Building Trust and Securing Multiple Gifts
Donor retention is perhaps the most important indicator of performance for any nonprofit organization. When donors choose to give, or not give, to your organization, they’re sending a direct message of how they feel about your nonprofit and its effectiveness.
Effective engagement with existing donors is necessary to build trust and secure multiple gifts. LDMI’s proven donor retention strategy can help your nonprofit build sustainable relationships with your supporters.
LDMI’s experienced staff will help your nonprofit:
- Develop and maintain an effective “Thank You” program that promptly thanks your supporters and encourages subsequent gifts;
- Produce and mail compelling newsletters that bond donors to your organization and cause;
- Reactivate lapsed donors with targeted and innovative mailings;
- Create an effective monthly giving or sustainer program that keeps your most loyal donors engaged in supporting your cause.
Contact LDMI today to start implementing your donor retention strategy.
Case Study
Donor Retention is the lifeblood of your nonprofit…
Effective engagement with existing donors is necessary to build trust and secure multiple gifts. LDMI’s proven donor retention strategy can help your nonprofit build sustainable relationships with your supporters.
Check out our Case Study focuses on Growing Your Donor Database. In it, we analyze our House and Prospect Mailings over the course of 9 months for a new Nonprofit. In it, you’ll learn:
- how to balance house and prospect files
- effective scheduling strategies
- how to position your next newsletter
“Lawrence Direct Marketing took over our direct mail fundraising at the beginning of 2014, and in less than three years have built an annual array of successful House mailings and have re-started membership growth with new-donor-acquisition mailings at a satisfyingly low cost. Mike and Jim Lawrence know “the Catholic market” and our Monastery has benefited greatly from their expertise.”
Friar John-Sebastian OFM, Secretariat — Franciscan Monastery of the Holy Land in America