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Fundraising

Keeping Promises to Donors

April 21, 2008 | Read Time: 1 minute

Charities rarely can guarantee donors will be satisfied, but some groups are taking extra pains to ensure contributors are happy.

Among them: DonorsChoose, a group that lets donors pay for education supplies and other needs listed by schoolteachers on a Web site.

In exchange for contributions to a teacher of their choice, donors are promised a statement from the teacher describing the difference made by the gift, thank-you letters from students, and photographs of students putting a donorโ€™s money to work.

But, about 2 percent of donors never get those materials. So now those donors get an e-mail message offering them the chance to pick another teacher to support, and DonorsChoose covers the cost. To pay for the extra donations, DonorsChoose is using a $30,000 grant it received from a donor who wanted to help the charity back up its promises.

Donors who receive the DonorsChoose offer are delighted and surprised, says Charles Best, the founder of the charity. โ€œProactively admitting a screw-up generates a whole lot of good will,โ€ he adds. โ€œInstances abound of donors saying they will give moreโ€ after receiving the offer.


A similar offer was recently created by another online-giving group, GlobalGiving, which began offering GlobalGiving Guaranteed few months ago. It matches any gift from a dissatisfied donor up to $10,000.

What ways have you found to keep dissatisfied donors from giving up on your cause?

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