Hope For the Future


If you are moving to a new home, you want to know all about the community to which you are going. And since we will spend eternity some place, we ought to know something about it. The information concerning heaven is found in the Bible. When we talk about heaven, earth grows shabby by comparison. Our sorrows and problems here seem so much less, when we have keen anticipation of the future.

In a certain sense the Christian has heaven here on earth. He has peace of soul, peace of conscience, and peace with God. In the midst of troubles and difficulties he can smile. He has a spring in his step, a joy in his soul, a smile on his face. But the Bible also promises the Christian a heaven in the life hereafter.

Prayer for the day1-Jesus Hugging image011Jesushuggingalovedonewithdoveinbackground

Father, as I face whatever trials come my way, I will take heart in the glorious promise of heaven—knowing I shall be with You!

Psalms 143: 8: Let the morning bring me word of your unfailing Love, for I have put my TRUST in YOU.

A Central Fact: Emotions Are the Decision-Makers


BY SIMONE JOYAUX, 31 AUGUST 2012 13:42

Brain
YAKOBCHUK VASYL / Shutterstock.com

I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again: all human decisions are triggered by emotions. Neuroscience and psychological research prove it. Consider two important statements, the first from Carl Jung. Remember him? According to Jung, “There can be no transforming…of apathy into movement without emotion.” And every organization confronts apathy and inertia from those we hope might give. And even from those who already gave but must still be motivated by the fundraising writing. The second important statement comes from neurologist and author Donald B. Calne: “The essential difference between emotion and reason is that emotion leads to action, while reason leads to conclusions.” You want action! Action is when the donor writes the check. Action is when the donor calls her legislator on your behalf. Action is when the family makes a bequest to your agency.

Psychologist W. Gerrod Parrott has identified 135 emotional states. You’ll see them listed in my book with Tom Ahern, Keep Your Donors: The Guide to Better Communications and Stronger Relationships. But who can remember 135? Over generations of testing, the direct marketing industry has identified seven emotional triggers that are particularly good at generating a response. I’ve told you these before: anger, fear, greed, guilt, flattery, exclusivity, and salvation. Do you use them? Do these emotions appear in every single donor newsletter, in your direct mail solicitations, in your storytelling? Read my September 23, 2011 column, “How to Use Emotions in a Personal Solicitation,” for an example of how this works.

Sadly, an annoying challenge might come from your boss. She says that fundraising is like an IPO: present the facts, and just the facts, to gather investors. (I’m wondering if even an IPO is really all about facts. Look at the frenzy with Facebook’s IPO. Honestly, was that all facts and just the facts?) And some board member will say, “I create a rationale and then people give to the rationale.” Well, they’re both wrong—your boss and the board member. Neuroscience proves it. And it’s your job to read articles about neuroscience. I don’t mean academic articles with neuroscientists talking to neuroscientists. I mean your job is to read the journalists’ translations.

Subscribe to neurosciencemarketing.com. Roger Dooley (a marketer, not a journalist) gives you and I excellent insights about neuroscience research. Now it’s your job and mine to translate this into fundraising. Read Dooley’s Brainfluence: 100 Ways to Persuade and Convince Consumers with Neuromarketing. Read Shankar Vedantam’s The Hidden Brain: How Our Unconscious Minds Elect Presidents, Control Markets, Wage Wars, and Save Our Lives. Read Sheena Iyengar’s The Art of Choosing. It’s all science. And these authors write in ways that you and I can understand, explore, and then apply. Read this stuff. Right now! Apply it!

Talk with your development colleagues about this information. Talk with your fund development committee. You’re the fundraiser. Be the expert. Keep up with the body of knowledge. Lead.

And now, drum roll, please . . . some neuroscience facts (with more to come in my next column):

Emotional messaging works. And rational messaging actually hurts. Hurts. That board member who claims he creates a rationale? Don’t let him solicit!

Here are the research stats on advertising effectiveness, reported on neurosciencemarketing.com on July 27, 2009: Rational content is 16 percent effective. Mixed content is 26 percent effective. And emotional content is 31 percent effective. The authors “attribute this split to our brain’s ability to process emotional input without cognitive processing . . . as well as our brain’s more powerful recording of emotional stimuli.”

Here’s another one—about flattery: Research shows that “even when people perceive that flattery is insincere, that flattery can still leave a lasting and positive impression of the flatterer.” Of course, ethical marketers—and that means fundraisers, too—use flattery honestly. That’s from research by Elaine Chan and Jaideep Sengupta of the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, reported on February 17, 2010 onneurosciencemarketing.com.

So I repeat: Collect samples of good donor communications that effectively use emotions, and use those emotions in your donor newsletter, your direct mail solicitation, the stories you tell in your annual report, and on your website.

The Best Thing You Can Create in Life


Achievement, success, a legacy.  Everyone is finding a way to arrive at these three things. LinkedIn connects people through millions of messages, but I imagine that if you could eavesdrop on them all at once, you’d find the same thread. Achievement means attaining a goal that means something to you personally. Success means finding fulfillment in your goal. A legacy means leaving behind something that is valued and remembered.

Yet as much as the social network facilitates achievement, success, and a legacy, actually reaching them has become confusing. Thirty years ago, you and I would have seen a narrow, rather fixed path. Our lives were more local and not global. We knew about economic events far away, but they didn’t impact us personally. The people we knew were almost surely born and raised in the same country as we were.

Now the path has become much broader and walls have crashed down. You and I can live a life with much wider cope. The potential for expanded achievement, success, and a legacy are greater than ever.  To survive in an expanded world, however, runs headlong into some things that we cherish and that are scary to let go of: familiar surroundings, a feeling of belonging, the security of the group, and the comfort of conformity.

As LinkedIn launches a new format for exchanging inspiration and influence between its members, I want to dedicate my part to this confusing picture of expanded promise. The title of this post is a teaser for the posts to come. What is the best thing you can create in life?

It’s not achievement, success, or a legacy. It’s a clear path to reach those things, and that path is available only by a conscious lifestyle.  Expanding your awareness is the best thing you can create in life, because it serves as the foundation for meaning, purpose, inspiration, love, and personal evolution.  Please stay tuned. This is the theme I will address twice a week. Let’s travel the path together.

 

Deepak Chopra MD, FACP, is the author of more than 65 books including numerous New York Times bestsellers.  His latest novel, God: A Story of Revelation (HarperOne) released on September 25, 2012).  www.deepakchopra.com