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Campaign Email Fundraising Tips

By Anonymous

The 2010 election cycle is here, which means a glut of 2010 fundraising emails is sure to follow. As a political junkie, I am on the email lists of campaigns across the country. So please, benefit from my addiction, and enjoy these tips for writing effective fundraising emails.

Comments, questions, and disagreements are always welcome and, in fact, encouraged.

1. Be clear. One email should convey one message. In a fundraising email, the message is “give me money because X.” Of course, the email does not—and should not—be as crude as that, but don’t let rhetorical decoration obscure your point. If, when the email is done, you cannot condense its point to one sentence, you are trying to say too much, no matter how prettily you are doing it.

Very clearly ask for a donation. Ask then ask then, possibly, ask again as the email progresses. Do not be shy about listing an amount, but think carefully first about who is receiving the email. Deep-pocketed donors can be tapped for big donations; everyone who signed up to receive your emails cannot.

2. Be concise. Make sentences direct, make paragraphs short, and make the body of your email as brief as possible. Your email is competing with an untold number of distractions, so it needs to be able to be read quickly and understood easily. But remember that short does not mean sparse, stilted, or half-finished. Channel Ernest Hemingway or even the authors of the Constitution. Make every word count.

3. Be compelling. There are two simple options: use emotion or a sense of urgency. Emotional emails tell a story and oftentimes include a video link; alternatively, they can encourage supporters to share their stories (hello, Obama 2008). These emails fall flat, though, if there is nothing truly moving or remarkable about the story you are sharing. Your campaign is the center of your life, but sadly, that's not sufficiently interesting to your neighbor, your mailwoman, or your local dog catcher. So be wary of using this method and, above all, don't fake it. Readers can tell, and you will be stung. Badly.

You can also use your fundraising appeal to highlight tasks your campaign must accomplish. Such tasks often include boosting numbers before an FEC filing deadline, readying your GOTV efforts, or getting the money for last-minute ads (or a Google Blast!). Giving deadlines and, preferably, quantifying the effect of a contribution (e.g. $50 will equip one Election Day volunteer) will give supporters more reason to give you some of their hard-earned cash.

Finally, remember that you must be professional to be compelling. Proofread your email carefully for distractions: misspellings, improper grammar, and awkward sentence structures. (Everyone hates it when someone is wrong on the internet.) It’s always okay to break rules for style or emphasis, but it’s always apparent when you know the rules and break them deliberately, and when you’re just winging it.

4. Most importantly, be honest. Supporters are not ATMs. Supporters cannot be tricked into giving money. So "speak" to your supporters candidly, get them excited and invested in your campaign, and you will be well-rewarded.

1 and 3 are the killer million dollar tip. Logo design

Yes I think if you follow all those tips you'd also create trust which probaly is the most imporatant aspect to aim for.

Important is the front aim . Hid Kit

Important factor is funds distribution. DNS tools  network tools  domain statistics  domain information

I hate those mails. Tens of mails about fundraisers and about people in need of help urgent. Come on, let me live. Hate those mails from all my heart distributie pliante.

It's not nice to receive hundred of emails every month.

Gmail is a lot better than other email account providers alpinisti utilitari.

I know they are very upseting sometimes. I know I get upset when I get 7 or 8 emails per day from people asking for money. But I also know is a very good way to raise money. Emails help a lot inchirieri masini.

Sometimes it drives me crazy when I get 20 mails about fund raising. The idea is to do something special, make people laugh, get them to cry, something that will get you out of the bucket property management.

Well the idea is really good, i would lik eto read more.

Nick from Franking

Well the idea is really good, i would lik eto read more.

Nick from Franking Machine

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