High donor churn is rarely a donor problem. It’s an organisational one.
When charities talk about poor retention, the conversation often drifts quickly towards donor behaviour.
🔷 People are less loyal.
🔷 Attention spans are shorter.
🔷 There’s more competition for support.
These things may all be true — but they are rarely the most useful place to start.
High churn is usually not caused by donors becoming fickle.
It is caused by organisations failing to give supporters a compelling reason to stay.
Most supporter journeys have evolved reactively:
• New campaigns added on top of old ones
• Communications layered without a clear narrative
• Stewardship treated as “what happens after the ask” rather than a core design principle.
The result is a fragmented experience.
Supporters may receive:
• Thank-you messages that don’t connect to future activity
• Impact updates that feel disconnected from their original motivation
• Appeals that assume more understanding than has actually been built
From inside the organisation, activity feels constant.
From the supporter’s perspective, meaning is often thin.
This is why churn is such an expensive problem.
Every supporter who leaves represents:
💸 Lost future income
📉 Wasted acquisition investment
🧠 Lost insight into what motivates giving
Yet many organisations still accept high churn as inevitable, rather than as a signal that the relationship architecture itself needs attention.
The charities that are improving retention are not necessarily sending more communications.
They are making the supporter journey more intelligible.
They are asking:
🤔 What story does this supporter understand about us?
🔗How does each interaction build on the last?
⚠️ Where do we assume knowledge that hasn’t been earned?
Stewardship, at its core, is about reducing organisational waste by increasing relational coherence.
That is a strategic issue — not a soft one.