Our recent Q1 animal welfare benchmarks revealed that organizations are continuing to see revenue growth, driven by donor value, in 2023 after moderate growth during the pandemic.
To continue to capitalize off this growth, we shared a few areas animal welfare causes needed to focus on in the second half of the year. Included in that list was the development of a stronger pipeline for major giving.
In this blog, I'm sharing a few strategies and tactics animal welfare organizations can use to identify and reach new major donor audiences to build their pipeline.
Animal welfare organizations have a treasure trove of data at their fingertips, but unfortunately, oftentimes it goes unused.
The easiest way to stay ahead of your competitors is to take the time to dig into your donor data. Using a mixture of both advanced modeling and RFM, animal welfare organizations can understand which donors have the capacity, affluence and, most of all, the potential to give major gifts to your cause so that you don’t waste valuable resources speaking to the wrong people.
You likely have a board and C-suite full of influential leaders—don't be afraid to partner with them! Take a look at the list of people closest to your organization and use those with the highest level of influence in your community as spokespeople.
Not only can they help multiply the efforts of your major gift officers, but you also never know what other influential people they have relationships with—people who are searching for the right cause to donate to.
I see corporate partnerships as an untapped opportunity for many animal welfare organizations. There are more corporations looking to partner with nonprofits like yours than you might expect.
Corporations are full of animal lovers just like you and are looking for ways to engage their employees in the community and social responsibility efforts. Plus, through a strategic corporate partnership, you’ll gain an entirely new audience of donors and volunteers you may not have reached before.
It’s no secret: Animal welfare donors are some of the most passionate givers—especially major donors. This passion is your superpower, and so it can’t be taken for granted.
Animal welfare organizations must have a strategic cadence of communication planned to continue to steward and cultivate major donors after they’ve made a gift. It’s about letting them see the impact they’ve made with their donation, sharing the strategies you have in place to help animals in your community and casting a vision for how their continued support will help achieve that goal.
At the end of the day, you and your major donors share the same purpose: helping care for animals and providing them with loving homes. Use the passion you share along with the strategies mentioned above to build deeper relationships with your donor base.