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How Virtual Events Can Boost Your Healthcare Organization’s Fundraising Initiatives

Matt Baranoski
Published:  10/22/2021

Sponsored Content by DonorDrive

Forward-thinking healthcare organizations are increasingly turning to virtual fundraising to help provide additional options for in-person events and shrinking budgets. For many organizations, in-person events like galas and peer-to-peer walks and rides had to be cut in response to the pandemic and to accommodate tightened budgets. However, fundraising for healthcare is still desperately needed.

In the U.S., hospital revenue is estimated to be down between $53 billion and $122 billion in 2021–and the challenge extends to other nations, as well. That’s a big problem since healthcare organizations rely on their own revenue and foundations to operate. Positive margins allow healthcare organizations to invest in facilities, treatments, and technologies to better care for patients and build reserves for an uncertain future.

Healthcare organizations must find new and better ways to engage fundraisers and donors to not let the decline in revenue halt the vital work they do. The answer? Virtual fundraising.

Virtual fundraising strategies can transform the way healthcare organizations approach fundraising altogether by providing opportunities for growth, increasing efficiency and accessibility, and achieving higher ROI.

Discover how your hospital foundation can use these strategies to achieve your fundraising goals when you watch our on-demand webinar.

Leveraging virtual fundraising for healthcare organizations

The value that virtual fundraising provides to healthcare organizations is undeniable:

  • It’s less expensive and less time-consuming than in-person fundraising
  • There’s more engagement and a further reach to diverse audiences
  • It's logistically easier and highly adaptable

With all these benefits, it’s easy to see why healthcare organizations are utilizing virtual fundraising. One example is London Health Sciences Foundation (LHSF), the charitable arm of London Health Sciences Centre (LHSC) in London, Ontario, Canada.

LHSF raises money for a wide variety of hospital programs and has had success across many fundraising campaigns since launching their first event Heroes of Health Stream-A-Thon in April 2020.

Using virtual fundraising, LHSF saw unprecedented growth:

Not only did these events surpass expectations, but they show virtual fundraising is a necessary step forward that healthcare organizations must take.

LHSF’s virtual fundraising strategy gave them four valuable advantages:

  • Build community
  • Increase accessibility
  • Improve efficiency
  • Save money & boost ROI

Build community

Every fundraising campaign needs an engaged community supporting it. It may feel more challenging than ever to build community without the help of in-person interactions. LHSF did some successful and repeatable things to help keep their community feeling connected and growing as they fundraised virtually. 

The three things LHSF did to build a community through virtual events were:

  1. Engage with fundraisers and donors
  2. Connect with promotional partners
  3. Invite donors into the fundraising journey

1. Engage with fundraisers and donors

LHSF knows listening and building meaningful relationships with fundraisers increases loyalty to their brand. That’s why they did virtual stewardship events and implemented a chatbot.

One creative idea LHSF implemented was hosting a virtual stewardship event through a livestream. Here’s how they did it:

  1. LHSF sent a private link to major donors so they could participate from the comfort of their homes.
  2. LHSF sent wine and charcuterie board kits to the donors' houses.
  3. A virtual instructor taught the donors how to assemble their own boards.
  4. Donors enjoyed their boards while they heard news and impact stories from the LHSF team.

“It was a great way to have our donors watch and engage,” said Lindsay Manz, manager of community events and celebration giving at LHSF.

Another way LHSF engaged with its audience was through a chatbot. They embedded a third-party chatbot into their page so donors could feel like they were talking to the LHSF CEO.

“It’s an automated messaging system that makes it seem like they’re really communicating with [the CEO],” said Justin Tiseo, development officer of community events at LHSF. “As he’s live on a stream, he’ll answer the questions to the donors so that way they have the communication style still.”

2. Connect with promotional partners

LHSF had to get creative to get the word out about the virtual fundraisers since signage and in-person marketing options were no longer effective. They partnered on a special stream-a-thon fundraiser with their local radio station who helped host and was influential in bringing in more talent to the cause.

The local station promoted the fundraiser not only on the radio but used their social media and website to embed the live stream and a donation widget. 

“That sent us a lot of traffic, so that was a huge component for us,” said Justin.

3. Invite donors into the fundraising journey

LHSF engaged with donors in new ways by making it possible for them to interact with the fundraiser and cause.  By adding streaming to the mix, donors tuned in and watched the opening and closing ceremonies, comedy hours, and entertaining or educational live streams—all with donation capabilities.

With activity tracking turned on, donors could pledge to specific participants and watch them progress in their movement and fundraising goals. And milestones & incentives connected them even more with the fundraiser they were supporting—and potentially get rewarded for contributing the right amount at the right time. 

Increase accessibility

One of LHSF’s events, Dash 4 Dad, grew a whopping 40% by raising nearly $60,000 by going virtual in 2020. That’s because the virtual element increased accessibility for participants and donors. 

Even without a pandemic, an in-person event can limit specific groups of people from joining when they don’t live close, can’t make the date, or don’t have the ability to come to an event. When virtual participant types are created it can only help a healthcare fundraising event expand its reach to broader audiences. 

For example, one rockstar virtual fundraiser for LHSF is Joan, Dash 4 Dad’s oldest participant. At 101 years old, she participates in the Dash 4 Dad event virtually from her nursing home. Joan’s determination helps her always exceed her fundraising goal. In 2020 and 2021, she became one of the campaign’s top fundraisers.

Without virtual fundraising, Joan wouldn’t be able to connect with the LHSF community and participate in the cause she is passionate about.

Improve efficiency

For many healthcare organizations, in-person fundraising events can be a cumbersome project for the development and finance staff.

One of the key benefits LHSF discovered when they began building their virtual events was their ability to quickly and efficiently set up and manage everything from a central platform on DonorDrive. The time it took them to go from idea to execution was very swift, which allowed them to respond to urgent fundraising needs. It also allowed them to make a virtual version for all of their suspended 2020 events rather than simply cancel them. 

Additionally, a big burden was lifted off of the financial team because they now had tracking tools to properly earmark donations through all of LHSF’s various campaigns and the DonorDrive system helped them to send donation receipts to donors in an efficient way.

Save money and boost ROI

Virtual fundraising strategies can put significantly less strain on a healthcare organization’s budget compared to hosting in-person fundraisers. Instead of paying for a venue, food, or event rentals and paying contractors to support event amenities, you can create a virtual experience with minimal investment that your audience can participate in from anywhere. 

LHSF began their virtual fundraising journey with a stream-a-thon called Heroes of Health. The stream-a-thon cost only the staff time it took to produce and to promote it — which was minimal compared to previous years with in-person events. Plus, the event received national attention from the media, which brought more awareness and donations.

Forward-looking healthcare organizations need to employ virtual fundraising to support their hospitals and programs. Virtual fundraising was first perceived as a short-term solution to sidestep the precautions of the pandemic, but healthcare institutions like LHSF have discovered there is significant ongoing value.

Watch our on-demand webinar to learn more.

About the Author

Matt has been involved in nonprofit and healthcare technology for over 20 years in a variety of roles including support, consulting, training, and sales through several technology companies. Helping organizations continue to grow and expand their reach has been a passion throughout his career; and with DonorDrive, he is introducing new concepts of digital and live fundraising to the world of healthcare fundraising.

Meet The Author

Matt Baranoski
Account Executive
DonorDrive

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