Graham Richards Legacy Presentation Nahf Derry 09

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Something old, something new, something borrowed, something blue: Legacy Marketing ideas Graham Richards Graham Richards Freelance Legacy Fundraiser Freelance Legacy Fundraiser

Transcript of Graham Richards Legacy Presentation Nahf Derry 09

Page 1: Graham Richards Legacy Presentation   Nahf Derry 09

Something old, something new,

something borrowed,

something blue:

Legacy Marketing ideas

Graham RichardsGraham Richards

Freelance Legacy FundraiserFreelance Legacy Fundraiser

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We canWe can’’t afford to do that!t afford to do that!

ThatThat’’s just for the big charitiess just for the big charities

� What the major charities do:

� National & Regional Newspaper ads

� TV, Radio and Cinema ads

� Posters & Hoardings

� Direct Marketing

� Face to Face legacy fundraisers

� Events & Visits

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Large campaigns = large costs!Large campaigns = large costs!

� Advertising design, printing and display costs

� Staff costs

� Media costs

� No one expects small, local charities to engage at this level

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However: for all charitiesHowever: for all charities

the potential is great!the potential is great!

� With charitable bequests in 16% of all Wills

� That means 84% are still to be tapped

� Around 88% of charity supporters have already made a Will

� We need to be asking if they’ve included us?

� And tell them it’s easy to add a codicil if they haven’t!

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The key point I want to makeThe key point I want to make

today is that:today is that:

Small is Bountiful!Small is Bountiful!

� Small, local charities have real advantages

� Legacy marketing doesn’t have to cost the earth

� Local knowledge is a valuable commodity to be utilised

� Local charities have local resources

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The local scene:The local scene:

� Advantages:

� You’re known personally by many people

� Local people have personal experience of your services

� You have useful local contacts and networks

� There’s a strong - local - human interest

� Money raised locally is being spent locally, benefiting local people

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The local scene:The local scene:

� Small can be very cost effective:� Using those local links

� Gifts in kind (i.e. free design for advertising?)

� Special rates (i.e. printing) might be possible

� Places to promote through (shops & services)

� Publications to advertise in (local papers, community magazines, etc) Ask if they have any free space and provide them with print-ready artwork to drop in.

� Utilising local services (i.e. postal round robins)

� Using your own volunteers as part of the process

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The local scene:The local scene:

� Use your local knowledge to target your audiences more specifically:� Where is the most privately owned housing?

� Where are the tenant-purchased ex-council houses?

� What local companies do you have links with?

� What warm contacts do your staff & trustees know?

� Where and how are your staff working closely with local people and local organisations?

� Who are local celeb’s that have experienced your services and who might endorse you?

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Legacy Marketing: the basic Legacy Marketing: the basic

messagemessage

�� What is it we are trying to get across?What is it we are trying to get across?�� ItIt’’s all about the needs all about the need

�� The benefits that can be brought aboutThe benefits that can be brought about

�� How ordinary individuals can help meet thisHow ordinary individuals can help meet this

�� Gifts in Wills, big or small, make a differenceGifts in Wills, big or small, make a difference

�� Two examples that will help us understand Two examples that will help us understand this:this:

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A reclusive pensioner who lived a life of a pauper has left £6 million to a children’s hospice in his Will. Ex-surveyor, Jack Witham lived alone above a garage in a flat he stuffed with bargains he found at car boot sales. Mrs Susanne Fry, a friend of Jack’s said, “If you saw him, you wouldn’t think he had two ha’pennies to rub together.”

His gift will enable Naomi House Children’s Hospice, near Winchester, to build a new centre for seriously ill teenagers. “It’s a complete bolt out of the blue. We knew nothing about it until we received a letter from his executors,” said Hospice Manager, Ray Kipling.

The enormous donation – the biggest the hospice has ever received –was particularly surprising, because the reclusive old man was unknown to them . Mrs Fry said Mr Witham wanted to help young people and opted for Naomi House when he saw the good work they were doing . Mr Kipling added: “It has allowed us to do something brilliant. We shall be naming the new centre “Jack’s Place”.”

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A small parish in Wakefield Diocese, who struggled to pay their Parish Share, faced a crisis when their ancient boiler suddenly blew up at the end of a service one Sunday morning. The cost of a new one was beyond what they could afford and pay their Parish Share at the same time. They went public about the problem , using their monthly newsletter and the local press to get the message out.

A few weeks later a local solicitor contacted them, to say they would be receiving several thousand pounds from a local lady’s Will. She was not a member of the parish church and not known to the parish priest. It turned out that the solicitor was an executor of her Will and she had left a discretionary legacy, one where the Executors are left to decide where the money shall go. Having read of the local church’s need , the solicitor put them forward as one of the recipients.

As a result, they not only got a new boiler fitted, they were able to carry out other much-needed repairs at the same time.

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So, letSo, let’’s get marketing!s get marketing!

� How can you effectively market your legacy need?

� Let’s start with

1. Using existing channels of communication

� And then

2. Developing new ways of communicating

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Legacy Marketing: Legacy Marketing:

using your Newsletterusing your Newsletter

� Your Newsletter:

� Goes to majority of your supporters

� It costs nothing to advertise your need in it

� It’s regular (drip, drip technique)

� Can go into more depth (features, articles)

� Can feature existing supporters (powerful message to readers, i.e. “they’re one of us”)

� Promote special initiatives “Make a Will Week”

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Legacy Marketing: Legacy Marketing:

using your Newsletterusing your Newsletter

� Your Newsletter – a few Do’s & Dont’s:

� Your newsletter is good publicity for legacies if…

� It gives a balanced picture of your work, so…

� Ensure it has a mix of operational, general & F/R news

� Don’t over-use fundraising (many do and you can’t find the work of the charity in them!)

� Tell real stories about real people (even if you have to change names, keep it real)

� LEGACIES MUST FEATURE IN EVERY ISSUE!

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Legacy Marketing: Legacy Marketing:

using talks to local groupsusing talks to local groups

� Talks to local groups� A great opportunity for legacy marketing

� Audiences are usually the right age group!

� Talk passionately about the charity and its wonderful work

� Let them know what it all costs

� Tell them how you raise the money

� ALWAYS END TALKING ABOUT LEGACIES

� Invite them for a visit and tour if possible

� Train your volunteers to give talks for you

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Legacy Marketing: Legacy Marketing:

using your legacy administrationusing your legacy administration

� Legacy administration� Small charities often have one person doing it all

� Marketing and administration of legacies

� Be relational with executors, especially if Next of Kin� Write personal letters – not general templates

� Always be sensitive to their needs and circumstances

� Thank them every time something comes in – you could even telephone them!

� When it’s over, invite them in to see where the bequest will be spent

� Offer to write a short obituary online or in your newsletter

� They could be your next legacy benefactor!

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Legacy Marketing: Legacy Marketing:

using your existing donorsusing your existing donors

� Your donors:

� Already “warm” to you – a real advantage

� Many have personal experience of you

� Age profile – have you got their age data?

� Use of small scale, personal DM? (Get your CEO or Chair of Trustees to write personally)

� Use of focus groups to inform you and them about legacies (and attitudes towards them)

� Use of market research – ask w/o asking!

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Legacy Marketing: using your Legacy Marketing: using your

existing volunteersexisting volunteers

� Use your volunteers to:� Give talks

� Help with legacy promotion

� Deliver posters

� Be a source of simple legacy information

� Write articles for your newsletter

� They will need training, materials and support for this

� Don’t over-build the role: i.e. they’re not specialists

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Legacy Marketing: Legacy Marketing:

developing new waysdeveloping new ways

� Posters:

� Produced in-house or outsourced

� DTP makes this easy to do in-house and cheap

� You might only need a small scale campaign

� Print just what you need

� See if there’s a local advertising design Co

� Would they do it as in-kind support?

� Point out the kudos it could give them

� What about a local art & design college?

� Offer a cash prize to best designs?

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Legacy Marketing: Legacy Marketing:

developing new waysdeveloping new ways

� Posters – targeting your audience:� Use public places where over 50’s hang out…e.g.:

� Libraries (may have round robin service)

� GP’s surgeries (may have a round robin service)

� Dentists

� Opticians

� Osteopaths/chiropractors

� Solicitors offices

� Clubs (bowls, dancing, social, etc)

� Your own charity shops

� Supermarket notice boards (Morrison’s Cafes: very popular with senior citizens!)

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Legacy Marketing: Legacy Marketing:

developing new waysdeveloping new ways

� Posters:

� Use A4 size (good for small notice boards)

� Use A3 or larger in your own charity shops

� Think BIG as well

� Hoardings at cheap periods (i.e. after New Year)

� Transport – buses, bus stops, stations (might get a free deal!)

� Corporate supporters may display posters too

� Offices, factories, shops

� A few poster examples…

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Legacy Marketing: Legacy Marketing:

using legacy brochuresusing legacy brochures

� Remember: 88% of charity supporters have made a Will� So don’t write brochures saying how important it is to make a Will

� You ought to be saying, “Have you included a gift in your Will for us and do you know how simple it is to add a change to your Will?”

� Avoid waffle about “helping us to plan ahead for the future” – legacy income is not predictable!

� Ask yourself: Do we need a legacy brochure?

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Marketing: legacy brochuresMarketing: legacy brochures

� If you do have one, do talk about:

� The great work your charity does

� What it achieves / how it helps people

� How legacies can make remarkable things possible

� The sort of sums that can achieve great things (both small and large)

� “You can do this or make this possible”

� Your charity’s performance: successes, professionalism and future longevity

� Include plenty of Passion!

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Marketing legaciesMarketing legacies

� In all your publicity use:

� Simple words and terms

� E.g. “a gift in your Will” not legacy or bequest

� Other people’s words and real stories

� Good use of images says it better than words

� Passion again and again and again!

� Links to your website where you can expand your information, etc

� Clever touches (e.g. St Gemma’s Blue Plaques)

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What other novel ways could be What other novel ways could be

utilised?utilised?

� Beermats – once tried by Greenpeace, Australia� FilPots – the replacement for the pub ashtray

� A unique form of advertising on a 6-sided cardboard container that sits on pub tables, in restaurants

� 80% of pubs approached now take them� Give one to your local solicitors for their waiting area

� Car window stickers� Cheap to produce� Insert into newsletters� Longevity and public visibility = brand reinforcement

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What will it cost?What will it cost?

� It could be cheaper than you think!

� Posters are cheap to produce and display� Try to use B&W images and text

� Print in-house on a laser printer

� Use other people’s mailing services to circulate materials

� Brochures will cost money to design (if not done in-house) and print� See if a corporate sponsor will pay

� Don’t produce something that looks amateur

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What will it cost?What will it cost?

� £1,000 pa is not a great amount, especially if it eventually brings in £1m+! The ROI is 1:1000, enough to make any Trustee smile!

� You’d be amazed what you can achieve with quite modest sums if you plan it carefully

� Special promotions can cost extra

� E.g. £350 for two aluminium blue plaques

� E.g. £800 for 4 hoarding posters x 2 weeks

� Try to get special deals - £5k for £50k+ rental

� However, restrict special promo’s to keep a healthy impact and costs down

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Remember: Small is bountiful!Remember: Small is bountiful!

� You don’t have to be big to be effective and you might just have the edge over larger charities by being small and local

� It’s all about creativity, innovation, quality, good use of local knowledge, networks, data and resources, as well as the ability to pester people to give you something for nothing!

� And anyway, isn’t that what fundraisers do?

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Thank you

Graham RichardsFreelance Fundraiser

[email protected]: www.freelancefundraiser.co.uk