A Journey Inside the Minds of your Donors

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Learn how neuromarketing and psychology can be applied to fundraising. Click on images within the presentation to be taken to the research or resource that supports the particular point.

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A Journey Inside the Brain of your Donors and Clients

Leah Eustace, CFRE

Principal and Chief Idea Goddess @LeahEustace

The power of persuasion

So, giving people the opportunity to invest

in your organization is, in reality, doing them a favour

Moral identity matters

“Thanks for calling and becoming a kind and caring WFIU

donor (or client)”

Those two words increased giving by 21% amongst female donors (no impact on males).

Humans experience psychic numbing

“If I think of the mass I will never act, if I think of the one, I will”

We really don’t make any sense

Give $10 million to fight a disease claiming 20,000 lives and save 10,000.

or

Give $10 million to fight a disease claiming 290,000 lives and save 20,000.

Read more about this study

And so does readability

If your fundraising messages has a grade level higher than 7, it will draw a lower response than one written at 7 or less. It’s a tested reality.

Speaking of planned giving

Most people have no idea what those words mean

Why, not how

Telling someone your goal makes it less likely to happen

In summary

• Use persuasion

• Focus on emotion

• Moral identity matters

• Use stories, not stats

• Don’t forget design & readability

• Stop using “planned” and “legacy” giving

• Why, not how

• Beware of stating your goal and/or raising awareness

• Actions speak louder than words

Leah Eustace, CFRE Chief Idea Goddess, Good Works

@LeahEustace leah@goodworksco.ca

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