Beyond Transactions: Building Real Connections in Advocacy Work

January 11, 2024
About This Series

This article is part of the Nonprofit Strategy series.

Most nonprofit outreach is designed around the organization’s donation calendar, not the supporter’s relationship arc. The result is communication that arrives irregularly, asks more than it offers, and trains supporters to tune out. The organizations that build lasting advocacy capacity stay present between asks, tailor outreach to individual motivations, and give supporters ways to participate that go well beyond writing a check.

Diverse group of advocates with a lightbulb connecting their ideas for impactful advocacy.
Christopher Frazier
Christopher Frazier is a founding partner of Make Good and the driving force behind LeadersPath. He designed the technical architecture behind Make Good's AI methodology and writes about how AI actually works inside organizations — not how it's marketed to them.
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In our increasingly fast-paced, digital world, it’s all too easy for nonprofits to get drowned out. Email inboxes overflow with appeals. Social feeds move at lightning speed. With so many worthy causes, organizations struggle to be heard above the noise.

But despite the chaotic climate, your supporters still seek authentic human connection and shared purpose. Transactions are secondary to meaningful relationships and community. So how can nonprofits cultivate authentic bonds beyond one-time gifts?

Over the past decade, I’ve partnered with purpose-driven organizations nationwide and seen the power of forging relationships by aligning around a common mission. My experience shows that a targeted, personalized approach to engaging supporters leads to more sustainability and impact.

Make Outreach Expected, Valuable, and Actionable

First, make outreach expected, valuable, and actionable. Sending sporadic, generic messaging doesn’t work anymore. Supporters engage when communications are:

Expected – Follow a regular schedule and cadence. This provides context for supporters to anticipate and appreciate your updates.

Valuable – Share content that educates, inspires, and empowers. Don’t waste supporters’ time with pointless updates.

Actionable – Craft messages that inspire advocacy by providing intrinsic motivation to advance the mission. Go beyond information sharing to spur supporters to get involved.

Then get personal. Take time to learn what motivates each supporter at their core. Tailor communications to speak directly to their passions. Help them see how their intrinsic values and your purpose align. Thoughtful personalization makes people feel valued beyond transactions.

For example, one youth center has seen great results from sending handwritten thank you notes to each volunteer raving about how they positively impacted particular kids. Small gestures like this go a long way to build loyalty when grounded in shared values.

Share Your Story

Next, share compelling stories that vividly bring your mission to life. Statistics and achievements have their place in annual reports, but stirring narratives forge emotional bonds with supporters. Help your audience visualize how your organization fulfills human hopes, needs, and dreams through its daily efforts. Rather than boasting about general accomplishments, tell richly detailed, character-driven stories that highlight how you eased an elderly neighbor’s loneliness through companionship or helped a shy child break out of their shell through arts education.

Put inspiring human faces to the mission beyond facts and figures. Quantify your impact through data, but lead with tangible examples of the lives you change through service. Invite supporters to envision themselves in your story as active participants in the mission. Help them imagine being the ones comforting a lonely senior or proudly cheering on a once-shy child who has blossomed thanks to your programs.

When you help supporters see themselves as part of your purpose, you spark lasting passion, investment, and loyalty.

Stay Continually Engaged

Additionally, commit to staying continually engaged with supporters, rather than only reaching out when you need donations. Create regular touchpoints that demonstrate supporters are valued partners.

For example, when I was in high school over 30 years ago, I had a volunteer youth leader who sent me personalized note cards every week with encouraging scripture and prayers. He has kept this up through the years, now sending me texts, despite his busy personal life. I recently learned he does the same for a young man who just graduated high school. This commitment to regular engagement cultivates community.

Small gestures like checking in consistently over decades make supporters feel valued beyond financial transactions. Imagine the inspiration you could spark by emulating this kind of meaningful, long-term engagement with your own community.

Issue Clear Calls to Action

Finally, when sharing your organization’s successes and milestones, always include clear calls-to-action that go beyond just donating money. Offer supporters specific, tangible ways to get further involved as a volunteer, ambassador, committee member, advisor, or other participatory roles. This empowers advocates to become even more actively engaged as changemakers rather than remaining passive donors.

For example, highlight an inspiring recent victory or achievement, then immediately issue a call inviting supporters to join the next phase of growth by taking on leadership positions. Rally your community around your bold vision for change rather than just asking for funding. Help them envision walking beside your team in pursuit of shared goals. When you inspire supporters’ highest hopes through inviting their direct involvement, you gain passionate advocates for life.

It’s About Relationships

By taking this relationship-focused approach, nonprofit leaders demonstrate to supporters that they are trusted partners in pursuit of a shared purpose – not merely transactions.

If you need help strengthening authentic community bonds or refocusing engagement efforts, I’m always available to connect. Because while fundraising has its place, nothing drives sustainable nonprofit success like genuine human relationships.

Where to Next?

Interested in finding out how Make Good works with organizations like yours? Let’s start a conversation.

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