Make Your Last
Days of the Year Count
It’s ‘The
Little Things’ That Can Cement Donor
Relationships
By Jennifer B. Furla, Senior
Vice President
Jeffrey Byrne & Associates, Inc.
Recently, I had the chance to reconnect
with a donor who had been a client of mine
in a past job. The donor knew I was planning
to meet with him but, five years since and
out of context, did not connect my name
with our past business dealings. Immediately
upon our greeting, the donor – who
is a man of some maturity – said:
“My! The last time I saw you, you
were climbing the stairs at [our university]
football stadium to deliver a gift to me.
Do you remember what that was?”
Of course I remembered the past client,
and I remembered the instance he was describing.
I also remembered generally that I was delivering
a special music CD we had discussed in a
previous meeting. I did not, however, recall
the specific music selection. He
helped me out.
“We had talked some weeks before
about a party I attended many years before
that [your boss] hosted. It was quite an
affair. [Your boss] did things right and
had the Glenn Miller Orchestra there –
with Tex Benecke. That was quite a memorable
evening. I loved Tex Benecke and hadn’t
heard his music in years. You went out and
found a Tex Benecke CD and gave it to me
that day.”
I was thrilled and somewhat embarrassed,
at the same time. I had the excuse of a
career change, dozens of new client relationships,
a baby (now five) and the lightning speed
that time passes helping that baby grow
into an active little boy, hours of volunteer
work, a few pleasure trips and a household
move. But he had recalled with
great clarity that small gesture that day.
I recalled with great fondness my past
encounters with the donor. I had looked
forward to seeing him again. That gesture
five years before was a bridge that spanned
those years and immediately reconnected
us.
Our exchange formed a deep impression.
In the hours I spent driving back from our
meeting, I mused over other past exchanges
– the small acts of appreciation,
the thought that goes behind them and the
impressions we leave – intentionally
or unintentionally -- with the clients,
business associates and donors we connect
with.
With the holiday season and the year end
upon us, what are you doing that will create
impressions for your donors that will span
weeks … months … years to create
a bridge that will keep you keep you connected
with them?
It’s the little
things that count.
That CD wasn’t terribly expensive.
Sure, it took a bit of doing to find a nearly-out-of-circulation
music selection from the client’s
favorite performer. Maybe it made a stronger
impression that the gift was delivered briskly
amidst a college football game with the
crowd noise so loud that there was little
in conversation to accompany it.
I can’t be self-congratulatory. I
must take responsibility for remembering
the client and the instance, but not the
specifics. I failed to stay in close contact
over the five years since (but that’s
another article). But my gesture was sincere
and I was happy he remembered.
At this time of year, we have already made
our holiday card lists and maybe have even
made plans for some personal calls and visits.
This kind of appreciation is always appropriate
and welcome. But what can you do that is
special and personal that shows you listen,
remember and really care about your donor?
Maybe it’s a music CD. Maybe it’s
a framed photo of an important moment. Maybe
it’s a home-made treat that harkens
back to a shared recollection of childhood
memories.
Make your last two weeks count. For that
matter, make any day of the year count.
Give thoughtful consideration to your donors’
passions, to their families, to their history,
to the stories you’ve shared. What,
from those conversations, no matter how
small the gesture, can you offer that will
show your donor that you value their relationship
and that it is deeply meaningful to your
organization?
Remember, it’s the little things
that count. With a chance meeting, that
lesson was brought home to me in just a
few brief words. I won’t forget it.
I hope you’ll remember, too.