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4 Ways to Recruit for a Donor Trip

After two years of a pause in travel for most organizations, it is clear by now that the industry has rebounded, with demand returning before supply can even catch up. This past year I’ve seen donor trips fill faster than ever, with little signs of that trend slowing down in 2023.

With such overwhelming demand, it can be tempting to offer your trip to the first people who raise their hands, but that’s not the most strategic approach. Here are 4 ways of filling a trip, including the pros, cons, and how to maximize impact.  Here I start in order of strategic priority, from greatest to least, so that you can make decisions about how to fill your next donor trip.

1) Anchor donor and their contacts   

In this scenario one of your key donors or a board member fills an entire trip with their own contacts. This is most common for custom trips and custom departures. A trip may be completely tailored to that donor’s interest, or it may be a trip you run regularly but set a custom departure date for that donor and their group. The point is, you don’t have to worry about filling it, because the donor has committed to bringing their family members, friends, colleagues, or former classmates.

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2) Private Invitations to Select Donors

In this scenario you fill a trip through direct invitations to donors in portfolios, or some other segment of your base whom you are targeting. There may be a website and registration portal for the trip, but the link is not made public – only those invited can register.

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3) Organizations who can market to their members

In this scenario, the nonprofit has an institutional partner who can fill the trip with their members. It’s like having an anchor donor, except that instead of an anchor person there is an anchor institution.  Really good institutional partners are philanthropy groups & giving circles, community foundations, corporations with philanthropy programs, etc. The nonprofit would create a trip custom for this partner, or have a custom departure date for them, then the partner would do all the marketing and outreach to their members, and the trip would run for that group exclusively.

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4) Recruit from Your General Audience

In this last scenario, you make the trip available to anyone willing and able to sign up and pay the fee. The trip website is publicly accessible and marketed to your entire email distribution list and could even be on social media. Most of the people who sign up will already be on your email list, or be connected to someone who is.

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In reality, there are nonprofits running all 4 scenarios simultaneously, and others who are doing a blend of 2 or 3. Which scenarios are right for you depends on your travel program and nonprofit’s objectives.

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