Categories
- Arts & Entertainment
- Business
- Advertising
- Bookkeeping
- Branding
- Careers
- Careers Employment
- Change Management
- Communication
- Corporate
- Customer Service
- Entrepreneurialism
- Ethics
- Financing
- Franchise
- Fundraising
- Human Resources
- Management
- Marketing
- Marketing Direct
- Negotiation
- Networking
- Outsourcing
- Partnerships
- PR
- Presentation
- Public Relations
- Resumes Cover Letters
- Sales
- Sales Management
- Sales Teleselling
- Sales Training
- Small Business
- Strategic Planning
- Team Building
- Top7 or 10 Tips
- Venture Capital
- Workplace Communication
- Communications
- Computers
- Culture & Society
- Disease & Illness
- Fashion
- Finance
- Food & Beverage
- Health & Fitness
- Hobbies
- Home & Family
- Home Based Business
- Internet Business
- Legal
- Pets & Animals
- Politics
- Product Reviews
- Recreation & Sports
- Reference & Education
- Religion
- Self Improvement
- Shopping
- Travel & Leisure
- Vehicles
- Writing & Speaking
Information
Donation Request Letters Need Strong Protagonist, Says Fundraising Company
Do your donation request letters lack a protagonist? The most compelling appeal letters feature a man or a woman, a boy or a girl, that captures the donor’s attention and makes the appeal human, moving and profitable.
The most memorable novels, movies and television shows feature strong protagonists. The protagonist in a drama or story is the leading actor, the principal character. Some examples:
BOOKS
The Hobbit: Bilbo Baggins.
Moby Dick: Ishmael.
Great Expectations: Pip.
War and Peace: Pierre Bezukhov.
Catcher in the Rye: Holden Caulfield.
MOVIES
Out of Africa: Karen Blixen.
The Ten Commandments: Moses.
Star Wars: Luke Skywalker.
Gone with the Wind: Scarlett O’Hara.
My Fair Lady: Eliza Doolittle.
If you’re a hospital, your protagonist can be a heroic cancer patient.
If you’re a relief and development agency, your protagonist can be an aid worker serving AIDS orphans in Nigeria.
If you’re an environmental advocacy organization, your protagonist can be an activist chained to the railing outside the Indonesian Embassy in Ottawa.
If you’re an opera house, your protagonist can be your youngest, most promising singer.
A strong protagonist brings your fundraising letters alive because donors are people who give to people to help people. They don’t want to read about programs and policies. They want to read about people—the people you help, and your people who do the helping. A protagonist helps you tell your institutional story in human terms, to translate your case for support into flesh and blood.
Here is an example, taken from a thank-you letter mailed by a hospital to donors who had recently joined the hospital’s monthly giving program:
Dear Mr. Sharpe,I shook hands with our country’s youngest heart transplant patient the other day, and he asked me to thank you. You are now a vital member of the team that’s keeping Brad alive.
Brad Phillips was only a few weeks old when the surgeons here at the Bendix Memorial Hospital gave him a new heart, saving his life. That was back in 1985. Since then, Brad has been rushed to hospital by air ambulance, caught pneumonia too many times to remember, received a second heart transplant, been diagnosed with cytomegalovirus disease, suffered kidney failure, and fallen in love with the hospital staff.
“I actually spend more time with them than I do with the family that brought me up,” says Brad. “I’m sure glad we get along so well!”
Your donors will quickly understand and embrace your cause when you show, in dramatic ways, who you are and who you serve, rather than describe what you do by naming your programs or listing your services. And the most vivid way to do that in a fundraising letter is to single out one person whom you help, or one person on your staff (or a volunteer), and to tell your story through that protagonist, showing them in action.
© 2006 Sharpe Copy Inc. You may reprint this article online and in print provided the links remain live and the content remains unaltered (including the "About the Author" message).
----
About the author
Alan Sharpe is a professional fundraising letter writer, instructor and mentor who helps non-profit organizations raise funds, build relationships and retain loyal donors using creative fundraising letters. Learn more about his services, view free sample fundraising letters, and sign up for free weekly tips like this at http://www.RaiserSharpe.com
Article source: Expert Articles
Most Recent Articles in Marketing Direct category
- Achieving Expectations With Direct Mail Marketing - By: Janice Jenkins
how do you make your direct mail marketing exactly the way you expected it to be? - Color Scheme Choices For Custom Catalogs - By: Lynne Saarte
proper color schemes you can use for custom catalogs - Do Not Print Your Own Business Card Alone - By: Lynne Saarte
you will find wisdom in professional online business card printing - D I Y Business Card Printing - By: Kaye Marks
You might think that business card printing and design is only done by professionals. To tell the truth though, you are wrong. - Making Cheap Postcards Look Great through Professional Postcard Illusions - By: Katie Marcus
Tired of printing cheap postcards that do not look great? In this article, I will teach you some postcard printing illusions that can make your cheap postcards look decent and very presentable. - Finding Inspiration For Custom Greeting Cards - By: Janice Jenkins
tips in finding inspiration for your color greeting cards - Learning How To Print Online In 7 Steps - By: Lynne Saarte
six steps below to learn how to print with an online printing company - How To Deploy Cheap Catalogs - By: Lynne Saarte
five options in deploying your cheap catalogs effectively - Are Your Custom Brochures Boring? - By: Janice Jenkins
there are many factors that can make brochure printing boring - Turn Leads Into Customers - By: Lynne Saarte
strategies that you can use to turn your leads into real profit sources for your business
