1. from the team at
Email marketing for
charities and
non-profits.
2. Email marketing for charities and
non-profits.
From the team at MailNinja.
Find out more at https://mailninja.co.uk.
It seems to me that there is a wide variance in how charities & non-profits
run email campaigns. Most fail to capitalise on one or more of the following
areas:
Email proposition
Very often the benefits or the point of signing up is not clarified. Identifying what you can offer
people when they provide their email address can encourage sign-up, set expectations right and
show that you have a sense of purpose both externally as well as internally.
Welcome process
Charities are often so skilled at being welcoming either in person at events and shops or over
the phone when someone has signed up to a regular gift. This is rarely capitalised on via email!
• Setting up a three or four stage welcome email campaign that is sent to all new sign ups
is not only good practice and good manners, but is likely to encourage good open rates
and levels of engagement.
A strong welcome process can also help introduce other opportunities for people to find out
more about your charity on the website as well as boost take up of social media.
Tailoring content
How often do we feel that the email content is tailored to what the charity knows about us? I
bought a gift membership online from one well-known charity. They send me lovely newsletters
3. each month, but they have NEVER referred to my gift membership in these email
communications. They did, however, send me a direct mail about it in the first year, more costly
for them to do and less likely to illicit a repeat order for me than an easy option to renew online
when prompted via email. The functionality is there with any good email system through the use
of conditional content to provide relevant, engaging email communications.
Followup unfinished online donations
This practice of ‘re-marketing’ is more commonly used by e-commerce based organisations that
use email to boost online income to counter ‘cart abandonment’. However, having tested a
number of well-known charity websites, none of them followed up my incomplete donation with
an email. You can expect to convert about 10% of those targeted – over time that could be a
valuable source of income for your charity.
Fine-tune approaches with costly media
By using email to test ahead of expensive activity such as print and telemarketing, charity funds
can be used much more effectively.
• I have seen the benefit of using the results from subject line testing with email to inform
the approach of a direct mail pack, which generated in turn above average results for the
charity using this.
Use email clues to inform audience understanding and improve targeting
While many charities will have very sophisticated donor segmentation models, it is still rare for
the results from email campaigns to be used to inform this. By including open and click through
rates to help inform how engaged audiences are and to predict their media preferences could
really enhance campaign performance through better informed targeting.
In short, email could be a much more powerful and well-respected asset to charities. It needs be
better understood and loved. To kick-start this process, start simply.
● Define what part email could play to achieve your charitable aims
● Evaluate past performance so as to set goals for enhanced performance
There are some charities that are already setting the bar high – in the guide you will see
stunning examples from Save the Children, Greenpeace International and Dogs Trust. Use this
inspiration to boost your own charity’s email communications so that from directorate to your
target audiences, email is a truly appreciated media.
4. How can MailNinja help?
Since MailNinja has been working with small business and global
corporations since 2010, we know a little about how email marketing works.
We can help you fine-tune your message, send great-looking emails, and
help you track the data that matters to the growth of your business.
To start - simply call our sales team on (0) +44 1793 677 511 or email
info@mailninja.co.uk.