alleviating hunger in their community. Taking a three-pronged approach of collecting food, soliciting donations, and galvanizing people to long-term volunteering, the organization partnered with other community groups to implement the campaign. Ambitious and well-intentioned as it was, the campaign did not achieve their desired outcome. Here’s what they learned.

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Clients to Tell Their Stories in Direct Mail Cards

CLIENT: ProLiteracy

Direct mail packages that come in standard business size envelopes are identifiable as fundraising solicitations from a mile away. So the question is, how do you get the recipient to open the package, and once the package is opened, how do you appeal to donors?

When ProLiteracy asked us for recommendations to improve the effectiveness of their direct mail, we looked at their existing package. We suggested using a different size envelope that would stand out. And instead of a lengthy letter describing people’s stories, we suggested using cards that let the people tell their own story for more immediacy and a stronger emotional appeal. And since a picture is worth a thousand words, we suggested separate cards that feature the photo of the person on one side. They used our recommendations to create a package that stands out in the mail and gets their message across in a compelling way.


Advice-Link Events Help Nonprofits

Sue Green, Founder of Nonprofit Central and Howard Levy, Principal of Red Rooster Group, co-produce Advice-Link events for nonprofits.

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Nonprofits face pressing problems, but often lack the time or resources to vet consultants. Advice-Link events address that need. Nonprofits can sign up for 30 minute sessions with up to three consultants specializing in strategic planning, board development and program effectiveness and other areas of nonprofit fundraising, marketing and management to get specific feedback and direction on their issue.

This event is styled after the successful Craigslist Foundation’s Nonprofit Bootcamp’s Ask the Experts sessions and the Nonprofit Consulting Day sponsored by the Baruch College School of Public Affairs’ Nonprofit Group. Advice-Link is sponsored by ADP and the Change Group.

Advice-Link events are produced independently and are also offered through nonprofit associations as a benefit to their members or as an adjunct to their conferences. The last Advice-Link event on March 24, 2009 was produced for Governance Matters.

AL_Group

Advice-Link events provide one-on-one advice for nonprofits by vetted consultants.

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Great Response from Participants

“I found the Advice-Link event very helpful and interesting. The structure encourages nonprofit staff to finely hone our  inquiries and truly get to the heart of the matter at hand, depending on who  we are talking to so that in and of itself, is a valuable exercise for those  participating. The time provided by the consultants is greatly  appreciated also, especially these days.”

– Cathy Sharp, Director Of Development & Communications, Greenwich House, Inc.


Red Rooster Group IconRed 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.


FUNDRAISING: Lessons from a Charity

Amidst all the recent financial gloom and doom, I thought it’s worthwhile to report a blip of good news on the fundraising front and relate the lessons that can be learned from it. The New York Times reported today that its Neediest Cases Fund has increased its contributions significantly over last year. The number of donors has jumped 53% from 2,955 to 4,518, and the fund is $500,000 ahead of where it was this time last year (a total of $3.7 million was raised so far). Apparently the heightened awareness of the needs of those living in poverty has touched the middle class, despite their own financial concerns.

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TRENDS: The Growing Senior Sector

The population is aging at a rate faster than anyone had anticipated. In less than three decades from now, the number of people globally under the ages of five years and those above the age of 65 will criss-cross. That means that there will be more elderly people around than younger ones. Projecting another 30 years forward and the number of elderly will double their younger cohorts.Continue reading