We all love the ease with which we can tap our phones to buy groceries or pay a bill. Apple Pay has taken the consumer world by storm, making it faster and easier to zip through lines and pay for items quickly.
But it’s also gained popularity as a convenient way for donors to set up recurring gifts to nonprofits. While this seems like a streamlined way to simplify the donation process, recent data suggests that it may come at a high cost to nonprofits in the form of higher decline rates and increased difficulty managing sustainers.
Nonprofits are adept at finding ways to make giving easy and are often focused on turning one-time donors into sustainers. When this includes accepting Apple Pay for those monthly gifts, you’re delivering convenience to your donors, but based on how Apple Pay operates, you’re running into three issues.
Not using CAU will impact your revenue. But what are some other side effects of offering this convenience to your donors?
Nonprofits can see higher decline rates because of the changing tokens and a payment processor’s limited visibility into raw credit card data.
If a payment is declined, nonprofits can have difficulty reactivating the donor because they can’t charge them until they collect new payment information. This, in turn, lowers your donor retention rates, and that lowers your overall fundraising revenue.
When nonprofit teams are required to manually contact donors for updated payment information, this can increase the administrative burden and the possibility of human error.
Every payment declined or donor who drops means a revenue loss, and these losses can multiply quickly and affect your ability to hit your fundraising goals.
Despite these significant challenges, some nonprofits still want to offer the convenience of Apple Pay for recurring gifts. Rightly so, they believe that an easy donor experience leads to more monthly giving signups, and they’d rather focus on mitigating the risk than losing potential donors.
If this describes your nonprofit’s philosophy, let’s examine some of the best strategies for mitigating the risk of offering Apple Pay for recurring donations.
It’s hard to argue with the convenience of Apple Pay and virtual wallets in general. They are perfect for different types of transactions. Accepting Apple Pay in a shopping cart for a one-time purchase makes a lot of sense and creates an easy donor experience.
But when it comes to recurring donations, nonprofits must consider the potential downside and balance the desire for new recurring donors with the likelihood of losing revenue, or at least having a difficult (and manual) experience maintaining it.
New technology, a lot of it powered by AI, is on the horizon. Critical thinkers will consider different situations and incorporate this tech carefully and strategically rather than blindly jumping on the newest and coolest bandwagons. Nonprofits must stay ahead of the curve, adapting to new technologies and anticipating their impact on donor behavior and fundraising outcomes (as well as organizational efficiencies).
At CharityEngine, we promise to shoot straight with you and share our thoughts on different topics of interest to the nonprofit community. There are many choices when you’re in the market for a new fundraising platform, and we always urge nonprofits to conduct research and find the perfect solution for their needs. If, though, you’re looking for a partner that will provide the knowledge and technology to help you engage donors and raise more money (in fact, only CharityEngine can help you keep at least 90% of your recurring revenue!), we’d love the opportunity to show you our platform and see what kind of results we can promise. Just book a quick demo! We’ll be ready for you.