In 1993, a little-known movie called Groundhog Day hit the theatres. Then Saturday Night Live star Bill Murray portrayed Pittsburgh weatherman Phil Connors on a trip to Punxsutawney, Pennsylvania, to visit the ground zero of the American tradition of predicting winter weather by whether a very plump groundhog will see its shadow. The result is a rom-com wrapped in a sci-fi time loop and hope that has become a global cult classic.
Why does this matter to NFPs on the opposite side of the globe and email marketing campaigns? It’s all about repetition. In the film, Connors starts by treating the repetition of living the same day over and over again selfishly, then recklessly, until realising the only way forward is to improve how you show up.
Email engagement can often feel the same. Another newsletter or appeal in the same boring context you’ve used before. You cannot escape the loop by doing something new. Like Connors, your email Groundhog Day has to shift by doing the same thing better. Here are some lessons this famed movie can give anyone in fundraising.
#1 Repetition Isn’t Bad, It’s Irrelevance That’ll Stall Your Goals
In the film, Connors treats each day as if it has no meaning. Why bother putting out effort if tomorrow is only going to be the same result? That is the same thinking some NFPs have with “we’ve already thanked donors” or “we’ve covered this campaign last month.”
You’ve got to flip the mental switch. Your readers aren’t seeing the same thing over and over. That email sent today might be the only one that exists to them. They’re looking at your subject line and content, asking, “Is this relevant to me right now?”
Instead of thinking you’ve sent that email already, redefine it by asking if it is meaningful to your target segment right now. Personalise your messaging. Segment your donors and volunteers. Deliver references from the local perspective to cut through the noise of a busy inbox, and you’ll get out of your time loop.
#2 Mastery Comes with Refinement
Pushing thousands of emails out a year doesn’t matter if they all look the same. Connors improves deliberately over the course of the film, using his endless days to learn the piano, help the townspeople, and become more attentive to the world around him.
Responding to low email or newsletter engagement by sending more reminders and building a sense of urgency won’t improve the craft of writing; it will only increase the volume.
You need to focus on A/B testing and refine your messaging with:
- Engaging subject lines
- One primary message per email
- Storytelling that appeals to your readers
- Clear CTAs for the next steps
Don’t be general. Saying thank you for support to a new community initiative is good. Including a line in your message that says “you changed the lives of 42 families this month” is better. Refine your open rates, CTRs, donor retention, and volunteer reactivation one message at a time.
#3 Attention Comes Through Empathy
At the beginning of Groundhog Day, Connors manipulates the people around him because he knows the results. By the end, he is listening and engaging with them from a state of empathy. That changes everything.
Donors are not giving to your “mission expansion.” They are donating money, time, and gifts to people. They want to see how their money changes lives and impacts their communities. The impact of their gifts dictates empathy-driven emails.
Think about whether your message recognises the supporter’s role or shows gratitude. Does it show impact from real-world outcomes? Stop trying to win donors. Instead, serve their interests. Let your emails be the oil in the machine of your gift-giving campaigns, and you’ll see results.
#4 Consistency Builds Trust
Nothing in Punxsutawney changes around Connors in the film. What changes is him, because of consistent growth. For your NFP, consistency should be the foundation of trust.
Avoid shifting the tone of your email messages from month to month. You don’t want to sound corporate in April and then casual in May. Tone consistency builds recognition for your brand.
Your NFP does have a brand voice, and using tools like recognisable formatting, predictable cadences, regular impact reporting, and standardised sign-offs can convey a warm, comforting message to your readers. They will trust you more because they know what to expect and count on that information.
#5 Small Acts Matter
The “final day” of the film, right before Connors wakes up to a new morning, is filled with tiny gestures of kindness, not grand acts. He catches a boy falling from a tree. Fixes the tire of a car driven by three old ladies. Learns the stories and motivations of people like the town’s mayor or a young couple who have just married.
Email engagement is much the same. Being grateful for the engagement you get and then offering small gestures of kindness, like a thank-you email in 24 hours or a quarterly volunteer spotlight, resonates with your audience. Something as simple as a birthday message goes a long way to people. It provides lifetime value in being associated with what your NFP does and how you do it.
#6 The Way Out of the Email Loop is Becoming Better
Repetition is the crux of the plot of Groundhog Day, just as email marketing is crucial to your NFP. Stop viewing that communication tool as punishment, but more as an opportunity. The answer to escaping endless repetition lies in small improvements that share outcomes, tell a human story, and invite meaningful action.
Learn to refine and improve little by little. Make small, intentional refinements with your email marketing and learn the lessons of Phil Connors by being grateful and personal. Quality email engagement is more than a clever subject line or a dramatic sense of urgency. It’s about showing up with consistent, empathetic, and refined messaging. That will provide the best engagement you can get.
Find Your New Déjà Vu
You don’t escape the loop of email marketing by demanding something new. You do it by becoming something better inside of it. While you may think email marketing is boring or outdated, your readers are not stuck in the same mindset. Go the extra mile. Put in that little piece of personalised intent, and you’ll grow in new and exciting ways toward your NFP’s goals.
At Web 105, we can help you take those refined steps with stunning, practical web forms that capture your readers’ emails. Our team of professional website designers and developers has worked with Australian healthcare providers, government agencies, and nonprofits, building customised, mobile-responsive websites optimised for email engagement.
Give us a call today, and let’s set up a time to discuss your NFP’s goals and online presence so we can craft the modern, refined website you need.
FAQs
How do I say I remain attentive in an email?
Use leading phrases like “you can write us at any time” or “we await your response.” You want to find a way to encourage engagement by clearly defining actions for your readers.
What is an email engagement?
This measures how your readers are interacting with your emails. Most NFPs measure open rates, response rates, or the number of people who use the CTAs in the message.
What is email segmentation?
With segmentation, you are splitting your recipients into groups based on behavioural or demographic data. For example, a group of donors who gift a given range of money and are within a given age range would be a good segment.