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Use These 26 Words In Your Campaigns Fundraising Emails To Get More Donations

By using these conversion words and phrases in your email copy, youll maximize the number of donations you receive from supporters.

Use These 26 Words In Your Campaigns Fundraising Emails To Get More Donations
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On average, a subscriber spends just 13 seconds skimming over an email. Thats about the length of a NASCAR pit stop. By using these conversion words and phrases in your email copy, youll maximize the number of donations you receive from supporters.

Urgency

Supporters need a reason to donate the moment they receive and open your campaigns email. If they see your email and dont give, theyre not likely to revisit it later after a dozen other emails displace it from the top of their inbox.

These words prompt supporters to act quickly

TIP: Dont overuse these urgent words because your supporters will become desensitized to reading them.

Curiosity

Your fundraising email is one of dozens your supporters receive in a single day. If theyre also active donors, theyre being asked by other campaigns and organizations as well. Tap into curiosity to entice an email subscriber into opening and reading an email with these words and phrases:

TIP: For best effect, use curiosity words in the subject line, preview text, and opening paragraph of your emails.

Emotion

Triggering a supporters emotions is a powerful tool in a digital campaigners arsenal. When were emotional, we make decisions such as donating more quickly than when we are rational.

These emotional words will drive supporters to donate:

TIP: Negative emotional words get 63% higher click through rates, according to a study from Outbrain.

Action

Never ever use passive voice if you want supporters to take action. Your email copy needs to be crystal clear on what a supporter should do by using these words:

TIP: Avoid qualifying these words with other words like please, maybe, consider, possibly, or if.

Loss Aversion

Humans are hard-wired to expend more energy to avoid losses than they are to achieve gains. This is a cognitive bias known as loss aversion and is more commonly known as fear of missing out or FOMO.

Drive supporters to action by letting them know what theyll miss out on if they dont act.

TIP: The loss needs to seem credible to supporters and you cant make the gap too extreme.

When you incorporate these words and phrases into your fundraising emails, youre using human behavior to maximize the quantity (and size) of donations from your supporters.