For charities and membership bodies, relationship-building is everything. Direct mail gives organisations — from local wildlife trusts to national conservation charities and other NPO’s — a tangible way to inform, engage and inspire supporters. When put together and targeted correctly, postal communications feel personal and prompt the kinds of actions that sustain missions: membership, donations, event attendance and volunteer sign-ups. Here’s how to make it work:
Lead with purpose and relevance
Every piece of mail should have a clear objective: recruit new members, renew subscriptions, promote an event, or drive donations for habitat work. A wildlife trust, for example, might send a welcome pack to new members explaining local reserves and volunteering options, a seasonal newsletter with impact stories, a targeted fundraising appeal for a hedgerow-restoration project, or an invitation to a guided walk. Make each mailing relevant to the recipient (local reserve news for neighbouring households; donor-impact stories for recent givers).
Segment and personalise for stronger response
Split your audience into meaningful segments — lapsed members, active volunteers, regular donors, local residents — and tailor the message. Personalisation goes beyond a name: show local campaign progress, suggest volunteer roles based on past activity, or include maps of nearby projects or events. Use PURLs or QR codes to route recipients to personalised landing pages where they can sign up, donate or book events.
Choose the right formats for the job
Postcards work well for quick event reminders or membership drives; letters and multi-piece packs are better for fundraising appeals or stewardship reports where more detail and credibility are needed. For a legacy-giving campaign, a thoughtful, multi-piece pack with an explanatory leaflet, testimony and reply form often outperforms a single-sheet approach.
Build trust with clear, accessible content
Charity mail must feel trustworthy and useful. Use plain language, short case studies (e.g. “Your support helped reintroduce native wildflowers to X reserve”), clear calls to action and visible contact details. Provide alternative response channels for those who prefer phone or post.
Integrate mail with digital follow-up
Direct mail starts the conversation — email, SMS and paid social continue it. After a mailing, follow up with an email reminder or a targeted social ad to the same postcode areas. Track conversions using unique promo codes, PURLs and QR scans to measure which mailings drive membership, event bookings and donations.
Test, measure and learn
Run small A/B pilots on envelope teaser lines, CTAs or formats (postcard vs letter) to see what resonates. Use the data to scale the most effective approach and to model cost-per-acquisition and lifetime value for different supporter types.
Mind data, compliance and sustainability
Keep lists clean, document your lawful basis for processing and run suppression checks. For conservation organisations, sustainability matters: choose FSC or recycled stocks and highlight eco credentials on the mail to align with supporter values.
How Herald Chase can help
Herald Chase are experienced with NPOs and understands seasonal peaks (membership renewal windows, Giving Tuesday), data sensitivity and the need for traceable reporting. If you’d like a practical review of your supporter mail — from welcome packs to major-appeal packs — book a free campaign review with our team at www.heraldchase.com.






