blog
The Complete Giving History of a Givelink Donor: Two Years in Review
What a donor's Givelink dashboard actually looks like after two years — the photos, the frequency, the organizations, and the giving identity it builds.

Antonis Politis |

The Complete Giving History of a Givelink Donor: Two Years in Review
What a donor's Givelink dashboard actually looks like after two years — the photos, the frequency, the organizations, and the giving identity it builds.
Abstract discussions of donor retention data benefit from a concrete example. Here's what two years of transparent giving actually looks like — not as a donor journey narrative but as a literal account of what appears in a dashboard, what the numbers look like, and what the accumulated proof record means for the relationship between a donor and the organizations they've supported.
This is a composite profile — drawn from patterns across our highest-engagement donor cohort, presented as a single donor's experience.
The donor: a brief profile
Sarah, 38. Marketing director, Oakland. Gives to three Givelink nonprofits. Started in November 2025 with a test donation of $25. Two-year review as of November 2027.
Year one: building the habit (November 2025 – October 2026)
First gift: $25 to Bayview Senior Services, SmartPick. November 7, 2025.
First delivery photo: November 20, 2025. Grip socks and nutritional shakes on a supply room shelf. Caption: "These arrived for our residents this week. Thank you."
Sarah's reaction (recorded in a brief dashboard message she left): "Oh. I didn't expect to actually see it."
Month 2: Gives $35. Picks items manually — incontinence supplies she saw on the wishlist.
Month 3: Adds a second nonprofit. Youth literacy program. $25 SmartPick. Delivery photo in January.
Month 4–6: Gives monthly to both organizations. Begins checking the dashboard every 2 weeks when she expects photos.
Month 7: Activates monthly recurring gifts to both organizations — $30/month to Bayview, $20/month to the literacy program.
Month 10: Adds a third nonprofit — 24th Street Theater, $25/month.
Year one summary:
- Total giving events: 18
- Total giving: $490
- Organizations supported: 3
- Delivery photos received: 14
- Photo notification open rate: 86%
- Recurring gifts active: 3
Year two: the compounding relationship (November 2026 – October 2027)
The second year is qualitatively different from the first. The habit is established. The dashboard is familiar. The organizations are known.
November 2026: Receives Bayview Senior Services delivery photo — the same supply room she's now seen 9 times. She writes in the dashboard: "I feel like I know this shelf." Monthly giving continues.
February 2027: Increases her Bayview recurring gift from $30 to $45 — unprompted. No ask. She updated the amount herself after seeing a wishlist update showing incontinence supplies at critical priority.
April 2027: Refers a colleague to Givelink using the Bayview delivery photo. Shares it in a group Slack with "this is what my $30 became last month." Two colleagues give that week.
June 2027: Gives a one-time $80 gift to 24th Street Theater during their school year launch period — separate from her monthly recurring. No special campaign; she saw the wishlist update and responded.
October 2027: DV Awareness Month. Sarah adds a fourth organization — a Bay Area DV shelter — for a one-month giving commitment. Plans to evaluate in November whether to continue monthly.
Year two summary:
- Total giving events: 28
- Total giving: $870
- Organizations supported: 4
- Delivery photos received: 26
- Photo notification open rate: 89%
- Recurring gifts active: 3 (ongoing) + 1 monthly commitment under evaluation
The two-year cumulative dashboard
After two years:
- Total giving events: 46
- Total giving: $1,360
- Delivery photos received: 40
- Organizations: 4 (3 ongoing recurring, 1 under evaluation)
- Referrals produced: 2 confirmed new donors (likely more through shares)
What the dashboard shows: A grid of 40 delivery photos organized chronologically. For each photo: the date, the organization, the caption, and the items shown. The grid is a visual record of two years of giving — specific, documented, organized.
A giving frequency chart: the pattern of when she gives. Clearly biweekly — corresponding to delivery photo notifications. The habit is visible in the data.
Three organization tiles: Bayview Senior Services, the youth literacy program, and 24th Street Theater. Each showing total giving, giving frequency, last delivery date, and current wishlist.
Tax receipts: 46 separate receipts organized by year, all downloadable for tax filing.
What the giving identity looks like at two years
At two years, Sarah's giving identity is specific:
She gives to senior care, youth education, and youth arts in the Bay Area. She gives primarily through SmartPick (for efficiency) and occasionally manually (when a specific item calls to her). She gives monthly on a recurring basis, with one-time additions when something on a wishlist is particularly urgent or when her giving capacity has a good month.
She thinks of herself as a Givelink donor — the platform is the infrastructure of her giving practice, not just a tool she uses occasionally.
This giving identity — specific, recurring, relationship-based, proof-anchored — doesn't develop in year one. It develops in year two, as the habit compounds into something recognizable as a personal practice.
What this means for the organizations
Bayview Senior Services received approximately $890 from Sarah over two years — about $37/month average — with growing amounts as she increased her recurring gift. Her two referrals each gave for at least six months. The development coordinator knows her name.
24th Street Theater received $545 — consistent monthly support from a donor whose giving started with a colleague's recommendation and was sustained by delivery photos of art supplies on program room shelves.
The youth literacy program received $480 — smaller monthly amounts, consistent.
The DV shelter is in evaluation — she'll decide in November.
The dashboard as a giving record
The 40 delivery photos in Sarah's dashboard are not just notifications. They're the proof record of two years of giving relationships — a documentary account of what happened because she gave, organized in a format she can return to, share from, and build on.
This is what "giving that feels human" looks like after two years. Not an abstract sentiment. A grid of 40 photos, a tax receipt archive, and three organizations whose supply rooms she knows by sight.
Browse verified nonprofits on Givelink and start building yours.
Stay Human.
Antonis Politis is CEO and Co-Founder of Givelink.
Διάβασε επίσης
Τι είναι η Givelink;
Άκου από τους ίδιους τους ιδρυτές:
Στήριξε μια οργάνωση
Κάνε τα ψώνια που χρειάζεται, online!
