Memorial gifts are among the purest expressions of generosity. As Mother’s Day, Father’s Day, Memorial Day, and numerous religious holidays draw nearer, now may be the perfect time to encourage memorial gifts and in so doing augment your funding in the months ahead.
Share information
As with most charitable giving opportunities, memorial and honor giving needs to be regularly explained to your donors. Donors should be consistently educated about how and why they may want to make memorial and tribute gifts to your organization. One of the most economical and effective ways to tell friends of your organization about memorial giving is by sending an informational mailing on the subject.
Communications encouraging memorial gifts need not be complicated. Many organizations include information about memorial gifts on their Web site and in addition send one or more annual appeals built around the concept of memorial giving. Memorial giving mailings generally consist of a cover letter, reply device, and an informational brochure. The brochure should explain how memorial gifts allow donors to pay tribute to someone special in a unique and meaningful way. The brochure might also point out the variety of funding options available for memorial gifts, such as gifts of cash, stock, or assets from donors’ estates. See page 5 for information about Sharpe’s memorial giving materials, including everything you need to encourage memorial gifts this spring.
Perhaps the most important function of promoting the concept of memorial giving is to inform donors about what can be accomplished through their gifts. Memorial gifts help donors establish a legacy in memory of loved ones and, at the same time, provide charitable organizations with resources to serve others. Memorial giving promotional materials should reinforce the fact that those who make memorial and honor gifts are sensitive, thoughtful, caring people who want to make a meaningful donation in honor of a special loved one.
Time is of the essence
No matter how your organization decides to acknowledge memorial donors, it is vitally important to thank them in a timely fashion. Gifts made in memory or in honor of someone are among the most personal of expressions—and ones that often occur during very emotional circumstances. Memorial gift donors are typically persons who have put a great deal of thought and care into the decision to make their gift. For this reason, every effort should be made to process memorial gifts promptly. In some of the more successful programs, all memorial and tribute gifts are acknowledged on the same day they are received, if at all possible. Acknowledging memorial gifts immediately helps ensure donors’ continued confidence in your organization.
Prompt processing of memorial gifts should also apply to notifying the families of memorial and tribute gift recipients. Often a family requests that memorial gifts be made in honor of a loved one who has just passed away. Timely recognition of such gifts from the organization can be helpful to the family who would also like to send prompt expressions of gratitude to those who donated in honor of their loved one.
Details, details, details
Just as timely notification of memorial gifts is critical, so too is accurate processing. Make it your policy to double check every donor’s and honoree’s name as well as addresses for both. Also review the names and addresses of family members who will be notified of the gifts. If you are processing an honor gift, ask the donor if the gift is for a special occasion, such as an anniversary or birthday, and record the occasion for which the gift is being made.
Evaluate memorial materials
Once policies and procedures have been reviewed and updated, consider the basic materials you will need to carry out your memorial gift program. Do you have effective, attractive acknowledgment cards for both donors and family members of honorees? If so, do you have enough on hand for the upcoming memorial giving season? If the cards need to be updated or redesigned, now is the time to finalize the new look and print the necessary quantities.
In addition, reread and consider revising the letters you send to family members of honorees and memorial gift donors. Many donors make multiple gifts, so be sure you are not sending the same form letter on multiple occasions to the same donor. If time permits, a handwritten note may be the best way to assure a personal response. In any event, make certain that letters to the families of those deceased adequately express your sympathy and gratitude.
A bridge to planned giving
Finally, fund-raising veterans know that a large number of bequests and other planned gifts are made in memory of a spouse, child, sibling, parent, or other loved one who has pre-deceased the donor. Whether in the form of a bequest, gift annuity, charitable remainder trust, remainder from retirement plans, or other methods of giving, planned gifts offer a unique way for donors to make significant gifts that might not otherwise be possible in the form of a check or other outright gift. Donors who make planned gifts are often among the most thoughtful and careful donors. Good stewardship of even the smallest memorial gifts may thus be the key to building the confidence necessary to help a donor decide to make much larger gifts in the future.