“No” means “no.” Right?
In fundraising: kinda, sorta.
The very helpful book, The Influential Fundraiser: Using the Psychology of Persuasion to Achieve Outstanding Results by Bernard Ross and Clare Segal, takes a close look at what NO might mean in a face-to-face conversation with a donor where you specifically ask for a donation. There are at least nine specific colors of a donor’s “no”:
- No, not for this
- No, not you
- No, not me
- No, not unless
- No, not in this way
- No, not now
- No, too much
- No, too little
- No, go away
In direct mail, there’s a 10th type of no, and it’s probably the most common of all of them:
I’m not paying enough attention to say yes or no!
It’s neither a no nor a yes. But since there’s no donation, it seems like a no.
But among all those potential negative answers, only one is a complete and final NO -- the kind of NO that means there’s no further point in asking.
All the others are something different.
Major donor fundraisers have a huge advantage over the rest of us: When they’re told “no,” they can ask questions or read nonverbal clues to discern which kind of no it is.
All we get is a lack of response. Which we tend to take as a “no.”
Even though it’s not really a true “no, go away, don’t ask” at all.
So don’t think of non-response to a direct mail or email appeal as as a final and total no -- as your failure to make the case. In most cases, that’s not what it is.