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4 Important Steps to Improving Monthly Donor Retention

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Last week, I wrote about the coverage ratio for monthly donors and how important it is to start tracking it. If you don’t have a monthly donor retention process in place, you may find that you are not growing at all, no matter how many new monthly donors you bring in. You may just be treading water. 

In my many years of working in and with monthly donor programs, the first step is to realize that sustainers may drop out because of credit card problems, but you also commit to doing the best you can to keeping them.  

The second step is that you think about this as doing your monthly donors a favor. It’s a courtesy to let the donor know his or her card couldn’t be processed. Remember, the donor didn’t call you to say he or she wanted to stop. You, as fundraiser, have to just help him or her by making the gifts continue to come in. 

The third step is to help “motivate” your organization to allow you to follow up and spend some time and resources on this by annualizing the value of sustainers at risk. 

Say you have 500 sustainers who give $35 a month and, on average, some 5 percent of sustainers whose cards change every month. That’s 25 sustainers at risk. Their annual value is $10,500.  

Worth a phone call, right? Worth an email? Perhaps a letter, if you don’t have an email address?

And better yet, implement a credit card updater. Ask your donor base or online processing partner about it. More and more are adding it to the mix. It is literally “peanuts” compared to the value of your saved monthly donors. 

The fourth step is that you map out the process of what happens with your sustainers now. This seems silly, I know, but believe me, it’s going to be so helpful. It’s always good to document processes so anybody can understand and see them, but it will also help you understand if and when there are “holes.” 

Here are just a few questions to get you started with writing down the sustainer process: 

  • How do you get the information that a card expires or declines? 
  • When do you get it? 
  • Could you get it before the card expires? 
  • Who gives it to you? 
  • How long does it take to get to you? 
  • How often do you get it? 
  • Does the report give you everything you need to do a follow up? 
  • What’s the annualized value of the monthly donors who are at risk? 
  • When does the credit card updater run if you have it? 
  • What is the best timing to do follow-ups? 
  • Who will do the follow-ups? 
  • How will you track the results of these? 
  • What options are available to do so within your organization? 
  • How many times will you follow up before you give up on the monthly donor? 

A combination of follow-ups may be necessary to best reach the donor. Don’t give up too soon. Just like you, donors are busy. 

If you take just these four steps, you will make a big difference for the health of your program and you’ll be well ahead of the 47 percent of organizations that don’t follow up on lapsing sustainers at all. (See here for a great study Brady Josephson did a while back.)

First posted by NonProfitPRO on March 25, 2019.

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