Fundraising 101

We won’t deny that fundraising is a crowded field these days, but we won’t dwell on it either. But you’re participating and fundraising for a very special reason: You want a life free of heart disease and stroke for all Canadians. And supporting critical research is the way to do that.

So let your passion drive you to fundraising success! And we want to help. Here are some tried and tested tips and strategies:

  • Start by asking close friends and family who won’t say no
  • Be specific in your donation requests - don’t be vague!
  • Break your fundraising goal up into small “bite” sizes and ask each donor to contribute that amount.
The Participant Centre can help with this. Login and use the email tool to upload contacts, send emails (templates or create-your-own), and send thank you notes.

The common tendency is to "go big" and blast your whole network with a request. That's good advice, and there will be a time for that. But you don't have to start there.

Try starting small with a strong base. Choose 5-10 close family and friends you can reach out to right away. These are people who won’t say no: your partners, family members, closest friends, anyone who owes you a favor, or anyone you recently supported with a donation.

Now here's the key: Be specific in your request. Ask each person for what you know they can give. If you have a friend who is capable of giving $100, don't ask them for $20! Refrain from asking for a vague gift amount. Instead, ask them for "$100 to help fund lifesaving heart disease and stroke research." If someone is only able to give $10, ask them for $10. They will feel good knowing they can give you what you asked for, and every little bit will move you closer to your goal.

Find 5 people who can donate $20 each — and you’ve just reached the fundraising minimum! So before you go big, start small: Think of the people who you know will help you, and how much they can help you with, and build momentum on that.
Expand
  • A self-donation is a chance to set the tone for your fundraising.
  • You can ask donors to "match" your gift amount
  • A gift to yourself is another step toward creating more survivors
Make a self-donation

We aren't nickel-and-diming you when we encourage you to make a gift to your own campaign, we promise!

Making a self-donation is as much about helping yourself as it is about helping the Heart & Stroke Foundation. Fundraisers who make a gift to themselves set the tone for the kind of fundraising they want to do. Donors are likely to make a donation of a size similar to yours. You can use the self-donation as a fundraising strategy by asking friends and family to "match" your gift amount.

Show your network that you believe in what you’re doing! Be good to yourself with a self-donation.

Just remember: You must be logged out of the Participant Center when donating to yourself online.
Expand
  • Tell a story about yourself, a loved one, a friend, or friend-of-a-friend
  • There’s a lot of noise on social media and in fundraising, a personal story is what will break through
  • Dedicate your efforts to the memory of someone, or in honor of a survivor
Easily share your personal story on all your social networks.

It’s time to go big. This is when you will post to your social media feeds and blast your address book with a link to your donation page. We know this works! We hear every year how surprised people are when gifts come in from old friends who saw the request on Facebook and wanted to contribute.

The risk, though, is that you could lose the personal touch. There are so many donation requests out there you see at least two or three every day on your own newsfeed. The requests that break through the noise are the ones that manage to strike a personal tone. They come across as somehow intimate, despite being seen by dozens of people at the same time.

This is done by telling a story about yourself, a loved one, or someone you know. It can even be a story you heard secondhand of someone who has been impacted by the life-saving breakthroughs funded by the Heart & Stroke Foundation.

You can dedicate your Ride to someone, make it in honor or in memory of someone, or share a personal reason why this cause resonates with you. It will make your request that much more impactful.
Expand
  • The other steps covered will all get you to your goal and beyond. But the following tips will really round out the whole experience. And it will set you and Heart&Stroke up for future fundraising success.

  • Say thank you! This should be a given. But if you want your donors to consider giving next year, send a thank you note or give them a phone call.

  • Avoid burn out. Think long-term. If you use the “start-small” strategy, you may be able to achieve your goal without calling on your entire network. Then you can "reserve" some of those resources for future fundraising. Consider dividing your network into rotations asking one half for support in one year, then asking the second half for support the following year.

  • Return favors. The unspoken rule of peer-to-peer fundraising: I’ll scratch your back if you scratch mine. If a donor requests a favor or a donation in return, it’s good manners to come through. Otherwise you can say good-bye to that donor next year.
Fondation des maladies du coeur et de l'AVC

Fundraising 101

We won’t deny that fundraising is a crowded field these days, but we won’t dwell on it either. But you’re participating and fundraising for a very special reason: You want a life free of heart disease and stroke for all Canadians. And supporting critical research is the way to do that.

So let your passion drive you to fundraising success! And we want to help. Here are some tried and tested tips and strategies:

  • Start by asking close friends and family who won’t say no
  • Be specific in your donation requests - don’t be vague!
  • Break your fundraising goal up into small “bite” sizes and ask each donor to contribute that amount.
The Participant Centre can help with this. Login and use the email tool to upload contacts, send emails (templates or create-your-own), and send thank you notes.

The common tendency is to "go big" and blast your whole network with a request. That's good advice, and there will be a time for that. But you don't have to start there.

Try starting small with a strong base. Choose 5-10 close family and friends you can reach out to right away. These are people who won’t say no: your partners, family members, closest friends, anyone who owes you a favor, or anyone you recently supported with a donation.

Now here's the key: Be specific in your request. Ask each person for what you know they can give. If you have a friend who is capable of giving $100, don't ask them for $20! Refrain from asking for a vague gift amount. Instead, ask them for "$100 to help fund lifesaving heart disease and stroke research." If someone is only able to give $10, ask them for $10. They will feel good knowing they can give you what you asked for, and every little bit will move you closer to your goal.

Find 5 people who can donate $20 each — and you’ve just reached the fundraising minimum! So before you go big, start small: Think of the people who you know will help you, and how much they can help you with, and build momentum on that.
Expand
  • A self-donation is a chance to set the tone for your fundraising.
  • You can ask donors to "match" your gift amount
  • A gift to yourself is another step toward creating more survivors
Make a self-donation

We aren't nickel-and-diming you when we encourage you to make a gift to your own campaign, we promise!

Making a self-donation is as much about helping yourself as it is about helping the Heart & Stroke Foundation. Fundraisers who make a gift to themselves set the tone for the kind of fundraising they want to do. Donors are likely to make a donation of a size similar to yours. You can use the self-donation as a fundraising strategy by asking friends and family to "match" your gift amount.

Show your network that you believe in what you’re doing! Be good to yourself with a self-donation.

Just remember: You must be logged out of the Participant Center when donating to yourself online.
Expand
  • Tell a story about yourself, a loved one, a friend, or friend-of-a-friend
  • There’s a lot of noise on social media and in fundraising, a personal story is what will break through
  • Dedicate your efforts to the memory of someone, or in honor of a survivor
Easily share your personal story on all your social networks.

It’s time to go big. This is when you will post to your social media feeds and blast your address book with a link to your donation page. We know this works! We hear every year how surprised people are when gifts come in from old friends who saw the request on Facebook and wanted to contribute.

The risk, though, is that you could lose the personal touch. There are so many donation requests out there you see at least two or three every day on your own newsfeed. The requests that break through the noise are the ones that manage to strike a personal tone. They come across as somehow intimate, despite being seen by dozens of people at the same time.

This is done by telling a story about yourself, a loved one, or someone you know. It can even be a story you heard secondhand of someone who has been impacted by the life-saving breakthroughs funded by the Heart & Stroke Foundation.

You can dedicate your Ride to someone, make it in honor or in memory of someone, or share a personal reason why this cause resonates with you. It will make your request that much more impactful.
Expand
  • The other steps covered will all get you to your goal and beyond. But the following tips will really round out the whole experience. And it will set you and Heart&Stroke up for future fundraising success.

  • Say thank you! This should be a given. But if you want your donors to consider giving next year, send a thank you note or give them a phone call.

  • Avoid burn out. Think long-term. If you use the “start-small” strategy, you may be able to achieve your goal without calling on your entire network. Then you can "reserve" some of those resources for future fundraising. Consider dividing your network into rotations asking one half for support in one year, then asking the second half for support the following year.

  • Return favors. The unspoken rule of peer-to-peer fundraising: I’ll scratch your back if you scratch mine. If a donor requests a favor or a donation in return, it’s good manners to come through. Otherwise you can say good-bye to that donor next year.
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