Why Discovery Is the New North Star for Donor Acquisition

Picture of Bruce Hammer
Bruce Hammer

SVP, Nonprofit Solutions

The Comfortable System

For years, we relied on a predictable formula for nonprofit direct mail acquisition: find strong lists, control costs, and use overlap between files as a form of validation. It was a strategy built for a more homogeneous market, and for a long time, it served us well.

But systems that work well often create an unintended consequence—eventually, everyone uses the same system.

Same sources, same donors, same ceiling.

The Question Worth Asking

If every organization is sourcing donors from the same limited pools, are we truly discovering new supporters—or simply circulating the same ones more efficiently?

Every acquisition strategy reflects a belief about where future donors come from. Some prioritize efficiency. Others prioritize discovery. Today, those models are hitting a ceiling—and the difference matters more than ever.

True advantage comes from harnessing modeling agility and unique, differentiated signals.

When Data Moves Faster Than Strategy

In today’s environment, data is not a commodity—it is a competitive lever. And the most meaningful difference is now timing. Some signals update daily, while others lag by weeks. That gap determines how closely our campaigns align with real donor intent.

Overlap may feel like validation—but it also concentrates our attention on donors we’ve already found. True growth happens when we shift focus from cost efficiency to discovery: identifying new donors earlier in their giving journey, before the rest of the sector finds them.

What Happens When the Signals Change

We’ve seen firsthand the impact of moving away from “recycled names”. In one humanitarian campaign, shifting to higher-recency, precision-driven signals delivered:

  • +379% Lift in Average Gift Amount
  • 3x Return on Investment
  • +16% Increase in Response Rate
chart highlighting the return

Growth Comes From Discovery

The goal of acquisition is not just to reach donors—it is to find those who have not yet given, but are most likely to. These audiences almost always exist just beyond our traditional, “safe” targeting approaches. Organizations that embrace differentiated data and prioritize discovery will be best positioned to find their next generation of lifetime supporters. And sometimes, that growth begins the moment we stop looking at the same old lists—and start looking somewhere new.

Bruce Hammer Senior Vice President, Nonprofit Solutions, is a Direct Marketing Professional with over 3 decades of experience helping Non-Profits Organizations acquire new, high-value donors.