I often hear people say that donations in the form of a monthly direct debit is more useful to charities than one-off donations, since it makes their cash inflow more predictable and easier to budget. Is this true, and if so, how much? If you run a non-profit, what percentage of a donation would you forfeit to have the donation come monthly, rather than yearly?
Context: I donate yearly, in November. I started doing this last year, when I tried (and failed) to get donation matching. This year, I failed again, and given the changes to donation matching terms, it seems unlikely I'll get donation matching again, so I'm considering switching to donation monthly.
I run a large-ish non-profit and do fundraising forecasting. It's definitely helpful to have a credible commitment for future donating since we can make plans based on that (or some credibility-discounted version of that), whereas otherwise we just make plans based on the initial cash.
I think monthly donations help establish credibility much faster (because over say six months you can see that the donation occurred six times whereas the yearly donation only occurs once) but you could also say something explicit to the non-profit like "I'm going to give you $X now and $X next year".
The main thing though is just being honest about your intentions. If you are going to rethink your donations every year or every month (very reasonable to do) you definitely don't want the non-profit thinking you'd keep donating regularly.
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I'm not sure I'd sacrifice anything for this since the cash is the same either way. It's just you leaving value on the table if you are going to donate in a recurring way but don't let anyone know.