A fantastic day to organize a fun fundraising effort to celebrate the dads in our community is Father’s Day. Offering your supporters a means of honouring their father and returning the favor might be a great community tradition to begin.
In addition, Father’s Day was founded in part by NGOs, hence giving to charity is ingrained in the day. More on it following the donation-inspiring advice.
These nine ideas will inspire donations on Father’s Day:
1. Organize a Father’s Day fundraiser specifically
Emphasize that the fundraising effort centers around Father’s Day, which falls on June 16, 2024. This will reassure possible contributors that their money is being used for a worthwhile purpose and will have an impact. If you are advertising a P2P (peer-to-peer) fundraising event, specifically, start this campaign at least a few weeks before the event and make sure the messaging and graphics are in place.
2. Make it particular
Be original and personal in your fundraising effort. Work out a means of relating your contributors to the cause they are backing. When generating funds for cancer research, for instance, share anecdotes about how cancer has impacted fathers in your neighborhood.
3. Use social media
Reaching possible contributors and promoting your event is made easy using social media. In order to get people interested in your campaign, use hashtags, upload pictures (look for GiveCentral’s father’s day post), and run campaigns. Remember to forward the link of your fundraiser as well!
Use the native donation features on Facebook or Instagram if you are fundraising there. In the meanwhile, concentrate on sending visitors straight to your online donation page
4. Have a purpose in mind
Decide on a fundraising target and let possible contributors know it. They will see from this that you take fundraising seriously and that each contribution matters. To attain your aim, look into crowdfunding sites. See GiveCentral’s SMART fundraising tool for the best online donation experience.
5. Make use of inventive giving
Giving contributors choices for amounts to donate ($25, $50, $100) is made simple with donation levels; however, why not get creative and offer them an additional reason to give? Personalized thank-you cards or shoutouts on social media are two examples of donor incentives.
To further customize the present and maybe pull a little practical joke, you can donate a sum determined by the Father’s age.
6. Provide donation simplicity
Assure possible contributors of the ways in which they may support your event. People will be more inclined to give the easier it is to do. Donations may be received in person, by mail, using cryptocurrency, or both. Just be sure your fundraiser page lists every choice.
7. Give incentives
You might give contributors who contribute a specific amount of money various benefits in addition to imaginative donation tiers. You might, for instance, provide a free t-shirt to anyone who donate $50 or more. Alternatively, you may enter contributors into a drawing to win a prize if they contribute $100 or more. People like feeling like they received a good deal, so be creative with the prizes or things you provide and make sure the value of the award justifies the donation amount!
The donation can produce a free, personalized online photo along with an online certificate. For templates like this to be included on the online donation confirmation page, Canva is a fantastic resource.
8. Offer several ways to give
Many donation choices should be offered so that contributors may select the one that suits them the best. Make sure your fundraising website lists all of the possibilities, since some contributors might prefer to mail in a check while others would want to pay by credit card! GiveCentral is the best in this matter. For individuals who wish to sustain your cause over time, you may also provide a recurring donation option; this is a terrific approach to develop long-term support.
9. Encourage gifts that match
Employee involvement in your fundraising and the double effect of their contribution are made possible by matching gifts. Look through the large, user-friendly database of matching gift.
Above all, never forget to express gratitude! Donors of all sizes should receive thank-you letters or emails.
How Did Father’s Day Come Into Existence?
Father’s Day is thought to have started with a Fairmont, West Virginia, Sunday School instructor. Mrs. Sonora Smart Dodd considered all her father had done for her and her siblings and sisters as she listened to a Mother’s Day sermon in 1908. Dodd wanted to thank William Jackson Smart, her father, a Civil War veteran who had reared his six children by himself after their mother passed away.
June 19, 1910, saw the first Father’s Day event organized by Dodd in Spokane, Washington. She requested churches to celebrate fathers by giving special sermons on them. Father’s Day became a national holiday in 1924 thanks to President Calvin Coolidge. Father’s Day | Britannica Definition, History & Facts.
Since nonprofits are in the DNA of Father’s Day, it is only right that your organization makes meaningful campaigns out of this yearly event.
Last modified: August 9, 2024