Rather than a TIP, this month I thought I’d offer you a TOOL that you can use whenever you’re creating legacy communications material.
This tool is dead simple. It’s just eight little words. Eight words that I think you should use whenever you’re creating content (be it paper-based, digital or conversational). Here’s how to use it:
Here goes – my personal favourite 8 words to use when I’m writing legacy-based materials:
1. LIFE: A legacy gift comes from the autobiographical part of the brain. That’s where we construct the stories of our lives and answer the existential questions ‘Why am I here?’ and ‘What good have I done? Note: These questions don’t usually mean all that much to us when we’re in our 30s and 40s – but they sure do after our 60th birthday.
2. FUTURE: Legacy gifts – when you get down to it – amount to casting our love and generosity into the future. In fact, the ultimate act of generosity is to extend your love to a time when you’ll no longer be here. That time is the future.
3. PURPOSE: Human beings are happiest when we have two things – lots of loving relationships and a sense of purpose. Purpose is what gets us out of bed in the morning, and it is what gives us a sense of accomplishment when we put our heads on our pillows at night. Purpose is essential to the human experience.
4. GENEROSITY: This is one of the noblest of positive character traits. When people make little speeches about me at my hundredth birthday party, one of the things I most want to hear is “Fraser’s a really generous guy.”
5. LOVE: They say that love makes the world go round, and you know what? It does! Legacy gifts are gifts of love much moreso than money. Talk about legacy giving for what it really is – an ultimate act of love.
6. FOOTPRINT: I use the visual of a footprint in my legacy writing all the time. Referring to a legacy gift as a footprint the donor will leave behind when she’s gone is a lovely metaphor to me.
7. MEANING: Knowledge is all the stuff you know – while wisdom is knowing which small part of that knowledge really matters. Meaning is kind of like that. We play all sorts of roles in our lives, and we do many things. But those that truly matter are the ones that add meaning to our lives. You might have to trust me on this one – but older people ponder meaning a lot.
8. LEGACY: Your legacy is what’s left of you when you’re gone. I’ve thought about my legacy. First and foremost comes my daughter (who is my life’s masterpiece). Next come family and all the people I’ve really loved. Last comes the outcomes of my actions – and gifts in wills fit perfectly here. Legacies are beautiful and noble things – and legacy is a beautiful word. So use it a lot!
Try using this list of eight power words next time you’re creating some legacy giving materials. I think you’ll like the result – and I KNOW that your donors will.
And while I’ve got you, here’s my list of 8 words I think you should avoid:
If you stop and think about it, the 8 words I like are really about people – and about life.
The eight words I’d avoid are about money.
Legacy gifts are about life – not about money.
Have fun with this – and good luck in your legacy marketing work!
Fraser Green is a passionate organizer/campaigner/evangelist who believes that we connect with each other by listening closely and telling kickass stories. Fraser has been an owner (and bigtime smartypants) at Good Works since 1996 – and he’s still listening a lot and telling way too many stories for his own good. Fraser believes working in philanthropy and living a great life are one and the same thing.
Fraser is the author of ‘3D Philanthropy’, the co-author of ‘Iceberg Philanthropy’ and a contributing author to the new book ‘MeVolution’. He is a sought-after speaker at fundraising confernces in Canada, the USA and Europe – and he’s frequently published in fundraising blogs and journals. Despite his advanced age, Fraser is fast becoming an accomplished webinar guy too!