Sanky Blog

Visiting Nurse Service Joins Sanky Communications

September 30th, 2008

SankyDirect and SankyNet are proud to be working with Visiting Nurse Service of New York (VNSNY) to help raise the crucial funds they need for their vital work.

VNSNY offers compassionate care to thousands of grateful patients in New York. With over 9,860 highly skilled care providers, VNSNY is the largest not-for-profit home health care agency in the nation. VNSNY caregivers travel throughout New York City, Nassau and Westchester Counties, working with an average of 30,000 patients each day. Their work includes long-term care services for the elderly, hospice care for those at the end of life, and home health care services tailored for patients in the Hispanic, Asian, or Russian communities.

SankyDirect will be developing a robust direct mail program for VNSNY. Giving active donors the opportunity to specify for which of VNSNY’s programs they would like their funds donated, this extensive direct mail campaign promises to be a rewarding challenge for SankyDirect.

SankyNet will be launching an exciting new online marketing and fundraising program that will greatly enhance the client’s ability to communicate with current donors, potential donors, and other friends of VNSNY. This program marks VNSNY’s first foray into using the internet for online donations. SankyNet is very enthusiastic to have the opportunity to develop this strategic tool that will help VNSNY continue to help thousands of grateful New Yorkers.

With integrated services that range from cultivating relationships through direct mail to an aggressive new marketing strategy, SankyNet and SankyDirect will work together to help VNSNY meet their marketing potential. We look forward to the unique opportunities these exciting projects will present!

We invite you to learn more about this vital organization.

Glida’s Club Gets a New Website

September 30th, 2008

Gilda’s Club is named for comedian Gilda Radner, and was founded by Joanna Bull (along with Gene Wilder and Joel Siegel), who worked as a cancer psychotherapist during Ms. Radner’s illness. Gilda’s Club works to create welcoming communities of free support for everyone living with cancer - men, women, teens and children - along with their families and friends. Gilda’s Club believes that providing an emotional and social support community is an essential complement to medical treatment for people living with cancer.

SankyNet understands the importance of the work Gilda’s Club is doing for those learning to live with cancer. We look forward to working with Gilda’s Club during the coming months to redesign their website and expand their vital online resources. Thousands of people living with cancer have found Gilda’s Club to be a sanctuary during a very scary time. SankyNet is excited to find ways to craft their website to feel as warm and welcoming as Gilda’s Club itself.

Please take a moment to learn more about Gilda’s Club of New York.

Sanky Wins Gold

September 29th, 2008

This year’s competition for the 2008 Gold Awards for Fundraising Excellence was especially fierce – which is why we are so honored to announce that our 2007 Holiday campaign for Covenant House took first place for e-philanthropy!

Gold Award judges complimented us by saying that with compelling copy, heartfelt stories and a positive message rounding out the ask, our Covenant House campaign “really covered all the bases.”

Tim O’Leary, vice president of McPherson Associates, said, “this is how you run an integrated, online campaign. The creative was eye-catching and clean, [and] crisp images draw the recipient further into the body of the e-mails.”

At SankyNet we have enjoyed our relationship with Covenant House for over four years. We are honored and excited to share this wonderful award with them!

Designing for the Future

September 26th, 2008

When Greenwich House approached SankyNet with the opportunity to redesign their website, we were thrilled at the creative potential this project held.

For more than a century, Greenwich House has brought people together to overcome big-city isolation and the problems that go with it, making them feel at home in their communities. Operating 17 different social, medical, mental-health, educational and cultural programs, Greenwich House serves the needs of more than 9,000 New Yorkers annually.

In their original site, each of Greenwich House’s diverse programs stood alone with their own independent looks and feels. SankyNet recommended a dramatic site re-design to bring each Greenwich House program together under one cohesive design, allowing each program to remain distinct while still connecting to the overall theme. Now the children’s education program and the senior services program each reflect their own personalities while still fitting within the Greenwich House theme. The arts program and the health/social services program feel separate, yet still connected to the Greenwich House site.

After SankyNet’s redesign, the Greenwich House site looks great and is much more user-friendly!

Greenwich House was so pleased with our site redesign and branding work that they signed on with SankyNet for an ongoing marketing and communications plan. We are excited to continue this partnership with Greenwich House and look forward to working with them well into the future!

Please take a moment to look at their new website.

SankyNet Helps PetSmart Charities® Hurricane Relief Efforts

September 21st, 2008

PetSmart Charities_Hurricane Ike On Saturday September 13, after crossing Cuba and raging through the Gulf of Mexico, Hurricane Ike made landfall at Galveston, Texas. Both people and their pets were in dire need of assistance after this devastating storm. By Monday afternoon, SankyNet had quickly created and distributed an emergency e-appeal to help PetSmart Charities to raise the funds they would need to respond to this crisis. And respond they did.

PetSmart Charities® deployed its Emergency Relief Waggin’® to assist groups managing vital rescue operations on the front lines… providing 16 tons of emergency animal-care and volunteer supplies valued at $50,000. Supplies include pet food, crates, beds, bowls, litter and litter pans, and other necessary animal-care items, as well as a generator, fans, tents, a battery charger, lights and other supplies to assist the volunteers on site who are caring for displaced companion animals.

SankyNet is proud to have helped PetSmart Charities in their heroic effort. If you would like to learn more about our fundraising efforts for PetSmart Charities, please click here.

“Isn’t email just like regular direct mail – but on steroids?”

September 21st, 2008

By Harry Lynch
Published on AFP site on July 21st, 2008

It’s been a while since a nonprofit executive asked me that question, but it still makes me smile. And groan a little too.

The myths and confusion engulfing email only seem to proliferate with each passing year. So here we are in 2008. A cool $10 billion or so is now being raised annually online. But what is the truth about email?

Is it the best way to reach a mass audience of potential online donors? Or is the highly publicized plunge in open rates just the latest sign of overuse and dwindling effectiveness? Are social networking and other new tools overtaking it as the top online fundraising medium? Or is email really the best way to engage donors – especially the younger ones – yearned for by so many nonprofit executives?

The bottom line is that email has emerged as a mature, predictable, and cost-effective fundraising medium – raising exponentially more money online (with far fewer resources) than social networking, search engine marketing, or any other vehicle than the all-important website itself.

But even in 2008, confusion about the medium and best practices still reign – and limit the success of far too many non-profits. So what are some of the most common myths? How can they be countered?

Myth #1: Declining open rates are a sign of “email fatigue.”

The truth is that “open-rates” just aren’t that meaningful anymore. Most recipient email programs now employ “image blockers” that skew open rates and give false negative readings. And aggregate statistics often cited in surveys are skewed because so many nonprofits now “append” email addresses from their land lists – and these are opened at lower rates, dramatically suppressing the overall average.

Emailers who segment their lists and tracks results according to donors, prospects, and append groups not only find that donor and prospect open rates are holding up, but they can better tailor their strategies and messages to improve overall results.

Myth #2: You can never send too much email.

With email just so darn cheap, the tendency for many nonprofits is just to blast away. What’s the harm, after all? The “harm” is that the recipient audiences will start to tune out your messages; click-through rates will fall rapidly, and opt-outs surge.

Online fundraisers can excel by taking the time to craft a thoughtful email segmentation plan and schedule. Friends who sign up to be “online advocates” might not mind getting one or two or even three “action alert” emails every week. But donors who ask for a monthly enewsletter will be turned off if their inbox starts to get cluttered with e-missives every other day. One final word: Opt-outs are easy – just the click of a button – and forever! It’s not like having your direct mail solicitation thrown away … so you can send another one the next month. When it comes to email, an opt-out is forever – there are no second chances!

Myth #3: Ask and ye shall receive.

The golden rule for offline fundraising is terribly tarnished advice when it comes to email. Online donors and prospects want information and a relationship before they’re even asked for money – let alone would consider giving. If you ask too soon, or too often, your list will stop opening your emails – or opt-out altogether.

Some marketing experts recommend a firm 80/20 rule – four informational emails for every one that is “ask” focused. While some experts suggest that a simple link to your donation page in non-fundraising e-newsletters and alerts doesn’t have any negative impact , others recommend avoiding any hint of fundraising until the email cycle reaches an appropriate point for the ask. Everyone agrees: asking for money too soon and/or too often on the Internet has serious, immediate, and irreversible consequences.

Myth #4: There’s no such thing as email acquisition.

True … but false too. Unlike traditional direct mail, where thousands of lists are available for rental at any given moment, few legitimate email lists available for rental seem to hold much promise for fundraising … and the ones we’ve tested yield negligible results.

That said, email acquisition is a vital – but too often overlooked – part of any online program. It involves a very distinct two-step process that first includes building your organization’s own email prospect list. Assuming you can offer a compelling e-newsletter, action alert, or other valuable information, you can methodically use your website … append technology … and even search engine marketing to promote email opt-ins – and then very carefully cultivate these new friends to give.

Myth #5: Timing is everything.

Many fundraisers now know that the obsession with precisely timing the day and even hour to send email solicitations is a bit overdone. The “best” moment to send an email tends to be a moving target depending on a whole host of factors and variables.

Rather than obsess about the advantages of, say, Tuesday morning vs. Thursday afternoon email deliveries, online marketers can more productively expend energy ensuring they are ready to leverage the tremendous opportunities that emerge because of the speed and precision of the medium. We all know that email offers one of the most effective ways to capture donations after a natural disaster or media event – but this is only possible when the systems and people are in place who can respond when there is such an opportunity. And many charities are learning that email is a way to get a “year end giving reminder” into the hands of your donors on, say, exactly the morning of December 30.

Myth #6: Email is the best way to reach a young audience.

These days you’re more likely to reach grandma than grandson via email. Study after study confirms that email is increasingly a medium of choice for people over 50 … and even over 65!

If you’re looking to motivate and tap the enthusiasm of our youngest citizens – say those under 25 – a text message or MySpace page will likely serve you better. If you’re looking for a donation from the audience with most of the money and inclination to give, traditional direct mail and email – if not a complicated combination of the two – are the way to go.

Reports of the death of email, as a useful fundraising tool, have been greatly exaggerated. But the sooner we recognize that email is truly a unique medium with its own set of rules and best practices, the sooner we can all put its power to better use – and raise more money for the causes we cherish.

SankyNet Design Yields Kudos for Citymeals-on-Wheels

September 20th, 2008

NonProfitMarketingGuide.com, a marketing resource for nonprofit professionals, recently published an excellent article detailing ways for nonprofit organizations to make their websites more user-friendly. They report that many nonprofits make the mistake of organizing their sites so that they read like old-fashioned brochures, never drawing people into their mission.

But the article cites Citymeals-on-Wheels as an exception to the rule. It explains that the Citymeals website, which was design by SankyNet, is expertly organized to meet the needs of the people who are coming to the site.

Citmeals-on-Wheels “has three tabs right across the top: Get Meals, Volunteer and Support Us. That about sums it up, doesn’t it? The left side menu includes additional information, but those three tabs right at the top stand out and show me that they know exactly why people are coming to their website.”

SankyNet listened to the needs of our client and we are proud to have produced a website worthy of such praise. We invite you to read the entire article to learn how to “Make Your Website About Visitors, Not About You”.