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The narrow path to direct mail success

November 11, 20232 min read

By Wayne Gurley
President & Creative Director

Recently, I was watching a pro football kicker attempt a field goal from about 50 yards.

The camera was behind the kicker. From that vantage point, the goalposts looked like a couple of yellow toothpicks in the distance.

I thought, “Field goal kicking has an extremely narrow margin for success.”

Then it occurred to me, "direct mail has an extremely narrow margin for success, too."

There are three main components to a direct mail appeal. As long as you remain "inside the goalposts” and don’t go wide on either side, your chances for success are good.

  • Your mailing list - Certain lists work and others don’t. If you’re an adult hospital, you’ll be using former patients or outside rented lists. Strangely, rented lists often work better than folks who’ve actually been in the hospital. Age also is important. If you mail to people who are too young, your mailing likely will fail.

  • Your copy - Like lists, certain themes work better than others. If you get outside a narrow range of topics, you won’t be successful. For example, adult hospitals generally can’t raise money for behavioral medicine or orthopedics, even if they have the best programs in the world. Donors don’t support these items. Your copy needs to relevant to the donor…something meaningful…something that offers a selfish motivation for giving. If your donors can’t relate to what you’re asking them to support, they won’t respond.

  • Your graphics - Again, there’s a very narrow range of what you can do. If you’re too flashy and put too many things in your package that distract your donor, you won’t be successful. Donors won’t spend unlimited time with your package before they trash it. We’re talking seconds! If it’s too complex, or if donors perceive it’s going to take too long figure out, you’ve lost them.

The next time you're contemplating a direct mail appeal, think about the field goal kicker and aim for the narrow space between the goalposts. Your chances for success will be enhanced.

Not “wide right” or “wide left” - but right down the middle!

© 2020 Allegiant Direct, Inc.

By Wayne Gurley

President & Creative Director

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Frequently asked questions

Frequently asked questions ordered by popularity. Remember that if the visitor has not committed to the call to action, they may still have questions (doubts) that can be answered.

What kind of copy gets the best response for healthcare fundraising?

Mainly, copy that’s relevant, focused on the donor and non-institutional.   Our experience is that it needs to be something related to heart or cancer and perhaps technology that does something better, keeps you out of the hospital and/or is less costly and less invasive.    For children’s hospitals and hospices, patient stories usually work best, but appeals for new technology, equipment or programs can also work well.

Which is best - a window or closed face envelope?

We use both depending on the situation. A closed face envelope is a little more expensive. However, the #10 window envelope has been a workhorse for us for many decades.   For hospital grateful patients, we think it may work because it approximates the look of a hospital bill. You can split test window vs. closed face, and sometimes you’ll find that a window does better, and sometimes a closed face works better. A closed face envelope has more professionally looking business correspondence feel to it.

What about using a teaser on the outside envelope?

We usually come down on the side of not using teasers. The reason -  if you put something on the envelope that gives the recipient an idea of what's inside and they're not interested – like if they can tell it's a fundraising letter - then the trash can is always nearby.   The problem with teasers is that most people who write teasers do not know how to tease properly. A teaser has to have some mystery to it. So, when you see it, you say, “What's this  all about?”   Having no teaser is its own mystery because you're wondering “why are these people writing me?” Then you want to find out. So, you open the envelope.   We’ve used teasers in the past and tested them. Sometimes they work, and sometimes they don't. More often than not, they don't work. So, unless you've got a really good teaser, you may want to not use one at all.  

Which lists work best for healthcare fundraising?

Most of our hospital clients solicit former patients and they mosly work well. But if you’re a hospice you have few numbers of bereaved individuals to solicit. By the same token, if you’re a children’s hospital, you have a minimum number of patients to contact.   Parents of children’s hospital patients (the guarantors) are too young to be good philanthropic prospects. As a result,  what we’ve have found is that rented lists of donors to healthcare causes in your area often work better than patients. With hospices and children’s homes you almost have no choice but to use rented names to build your donor base.   Perhaps surprisingly, rented names tend to outperform hospital grateful patients. But why would a person who hasn't been in your hospital perform better than someone who has?   With patients, we really only know two things about them. We know they're the correct age because we can select them based on age or date of birth from the patient record. We also know they've been in the hospital. But that’s it. We don't know anything else about them.   But with a rented name, we know they're the right age because they've given to other nonprofit organizations. They’re definitely philanthropic. They’ve also given through the mail and are responsive to mail appeals. We also know they like to give, and particularly to healthcare causes. So that gives them an edge on former patients.

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Allegiant Direct, Inc.

278 Franklin Road Suite 290, Brentwood TN 37027

(615) 373-2042

[email protected]

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