- Sending your year-end solicitation within a month of when the donor made his/her most recent donation.
- Losing track of the donor's preferred title of address. Don't send me a letter that starts with "Dear Mr. Hirsch."
- Claiming, even humorously, that you're the charity most worthy of receiving donations. This could be funny in boom times. In a year when employment in Alameda County is close to 12%, the economy is in the tank, and there's a lot of suffering, not funny and not persuasive coming from a small arts organization.
- Getting the amount being donated wrong in your acknowledgement letter because, as you admitted, you based the letter on email correspondence from Party 1 rather than looking at the actual donation made by Party 2. I am never donating to your organization again, as a result.
- Having a web site that makes it look as though you are buying something rather than making a donation. Confusing!
- Sending a solicitation letter when you never sent the acknowledgement for a previous donation.
- Rule number 2,391: If you're running a phone campaign, remember to cross off the person from your list who (this year) politely declined to donate; this in case you accidentally call them during dinner the very next evening, twice.
- Don't send your contributors a useless gift package parcel post. If they've moved, they'll have to pay a huge postage due, as the USPS free forwarding doesn't include parcel post.
- Sending a solicitation every month with your printed newsletter. Having a huge DONATE button in the monthly email newsletter. I unsubscribed from the email newsletter and asked to be taken off the group's mailing list. I donated to them twice last year. Seriously, folks, make it possible for people to receive information from you that doesn't include solicitations.
Lisa Hirsch's Classical Music Blog.
The iron tongue of midnight hath told twelve. Lovers, to bed; 'tis almost fairy time.
Opinions expressed on this blog are mine and not my employer's.
Fund-Raising: The Good, the Bad, the Indifferent
Errors to avoid, with thanks to readers who contributed some of these goofs:
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