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New Year’s Resolutions for Your Fundraising Events

Written by A.J. Steinberg, CFRE of Queen Bee Fundraising

The holiday season is upon us!  A crazy, hectic time for nonprofits whose intentions are firmly glued on year-end giving. But soon this old year will fade away, replaced with a new year filled with great possibilities for your fundraising events.

Fundraising Events

For this new year, give your organization the gift of successful fundraising events. This is the time to bid farewell to bad event planning habits and to make a commitment to a implement new event strategies. This is the year to transform your bloated, boring events into sleek and engaging money-making machines.

Here are five game-changing New Year’s resolutions you can make to get your fundraising events to their peak performance. 

Resolution 1 – Build your fundraising event right

Before jumping into your event production, it is crucial to pinpoint who you want to see attending your fundraising event. To ensure that your event will appeal to this specific group, you must consider their interests and abilities, both physical and financial.

For example, if you are an environmental organization, you most likely have an active support base who prefers to be outdoors rather than at a sit-down black-tie event. Younger demographics usually don’t have the financial resources for higher ticket prices, and older crowds prefer to be seated with easy access to elevators and restrooms.

TIP:  Include your board members in the pre-planning conversation. Listen carefully to what they liked, and didn’t like about your prior events. By listening to their concerns, you will be able to build an event which appeals to them. A fundraising event that appeals to board members means that they will be more likely to be engaged in helping with the event.

Resolution 2 – Choose an amazing honoree for your fundraising event

Your honoree should be a cash cow for your event. If you choose the right person, their participation can rev up sales of sponsorships, tribute ads and tickets.

The best honorees are strong supporters who have in the past contributed to your organization in a meaningful way. They should not have been honored previously by other organizations. Avoid choosing politicians or individuals affiliated with other charitable organizations as honorees. These folks have tapped out their fundraising capabilities for their own causes. 

Tip: To effectively engage honorees, make them feel special. Keep them in the loop as the planning progresses to help build their excitement and enthusiasm. Ask their opinion on certain elements such as entertainment elements or the fund a need. Most importantly, don’t make them feel they are just one honoree among a large crowd! Best practice is to have maximum two honorees, which makes each person feel truly honored. This also keeps the length of your stage program down to a manageable length. Nothing bores fundraising event guests more than sitting through a multitude of long honoree speeches!

Resolution 3 – Recruit a superstar event committee 

Your event committee is key to your fundraising event’s success. Not only will they help with planning and procurement of auction items, but they are also your best marketing tool.

Choose your committee chairs carefully with eyes on their influence and reach in their social and business circles. I prefer two event chairs as it doubles the impact of having their names listed on invitations and event materials.

When committee members are engaged and appreciated, they help solicit sponsorships and auction items. Their enthusiastic word-of-mouth is also free marketing of your event which helps maximize your fundraising events’ ticket sales.

Tip: I always aim to have twelve people sit on my committees. This is ideal for bonding as a group and gives us plenty of person-power for soliciting auction items and setting up. Too many people serving on a committee can diminish the feeling of working as a team which is so beneficial to a fundraising event’s success. Also, I avoid having board members as committee members as they have already asked their peers many times over, for donations and support. The idea of a committee is to bring in new assets to your fundraising event!

CLICK HERE to see how we help organizations like yours create more profitable and engaging events!

Resolution 4 – Craft your fundraising event’s stage program to inspire

Research shows that fundraising event guests are often bored. This happens because too little time is spent sequencing and scripting the event’s stage program. A stage program may not be on a stage – it could be in a living room or on a golf course. But it is the portion of the event when you speak to your guests and make the case for support.

My advice is to spend far less time on the silent auction and far more time crafting a stage program that opens hearts and wallets.

Tip: There are some rules that I follow when sequencing a stage program that help keep the audience engaged. Here is a sample of stage sequencing that works to keep audience members from falling asleep.  

Learn more about how I can help you craft stage programs that open hearts and wallets! CLICK HERE

Monthly Giving

Resolution 5 – Be ready with a post-event cultivation plan

You did it! Your fundraising event was a huge hit, and you have succeeded in convincing guests that your organization is worthy of their support. Now, post-event is the crucial time for starting the cultivation process to turn those attendees into supporters.

Have a well-conceived post event communication plan ready in advance to parlay your success into new supporters. The sweet spot for starting post-event communication is usually one to two days after the event’s completion.

Tip: Just as with donors, you need a cultivation plan and a communication plan for transforming attendees into supporters. It is important that the post-event communications include sequencing for all attendees and those who donated at higher levels during the event. 

Here is a sample of a post-communication plan. Remember, to be most effective with post-even engagement you need to be timely with your outreach to attendees. This means your first email in the sequence, or phone call for large donors, must be done within 48-hours of the event.

Learn more about how to create events that engage and inspire! Visit us at www.QueenBeeFundraising.com

But wait, there’s more!

Immediately following the fundraising event, while the details are still fresh in everyone’s mind, send out a post-event survey to collect committee and board members’ impressions of both the planning and the event itself.

Plan a wrap up meeting where you can do some well-deserved victory laps around the meeting room. This is when you can discuss the results of the surveys with your team. This is the time to focus on what did and did not work with this event, and do some brainstorming on how to make next year’s fundraising event even better.

Want an example of a post-event survey? CLICK HERE for a sample gala survey. 

And here’s even a little more!

If you feel energized after purging yourself of unproductive event planning habits, consider a year-end fundraising event audit. This audit assesses your events’ ROI, volunteer and board engagement, and attendee cultivation success. 

The most important resolution of all…GRATITUDE

As you look forward to the year ahead, take a moment to appreciate all that you have accomplished this past year with your fundraising events. 

Reflect on all the wonderful volunteers who have stepped in to help with planning and running your events. 

Appreciate the generosity of guests who raised their paddles and bid on auction items.

Be thankful for your dedicated, hard-working staff who pulled together all the loose ends at the last minute of event planning.

And, most importantly, think of the amazing and positive impact you are making in the world. This is both through your day-to-day hard work as well as through all your efforts planning fundraising events.

Thank you for all you do, and happy new year to you all.

Learn more about how to create events that engage and inspire! Visit us at www.QueenBeeFundraising.com

About The Author:

A.J. Steinberg CFRE, has created outstanding fundraising events since 1999 with her Los Angeles-based event planning company. She has produced over 100 events and raised millions of dollars for her nonprofit clients.

In 2015, A.J. launched Queen Bee Fundraising to share the art of nonprofit event planning with organizations worldwide. A.J.’s goal is to make her successful strategies available to all nonprofits, no matter their size or location.

A.J. has earned the reputation as a leader in event-based fundraising and is a recognized topic expert and contributor to respected nonprofit resources such as CharityHowTo.Com.

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