(4) Strong contrast over subtle.
If you’re in your 20s and 30s, that gray 10-point font on a darker gray background might look fine to you, but I can assure you: a 75-year-old can’t read (and won’t want to engage with) what you’re writing.
(5) Resist font trickery.
IMTALKINGABOUTLOTSOFALLCAPSHEADLINES or endless fields of italics that older eyes (and let’s face it, ANY eyes) will struggle to track.
(6) Keep your directions, and all your copy, clear and easy to follow.
As a Loyalty Letter subscriber you know that I write all
the time about writing with emotion, compelling examples, clear calls to action, and evocative, sensory words – but let this be a reminder: you absolutely should be doing this for every-age giver.
(7) Don’t write off digital.
Just because your donor is over 60, this does not mean they are digitally challenged. Yes, kids, lots of folks 60+ are quite capable
online.
BUT, you do want to be generous here too: Smashing Magazine recommends watching actions that require a lot of precision (dexterity, remember), adding a Back link, and avoiding disappearing messages, among other tips.
To wrap it
up, a true story...
At a huge international fundraising conference, I stopped at the booth of an agency that specializes in legacy giving.
They had loads of samples on display, free for the taking... and after the first legacy brochure I picked up, I knew there was trouble.
The legacy guide, designed by so-called experts in the field and specifically aimed at older givers,
was:
- On glossy paper :(
- In pale gray sans serif font, about 11-point :(
- With loads of places where copy was printed over photos or busy backgrounds. :(
I could have cried. What a wasted opportunity to touch hearts and bring meaning!
So please, my smart, caring, world-changing, fundraising friends:
As generous as your older givers
want to be to your nonprofit, you need to be generous with your copy and design in return. (Great piece on age-positive design here.)
And that means you need to write and design for older eyes and older hands, and help them read, interact with, and respond to,
what you send.
Thank you so much for taking the time to read today... and thank you for caring about the craft of great donor communications, for generous hearts of every age!