A few years ago, I joined 20 organizations as a monthly donor with a credit card that was going to expire one month after joining. I purposely did this to see the actions nonprofits took and how long it would take them to do so.
The sad reality was that only two of the organizations called me. They did so within the first month of my card expiring, so that was good. They only tried calling me once, but they did leave a message.
I, of course, didn’t call them back to see what they’d do next. Another sad reality: a big nothing until 8 months later!
One organization’s new fundraiser looked at the organization’s monthly giving program and picked up the phone to see if she could bring back some of the lapsed monthly donors. Guess what? It worked! She was able to catch me live, and she asked me if I wanted to come back. And I did.
I hadn’t paid in seven months now. She didn’t ask me for the missing months, and I certainly wouldn’t recommend you do so. That would be a bit too “greedy” for my taste. If the donor offers, that’s a different story.
Rather, I recommend preventing the drop off to begin with. It starts by picking one day in the month to sit down and look at your monthly donors and see whose card is about to expire. If that’s not available to you, see whose card expired or declined. So track your monthly donors at least once a month and see what’s going on.
Then don’t wait. You must act right away for best results. The donor probably hasn’t realized yet that their gift wasn’t processed this month. Call and leave a message if you can’t reach the donor live. Send an email, and ask the donor to call you or have a link to an update page. Send a letter, and ask the donor to send in a reply form, call you or go online to update.
Then wait two weeks. Track who came back and who hasn’t. Then REPEAT the same at least once more for those monthly donors you still haven’t received updated information for.
If you can put credit card updater in place for your organization, run to do that. It will help lower the number of donors you have to follow up on. But it doesn’t find everybody, so repeat the credit card process next month as well.
Track your monthly donors at risk. Annualize their value, and track how many monthly donors you’re keeping with the actions above, so you can make tweaks to the process. You’ll also know how many monthly donors you’re bringing back with a second request, a third request and so on. I know organizations that stop at one month, some at two months, but several don’t stop for four or even six months.
So, make this your new mantra when it comes to monthly donors: TRACK. ACT. REPEAT. KEEP.
Just consider the amount you’ll be able to retain. Credit card updater, a call, an email and a letter are tiny investments compared to what these monthly donors are worth in the long run.