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You are here: Home / Blog / A love song to the small donor

A love song to the small donor

Hanny Naibaho

The small donor is not really small

I’ve been trying to update and correct information in our database. It’s a chore. I’m going through everything line by line, gift by gift.

I realize one thing as I work, though. While I’ve only been at my organization for a year, so many of the names I see are familiar.

It happens when you’ve worked in fundraising for a while in one place – particularly in a smaller city. There are names that are very recognizable. And not because they’re the donors everyone is chasing.

I’m talking about the smaller donors who make up the backbone of the community. Their $50 and $25 and $10 gifts don’t jump out at you at first. They certainly don’t get much public attention or many accolades. But there they are, at organization after organization, year after year.

They tend to be very loyal. And very regular – sometimes giving every year at the same time, to the day. As donors, they don’t ask for much. They rarely complain. They don’t give for public recognition or perks. They just quietly make their gifts, over and over again.

We couldn’t do without them.

That’s why I love programs that recognize loyalty as much as gift size. These wonderful people expect so little that they’re completely delighted when they are recognized. It takes so little effort to make them feel important.

Start a loyalty program. Recognize them in your annual report. Send them a special thank you – just because. Build in a special event or two just for your long-time donors. They deserve to feel special. And I promise that you’ll love meeting them.

They do so much for our communities. Why don’t we do more to recognize their contributions?

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Filed Under: Annual Giving, Blog, Donor communications Tagged With: loyalty, Nonprofit, small donors 9 Comments

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Comments

  1. thegoodcounsel says

    January 21, 2014 at 9:27 pm

    Terrific posting, So true. jim toscano

    Reply
    • Mary Cahalane says

      January 21, 2014 at 9:32 pm

      Thanks very much, Jim.

      Reply
  2. greatergoodfundraising says

    January 22, 2014 at 8:51 am

    Mary,
    Loyal donors are the backbone of your development department. It is nice when you get a large gift, but they tend to be fewer and farther apart, but those who give more often in smaller amounts make gifts that add up to that same large amount. It’s a pity that more organizations don’t recognize that.

    Reply
    • Mary Cahalane says

      January 22, 2014 at 9:11 am

      I know we agree on that, Richard. Even if their total giving is never the same, though – that loyalty matters. And that $25 from them may be more meaningful than the $1000 from someone else.

      Reply
  3. Michael J. Rosen, CFRE says

    January 27, 2014 at 8:08 pm

    Mary, I appreciate your post about small donors. Small donors are wonderful. They generate a great deal of financial support, demonstrate broad community support. have important lifetime value for an organization, and are a source of major donors. One large charity I worked with found that over 1/3 of its major donors first engaged the organization as a small donor. Thanks for talking about these small but mighty charity supporters.

    Reply
    • Mary Cahalane says

      January 28, 2014 at 12:27 pm

      Thanks for commenting, Michael. I knew you’d feel the same way I do!

      Reply

Trackbacks

  1. Triage and the nonprofit fundraiser | Hands-on Fundraising says:
    January 28, 2014 at 9:07 pm

    […] wrote last week about our smaller donors and how wonderful they are. The often unsung backbone of many […]

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  2. When to use your inside or outside voice ⋆ Hands-On Fundraising says:
    September 22, 2020 at 11:48 am

    […] You really want donors to feel they matter. And they all do. […]

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  3. Treating So-Called Small Donors Like Rockstars ⋆ Hands-On Fundraising says:
    February 4, 2021 at 11:37 am

    […] reality is that small donations lead a bread crumb trail toward legacy gifts like this. In fact, monthly recurring donors are seven […]

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