Edit 5. If your edit tries to resolve the story (same goes for happy photos)...
I’m going to say this with all the fire in my copywriter’s heart.
If you really and truly love your donors, resist the urge to let anyone on your team edit your appeal into a happily-ever-after story.
An appeal with a
resolved story is not the best way to spark action.
But an appeal with an unresolved story?
That's a story your donor can be part of... a story they can give to now... a story they can help change or resolve or improve.
Allow your storytellers – your writers, your designers, your strategists – to find and tell the stories that need your donors to help complete the circle... those are the stories that make
people want to give.
Then save your happily-ever-afters for newsletters and email success stories.
Same goes for your photos, by the way. Only happy, smiling faces in an appeal is not showing need. Especially if your copy talks about need and is contradicted by a happy photo.
Edit 6. If your edit favors programmatic wording or puts features over benefits...
I once made this suggestion to a
writer, who used the phrase “education classes at our day program” in an email appeal:
'Education classes in our day program' is an example of features over benefits and the Curse of Knowledge (see Chip and Dan Heath’s book, Made to Stick). You cannot assume a donor will know what these things are or why they
matter. Instead, turn features into benefits: your beneficiary is learning the skills to build a new life, or something similar.
So: Don’t try and work in the official names of your programs everywhere if they’re loaded with jargon.
Instead, say what your programs do... how your programs help. (Yes, you can use the name sometimes. But not in place of benefits-rich
copy.)
Final three for today...
Edit 7. If your edit replaces tangible gifts with intangible ones...
I totally understand you’re worried about restricted vs. unrestricted gifts.
But fixing that is as easy as saying, “Your gift will help provide 10 children with a school kit” or “Your gift could/can provide...”.
Help, could, and can let you show donors they are helping give to real, tangible things, while still being unrestricted and transparent that there are other pieces of the work they will also support.
(Note: you can also add copy to your letter, in warm human language, that says their gift will support all of the
work.)
Edit 8: If your edit is based on personal likes and dislikes...
Don't.
Instead, ask your creative team why they made the choices they made. 99.9% of the time, they have a definite reason for adding faux tape to the edges of the photos, or a blue handfont that deviates from your brand font.
At one of my first copywriting gigs, the rule was: “Leave your ego at the door.” That rule
still stands for me today.
Direct response is about what works, not our personal likes or dislikes.
Which brings me to our final common edit today, number 9...
Edit 9: If you artificially constrain length...
So common, this edit: “Make this a 2-page letter, please. No one reads long letters anymore.”
Hear me
now.
Even if your focus group said that, it’s almost always not true.
You want what people actually do. Not what they say they do.
And I can tell you this, based on real results: I write four- and six-page letters that outperform short ones time and time again, and I am not alone or special in my ability to do this: LOTS of other writers do
too.
Instead of artificially constraining length, if budget allows, let your letter be as long as it needs to be. 4 pages... 6 pages... still good, and often better.
Because here's the thing: great fundraising editors focus their time on looking for the real issues, such as:
Typos, obvs...
Clunky or unclear
phrases...
Glitches that bog down the reader with unanswered questions...
Endless paragraphs...
Overuse of adverbs...
Lofty prose...
Fancy design...
Copy that tries to 'educate' donors into giving...
Weak or tepid calls to action...
... They don't spin their wheels pushing back endlessly against what we know makes for truly effective,
engaging copy and design.
You want to be that Great Editor: making every letter stronger, and better, with every review you send – and it’s my great hope today that this quick editing session has helped you on your way to doing just that.
Thank you so much for caring about effective fundraising... for reading today... and for being a Loyalty Letter subscriber. See
you in October :-)
Write with great heart!
Lisa ✍️