1
Email
Bes Practices
for Fundraising
Content
Do More for Your Cause with Email Marketing.......................................................2
Plan..........................................................................................................................4
3 Simple Steps to Planning Your Email Marketing Strategy.....................................5
Design............................................................................................................8
7 Essential Elements of Email Design.......................................................................9
Create.....................................................................................................................13
3 Step Formula to Writing a Successful Email.......................................................14
Measure..................................................................................................................17
The Triple-A Approach to Email Measurement.....................................................18
Grow........................................................................................................................20
3 Questions You Must Answer to Grow Your Email List.......................................21
2
Your donors and volunteers wake up every
morning and check their email.
More than half of all emails are now read on a
mobile device, and through the course of a day,
readers spend an average of 6.3 hours reading
around 88 emails. [Source: Litmus, HuPost &
Text Request]
Shouldn’t your organization be among them?
A recent study says 38% of online donors are
inspired to give from an email. [Nonprot Tech
for Good]
On the pages that follow, you’ll learn a simple
strategy, broken into quick tasks, to help you
manage your time and have more success telling
an inspiring story to drive fundraising results.
We’ll show you how to plan your email
marketing strategy, design an email that drives
action, create better email content, measure
Do More for Your Cause
with
Emai Marketin
DID YOU KNOW?
Research has shown that
rst-time donors who
receive a personal thank
you within 48 hours are
four times more likely to
give again.
Source: Guidestar
your email marketing’s impact, and grow your
email list from scratch.
Follow this step-by-step plan to send emails
your donors will love and drive action to reach
your fundraising goals.
Successfu
fundraising
is about
building a relationship and
trust.
Download our worksheets for success at
www.donorperfect.com/email-worksheets
44
M
ost organizations start email marketing
with the right goals in mind.
They want to increase donations, enroll donors
in a monthly giving program, solicit new gifts,
recruit volunteers, and strengthen relationships
within the community.
But then they struggle. It’s easy to feel lost, not
knowing what to send or when to send it.
In the end, they send out an underperforming
email or just give up without sending at all.
Either way, they’re leaving donations on the table.
Pla
People fail at email marketing because they
don’t have a plan.
An email marketing plan helps you stay focused,
motivated, and accountable. With a plan, you
never have to wonder what and when you’re
going to send.
Let’s take a look at the three simple steps to
planning your email marketing strategy:
5
Simple Steps to Planning Your
Email Marketing Strategy
1. Start with your organization’s most signicant goals
Take a few minutes to jot down the initiatives to support your goals
for the year. Do you hold a series of 5K races or annual gala? Are you
raising money to build a new gymnasium? Communicate to donors
so they know what goals and programs they’re supporting.
Use the Email Marketing Opportunities worksheet and enter
the milestones for each month or quarter that you’ll want to
communicate.
2. Fill in other key dates
like #GivingTuesday and
December 31st
#GivingTuesday and December
31st are two big days for
nonprots. Mark these dates
down as opportunities. Your
year-end tax statement is
another great milestone on the
calendar to thank and celebrate
your supporters.
In 2017, there
were 2.5 million
gifts donated
contributing over
$300 million dollars
raised online during
#GivingTuesday.
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3. Plot emails into your calendar
For this step, use our Email Marketing
Calendar. This calendar may look simple, but
it’s essential to achieving your email marketing
goals. Use your completed Email Marketing
Opportunities Worksheet to mark your events
and dates from each month onto your
calendar worksheet.
Next, schedule your email frequency depending
on the nature of the opportunity. Most of
your emails will have some time sensitivity
associated with them, like an event or a
donation campaign.
For these time-based communications,
we recommend sending a series of at least
three emails:
» An Announcement of your event and
fundraising goals. The timing on when
you send this email can be as little as two
weeks out or as much as three months
depending on the lead time your
audience needs.
» A Reminder about your event and
fundraising goal. Timing may vary but at
least a week out.
» And a Last Chance to take part in the
event and fundraising goal. Send an email
as close to the date as possible without
being too late for someone to take action.
7
DID YOU KNOW?
National Donut Day, the
rst Friday of every June,
was rst started by The
Salvation Army in Chicago
where volunteers handed
out donuts to World War I
soldiers.
Source: Guidestar
Emails that don’t have time sensitivity fall into the
category of informational communications.
These messages, focused less on donations and more
on sharing information to connect with donors and
volunteers, should be scheduled as necessary, but
plan on this type of message at least once a month.
Once you’ve lled out your calendar, you’ll have a
document to keep you on track and know exactly
when you need to get things done as part of your
communication strategy.
With an email marketing plan in place, you’ll be ready
to design emails that drive action for your cause.
88
W
ith your email marketing planned out, it’s
time to design your email.
One of the biggest reasons for underperforming
emails is a weak email design. With more emails
now opened on a mobile device, you must
design emails to look great on any device. Focus
only on the essential elements necessary to
convey your message and move your contacts
toward taking a specic action that measurably
supports your organization.
Desig
9
Essential Elements
of Email Design
1. Header
The rst thing to include in your email is a
well-crafted header. Your header contains the
From name, the Reply name, and the Subject
line. Why is the header a design element? It’s
because the header is rst thing people see in
the inbox.
For the From name, use your organization or
a recognizable name, so those receiving your
email know who sent it. Just like postal mail,
the sender plays a vital role in your reader’s
decision to open it.
For the Reply name, use an ocial email
address from your organization that you’ll
monitor for responses.
For the Subject line, ideally, keep it between
four to seven words that explain what your
email is about as concisely as possible.
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10
2. Preheader
The preheader acts like the second subject line
when being read on a mobile device, further
enticing people to open your email. You have ve
to eight words to capture your reader’s interest.
3. Organization Logo and Colors
After the header and preheader, reinforce your
brand by placing your organization’s logo at the top
of your email and incorporate your brand colors.
If your logo and colors stay consistent with
your website, your constituents will instantly
recognize your organization and email style.
Luckily, email marketing services like Constant
Contact make it easy to develop beautiful, branded
templates that are easy to read on any device.
Tip: Use tools like
Digital Color Meter for
Macs or Color Cop for PCs
to make sure the RGB
or Hex value is identical
with your organization’s
guidelines.
11
4. Image
Next, include an attention-grabbing image that
pulls the reader down into the next section. The
image should relate to the content of the email,
and be at least 600 pixels wide. Add a link to the
image so if clicked the reader gets directed to the
same destination as your call to action.
5. Text
Below your image, you should write your email
content. We’ll touch on what to create in the next
section. In any case, you want your message to
be easily read. When choosing fonts for your
emails, keep things simple. Using too many fonts
can make your emails look messy and distract
from your message.
Start with a direct headline that gets to the core of
your message. Use dark text on a light background
for maximum readability, and make your headline
larger than the body text (around 22 pt).
In the message body, we recommend using 14 pt
text that is either aligned left or centered. If you
use more than three sentences, you should left align.
6. Call to Action (CTA)
The Call to Action highlights the action you want
the reader to take. Make sure you provide links to
online donation forms, your website, social media
pages, and volunteer sign-up forms so it’s easy for
your supporters to take action.
Make the CTA stand out by using a button with text
to direct the reader as to what they should do next.
7. Footer
The nal element of your email design, the footer,
shows readers useful information about your
organization. The footer should include your
contact information such as your location, phone
number, and links to your social media pages. You
can even add a consistent donation call to action in
this space.
DID YOU KNOW?
The estimated value of a
volunteer’s time is
$24/hour.
Source: Independent Sector
13
H
ow can you sit down to write strong email
content with complete condence? Use a
simple, three-step persuasive formula to make
your writing process fast and eective.
Creat
14
Step Formula to Writing
a Successful Email
1. What are you trying to accomplish?
- Headline
State the purpose of your message — right in
your headline. Whether it’s about the people your
organization serves or your donors and volunteers
directly, readers should be able to understand the
focus of your message in seconds.
2. Why should the reader care?
- Message body
Below your headline, write a few sentences to
elaborate on the problem. Provide the relevant
details and explain why they matter to your
reader. Exclude any information that doesn’t help
your reader take the action you want them to take.
Keep your message clear
and concise. We’ve seen
that emails with 20 lines
of text or less typically
receive the highest
engagement.
3
3. How can the reader get involved?
- Call to action
Invite your reader to take part in solving the
problem. Tell readers the next step they should
take. This invitation becomes your call to action:
feed a hungry child, give clean water, stop
the hate.
15
Remember, not all emails
need to be about donations.
Here are nine ideas as inspiration
for your next email.
1. Send a thank you note
2. Celebrate a milestone or
anniversary
3. Highlight one of your
volunteers or partners
4. Share a video
5. Preview something you
are looking forward to
6. Feature one of your
employees
7. Share an interesting
article related to your
nonprot’s sector
8. Highlight your social
media accounts
9. Let your readers know
how they can get involved
in the community
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Best Practice:
Be sure to personalize
your emails with your
donor’s name and other
key information such as
the gift amount or your
relationship with them, so
each of your supporters
feels acknowledged
individually.
Get better results with targeted emails.
Even the best email won’t get results when sent
to the wrong people. Segmenting your contacts
into interest lists allows you to deliver more
valuable and relevant content to your readers.
Beyond audience segments like donors,
volunteers, and board members, consider these
segmentation ideas:
» Create a list of your most impactful
donors to send personalized
acknowledgments of their support and
contributions to your cause.
» Make new lists for every event you hold.
You can quickly send follow-up messages
to attendees of a particular event.
» Put together a list of your current donors
who haven’t made a gift this year and
incorporate them in your annual appeals
communications.
With DonorPerfect’s Constant Contact integration
you can segment your constituents on a number
of values including last gift amount, geography,
etc. so you target the right message to the right
audience.
Constant Contact’s segmentation tools give you
the ability to easily identify and group contacts
in order to send only the most relevant emails
that deliver big results.
Click segmentation automatically adds contacts
into lists when a reader clicks a link in an email.
You can then send more targeted and relevant
email campaigns to that group of contacts
based on their engagement.
17
E
mail marketing without reviewing your email
reports is like throwing a message in a bottle
into the ocean. It doesn’t matter how well planned,
designed, or written your message is because you’ll
never know what happened to it.
How can you see the impact of email marketing and
make sure that it’s worth your time?
We’re going to show you how to use your email
reports to see the impact email marketing is having on
your organization, using a simple but eective system.
Ready to get started? Let’s look at the Triple-A
Approach to email measurement.
Measur
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The Triple-A Approach
to
Emai Measuremen
1. Analyze your email reports
The rst step of measuring the impact of your
emails is to decide what it is you actually want
people to do after they read your emails.
Do you want them to donate? Maybe you want
them to engage with your email, clicking the
link inside and visiting your website. In that
case, you should focus on measuring open
rate, click-through rate, bounces, and opt-outs
(unsubscribes.)
If instead, your goal is to solicit feedback from your
audience through a survey, you should measure
response and completion rate.
Measurement strategies will dier based on
the type of email you’re sending. In 2017,
DonorPerfect clients using Constant Contact saw
an average open rate of 35% and a click rate of
9%. DonorPerfect clients have access to this data
forever within DonorPerfect for reporting and
segmentation.
Use the worksheets to help measure your
time-based and informational emails.
2. Assess how your emails are
supporting your organization goals
What are the numbers saying about your
marketing eorts?
Review the following terms in your
email report:
Total Sent indicates the total number of people
you sent this message to.
Opens by Device tells you the percentage of
people who opened your email on their phone
or desktop.
Open Rate shows what percentage of the total
number of people who were sent the message
opened to read it.
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Click Through Rate tells the percentage of
clicks an email receives based on the number of
contacts who opened the email.
Bounce Rate is the percentage of subscribers
who were unable to receive the message. The
bounce report gives you a reason for why the system
interpreted that they didn’t receive the email.
Unsubscribe Rate shows you how many opted
out of receiving your emails.
3. Adjust your strategy accordingly
Step back to see the full picture of your email
marketing. Don’t measure for the sake of
measuring. Instead, make sure you measure to
understand the impact of email marketing on
your organization.
Use the worksheets to tie your metrics to your
marketing goals.
Asses
Analyz
Adjus
T
he more people you have on your contact
list, the more people you have to rally
around your cause.
For this reason, you should always be looking
for more people to give you their contact
information. Then you’ll be able to reach them in
a place they visit every day — the inbox.
Here’s how to increase the likelihood of people
opting to give you their email addresses.
20
Gro
21
Questions You Must Answer
to Grow Your Email List
1. Why would someone subscribe to
your email list?
Few people wake up each morning hoping they’ll
get more emails.
Don’t ask for someone to join your email list, but
instead, focus on what they’ll get in exchange for
their email address.
People subscribe to nonprot email lists because
they want to show their continued support for
an organization and they want to receive
exclusive content.
More people will give you their email address
when you highlight the benets above.
2. Where should you ask for email
addresses?
There are three main ways to collect emails: in
person, through printed materials, and online.
If collecting at events, feature a sign-up sheet
at the registration table that invites people
to subscribe for future events or other
opportunities to get involved.
To collect via print materials, you can use a
Constant Contact feature called Text-to-Join.
With Text-to-Join, you choose a keyword that
people can text to a set number, they then text
their email address and are instantly added to
your email list.
Put signage around your event that encourages
attendees to use their phones to join your
email list. You can also put your Text-to-Join
information on your yers, brochures, and
direct mail pieces.
When asking for addresses online, link to your
sign-up form in your social media posts/proles.
You can also add a link to your sign-up form
in your email signature, and put static and
dynamic forms on your website.
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3. How should you ask people to sign up?
The key to any good list building script, online or in
person, is answering four questions most potential
subscribers will have.
First, what’s in it for them? Explain the value of
joining your email list.
Second, what objections do they have?
Address any potential concerns including the
frequency you’ll be sending emails, and how easy
it will be for them to unsubscribe.
Third, how can they sign up? Make it painless
and foolproof. Guide them through the signup
process, do it for them if possible.
Finally, what should they expect next? Explain
what happens next and what type of emails they
can expect to receive.
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Do more for your cause with email marketing
Armed with how to plan your email marketing
strategy, design emails that drive action, create
better email content, measure your email
marketing’s impact, and continually grow your email
list, we hope you’ll be able to achieve real results for
your nonprot with email marketing.
24
Raise More Money With Targeted
Communications
DonorPerfect’s Constant Contact integration
provides everything you need to drive results for
your organization through professional, eective
communications. From major donor appeals to
monthly giving campaigns, Constant Contact and
DonorPerfect make it easy to spot which messages
resonate best with each of your donors. Segment
lists in a snap to ensure that every ask is appropriate
and well-received.
Learn more at donorperfect.com/constantcontact
Don’ forge
your free email
worksheets.
Download our worksheets for success at
www.donorperfect.com/email-worksheets
27
» Easily create beautiful mobile-responsive emails
» Send targeted emails with advanced segmentation
» Real-time reporting to measure success
Develop and grow your most valuable relationships with
DonorPerfect and Constant Contact.
Learn more about DonorPerfect and Constant Contact at
donorperfect.com/constantcontact