Five ways to improve response to your donation page

images1.jpg Donordigital has released a report called “Perfecting Your Page: Can donation page optimization boost online giving?” The answer to their question is yes — improving your page really can boost giving. The report can be downloaded here and is based on testing done with Amnesty International USA and Optimost.

From the report:

Online fundraising has become a growing source of income for many non-profits over the past 10 years. But while organizations typically spend lots of time spent developing clever, creative, and inspirational online content, they often overlook more mundane aspects of online appeals that can make a big difference in converting advocates, subscribers, and other supporters into donors. Specifically, while email and web page copy may persuade people to “click to donate now,” less than half of those who click through to the donation page (and often just a few percent) typically complete the donation transaction.

Here are five key tips:

      • 1. Size DOES matter: Bigger donate buttons helped convert more donors
      • 2. Color can matter too: A vividly colored donation button can strongly boost donation page conversion…but seasonality and color choice influenced whether it did (read the report for more on this… green buttons performed better than blue)
      • 3. Less is more: Removing unnecessary fields from the personal information form significantly increased conversion to donate
      • 4. Remind people (nicely) why they want to donate: Polite header copy (“Please make a tax-deductible gift…”) followed by short appeal copy yielded better conversion than a more forceful call-to-action (“Donate Now! Help us…”) without appeal copy
      • 5. No need to be demanding: Using firmer language on the donation button (“Donate Now” instead of “Submit”) did not produce statistically higher conversions

Thanks Donordigital!

4 Responses to “Five ways to improve response to your donation page”

  1. Patrick Lok Says:

    Some very interesting points there (do green buttons trigger our ‘handout’ mechanism?) Thanks for the tips and keep up the great blog.

  2. Andrea Seale Says:

    Thanks Patrick! Maybe green means “go” to us. Interesting stuff.

  3. » Resource Roundup: Online Donations; Online Fundraising Strategies Says:

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  4. John Lepp Says:

    This is great information Andrea - and timely for me - I was just asked to overhaul the donation page for a charity. Thanks!

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