This is the 120th Fundraising Writing Newsletter.
If you find value here, please tell your fundraising friends.
β(Your fundraising friends can βsubscribe here for free.)β
In this issue:
β Take a fundraising cue from Canada: balance risk for reward
β VIDEO: 'Win It in a Minute': the fundraising pitfalls of your brand guidelines
β Randomly yours: to inspire and recharge you
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Wednesday, January 31, 2024
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Hi Reader,
Brett here:
Did your mom ever say, "Just be home by dinner!" right before you left the house for seemingly endless hours?
My mom did. I remember it fondly.
And now I think of this phrase β "Just be home by dinner!" β as a shorthand for free range parenting.
When I was growing up in the 70s and 80s, my friends and I roamed for miles within our neighborhood and beyond.
We played meandering group games across multiple yards and streets. We walked or rode bikes to the store (for gum or candy) to the pond (for fishing) to the park (for baseball or tennis) or to the school (for the playground).
This gave us a sense of wild freedom specific to that era βbefore cell phones, ubiquitous video cameras, and social media made our modern society lean into controlling ever more risks in the name of safety.
"Back in my day," parents probably accepted too much risk. These days, we probably accept too little risk.
The Canadian Pediatric Society seems to agree. Last week, it introduced new guidelines for children that call for more "risky play."
You'll notice the table above advocates for more height, more speed, more distance, more impact. The organization also advises balancing risky play with injury prevention.
All this resonates with me because of my many joyous childhood experiences (in spite of nearly dying from a bike fall at age 7) and my current sense of mental wellbeing β and it makes me think of how you might . . .
Certainly, playgrounds and fundraising are two very different things. But I think it's safe to say that avoiding risks at the expense of rewards is a trend we can see in many domains, including fundraising.
Just as most children should probably climb more trees, most fundraisers should probably take more fundraising risks.
Here are some ideas on how you might do that.
Tone/Style:
Design:
Accessibility (for all ages and brains):
Extras:
Once you get in the swing of risk taking, the fundraising world will be your super fun, very rewarding playground!
Tom Ahern and Denisa Casement on brand guidelines
This video is a snippet taken from last week's Tom Ahern fundraising newsletter webinar Q&A session. You'll see Tom and special guest Denisa Casement answer an attendee's question about the fundraising pitfalls of your brand guidelines.
You can (and maybe want to?) subscribe here.
For your brain, heart, and funny bone...
Until next time: May you always take risks, reap the rewards, find balance, and feel on top of the world.
Grateful,
Fundraising Copywriters βFundraisingWriting.comβ β |
PS: We wrote a new (200+ page) book β and it's free! Click here to access Heartable Fundraising Writing.
We're Julie Cooper and Brett Cooper, fundraising copywriters for great causes. Does your fundraising bring in as much money as it could? You can send donor communications that stir hearts to action. We'd love to help. π Start by subscribing to our FREE and fun weekly newsletter.
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