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SOFII’s
view
An amusing story from the early days of The
Dogs Trust ‘sponsor a dog’ scheme shows how
the idea of dog sponsorship captured people’s imagination
and even motivated donors to go to quite extraordinary lengths
for ‘their’ dog. The 24 dogs first featured
in the scheme were located in NCDL animal centres all round
the UK. Initially, sponsors were encouraged to visit their
dog, to take it for a walk. This proved so popular that
some of the poor pooches were no sooner back from one walk
than they were frog-marched off on the next.
The idea had to be dropped because some dogs were in danger
of having the legs walked off them.
The agency creative teams had endless fun with this project
in devising all the paraphernalia of the scheme such as
creating the promotional materials and writing the Valentine’s
Day poems (doggerel).
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Name of exhibitor: Adrian Burder, director of fundraising,
Dog’s Trust .
Email: adrian.burder@dogstrust.org.uk
Name of exhibit: The Dogs Trust ‘Sponsor
a dog’ scheme.
Date of first appearance: 1995.
Category/area of fundraising: Fundraising products
and propositions.
Country of origin: UK.
Summary/objectives : To transform an important
animal welfare organisation by successfully re-launching a classic
fundraising product.
Background: Dogs Trust is the largest dog welfare
charity in the United Kingdom. Every year, Dogs Trust looks after
around 15,000 abandoned dogs at its nationwide network of 17 re-homing
centres. The Trust aims to find new homes for all dogs and no healthy
dog is ever destroyed. Until 2003, Dogs Trust was known as the National
Canine Defence League (NCDL). Its main source of funding is the
sponsor a dog programme.
‘Sponsor a dog’ started back in the 1960s by the then
chief executive, Lieutenant Colonel A H Roosemale Cocq OBE MC who,
for obvious reasons, was known as Rosy. When Rosy was appointed
NCDL was over £100,000 in debt. Rosy set about transforming
the organisation and one of his first decisions was to introduce
a non-destruction policy. This meant that many of the charity’s
dogs would be in NCDL’s care for long periods of time, so
Rosy hit on the idea of putting these dogs up for sponsorship.
Although dog sponsorship is a lovely fundraising product, it wasn’t
developed for many years. Promotion was through leaflets and mentions
in NCDL’s magazines. Sponsors would get a photo of ‘their’
dog when they joined but further communication was haphazard.
There wasn’t a fundraising department until 1991 and until
1995 it consisted of just one person. By the end of 1994, dog
sponsorship was raising around £90,000 a year — not
nearly enough for the charity’s needs, particularly if it
was to become a significant national organisation. So NCDL instigated
a major fundraising drive to enable the organisation to refurbish
existing re-homing centres and build new centres. It was believed
that, by using direct marketing, substantial and dependable income
streams could be developed.
One of the first major developments was the re-launch of dog sponsorship,
in the summer of 1995. The premise is simple: for a regular gift
of a pound each week, you can sponsor one of NCDL’s longer-term
residents and help to keep them (and the other dogs in NCDL’s
care) safe and happy.
By developing the product (with agency Burnett Associates), NCDL
set out to build strong relationships with its donors. Earlier letters
to sponsors had been written as if they had come directly from the
dog. Sponsors seemed to respond warmly to this and often replied
to ‘their’ dog. It was also common for dogs owned by
some sponsors to write back to the sponsored dog (obviously, donors
were entering into the spirit of the sponsorship link, with enthusiasm
that far exceeded NCDL’s expectations). It was decided that
this anthropomorphic approach was the way forward — the sponsored
dog forming a relationship directly with the donor, through letters,
cards and other regular communication.
The product was redesigned to ensure that sponsors would receive
regular newsy updates from their dog. The first update was a Christmas
card, the second a Valentine’s card. Handwritten envelopes
and postage stamps were used to make these communications more
personal. While donor response to the Christmas card was very
positive, the response to the Valentine’s card was overwhelming.
Several letters were received from elderly women who confessed
to shedding tears of joy when they opened their card — as
they had never received one before. One woman phoned NCDL’s
head office to ask someone to explain what was happening to her
boyfriend, as he thought she was having an affair! It was quickly
realised that dog sponsorship had the ability to make donors smile
— a rare event in direct mail fundraising. All materials
were bright and cheerful with no harrowing images, so donors could
open the mail without fear.
When sponsors join the scheme they receive a welcome pack featuring
a canine ID card, a certificate of sponsorship, a fridge magnet
and car sticker, followed by three updates a year from ‘their’
dog. Sponsors also receive the Trust’s tri-annual magazine
Wag, to keep them abreast of what’s happening at Dogs Trust.
The first means of promotion was a mailing to the existing NCDL
database. The head of fundraising at NCDL had no idea how successful
this would be, just a hunch that it would work. The results were
phenomenal, with ROIs of around 1:12 (for every £1.00 invested,
an immediate response of £12.00 came back). This was followed
up by testing recruitment advertisements in the UK national press
which, again, proved phenomenally successful — one national
newspaper providing an ROI of 1:7. As confidence in the product
grew, it was decided to test the use of DRTV (direct response television).
It was felt that a visual product such as the sponsor a dog scheme
would lend itself well to the television medium. Again, results
were fantastic with ROI’s of 1:4 or more achieved in the early
days.
All the promotional materials were heavily anthropomorphic —
dogs asking donors directly, ‘will you be my best friend?’
It proved irresistible. From the outset it was made clear that each
dog had multiple sponsors (unlike child sponsorship schemes, which
are almost invariably based on one child, one sponsor) but this
seemed in no way to diminish the sponsors’ enthusiasm for
the scheme.
From that point in 1995, NCDL’s income began to rise exponentially.
Today, Dogs Trust generates over £15m per annum from dog
sponsorship — excluding Gift Aid (which can add another
15 to 20 per cent). Dogs Trust currently has 200,000 sponsors.
So income has grown from £90,000 to £15m in just 12
years.
Creator/originator: NCDL/ Dogs Trust working
with Burnett Associates Limited.
Special characteristics: A ceaseless commitment
to improvement through innovation.
Influence/impact:
This is a classic and highly creative example of one of the best
fundraising propositions of all time — sponsor a dog.
Test details: A wide range of media has been tested
— direct mail, press ads, advertorials, direct response television
(DRTV), loose inserts, door drops, telephone, radio, outdoor posters,
viral email (where recipients of Dogs Trust emails are asked to
forward them to friends), on line advertisements and face to face
— it’s even been tried (unsuccessfully) on the sides
of milk cartons, as was expected, ROIs have dropped since the halcyon
days of the mid 1990s but the product is still very profitable.
The sponsor a dog product has evolved to ensure that efficient
renewal, upgrade and reactivation programmes are in place. A website
has been created (http://www.dogstrust.org.uk) and all materials
are refreshed from time to time. But, at its heart, the product
remains the same. A simple means of building a relationship between
giver and beneficiary to encourage long-term support from our
donors. We even have some dog sponsorship addicts who sponsor
every available dog (currently 25) for £52 a year
Costs: See above
Results: See above
Why do you think this exhibit merits a place in SOFII?:
This is the classic ‘sponsor an animal’ fundraising
product, developed to a very high degree of technical excellence,
which has led to quite extraordinary fundraising success for its
initiator, Dogs Trust.
Any other relevant information:
Dog sponsorship is also a product that sits happily with our brand.
Dogs Trust is an upbeat, positive organisation that celebrates
the dog/human relationship. Dog sponsorship reflects these values
perfectly.
In 1999, The Dogs Trust was left a legacy of 7.5m. The generous
woman who had made this extraordinary gift was a dog sponsor.
(see also Dogs Trust legacy advertising).
Related
pages/exhibits
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An
escalator poster. It’s not hard to see the appeal of this great fundraising
proposition. Show these ads, mail packs and TV spots to, even, a roomful of
fundraisers and invariably it'll be greeted by cries of ‘Awwww!’. And as all
fundraisers should know, possession of the ‘Aww’ factor is a sign of a surefire
winner.


The
‘big world’ cold acquisition pack
— leaflet.
The
‘big world’ cold acquisition pack
— letter.

The
‘big world’ cold acquisition pack
— poster.

The
‘big world’ cold acquisition pack
— outer envelope.
Television
commercials.
The first TV spot. Please select:
PC or Mac use.

A
current TV spot.
Please
select: PC or
Mac use.

The
‘wheel’ promotion.

The
‘how much do you love me’
press advertisement.

The ‘Charlie’ St Valentine’s day
card.
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