Automation tends to raise eyebrows in fundraising circles, especially when donor relationships are on the line. And honestly? Fair enough. Stewardship is personal by design. The whole point is to make people feel seen and valued.
So when someone suggests automating part of that, it can sound like a shortcut in all the wrong ways. The hesitation makes sense. No one wants stewardship to feel robotic.
The right automation doesn’t replace the human touch; it makes space for it, clearing out the manual noise so teams can focus on the deeper, more meaningful work of building relationships, following up thoughtfully, and staying responsive in moments that matter.
Let’s break down how nonprofits use HubSpot to automate stewardship in ways that are strategic, scalable, and still deeply personal.
In 2025, donor retention is still trending in the wrong direction. According to the Fundraising Effectiveness Project, the retention rate for new donors declined to about 18.1 % in Q1 2025, down from 18.3 % a year prior, showing how fragile early donor relationships can be. Meanwhile, the number of donors in the same period dropped about 1.3 % year-over-year.
This illustrates that supporters expect to feel seen and connected after they give, but when teams are stretched, those key moments can slip through - quiet signals (but oftentimes just a complete misinterpretation) that the relationship isn’t being nurtured. Organizations can’t afford that. Donor engagement is far too important to fall behind and too valuable in the big picture, both in the long and short term.
This is where automation offers strategic leverage and creates systems to ensure stewardship moments land on schedule and with purpose.
So what’s getting missed, and what can automation actually fix?
Let’s look at where gaps happen most often in stewardship, and how well-designed automation can close them without sacrificing the donor experience:
Even with the best intentions, donor touchpoints slip through the cracks. A thank-you that goes out days late. A pledge reminder that never gets sent. A milestone that passes without acknowledgment.
And it’s not even about lack of care. Teams are working hard for sure, but without the right support, it’s tough to keep up with every detail that makes stewardship feel personal.
Automation steps in to help your team follow through consistently, on time, and at scale. When you build intentional, well-timed workflows, your team can deliver consistent, timely engagement without relying on memory, spreadsheets, or late-night catch-up emails.
When you automate key stewardship flows, you free up your team to concentrate on the moments that require thought, care, and creativity. The manual steps get handled in the background so staff can spend less time chasing reminders and more time building real connections.
Done right, automation helps:
Consistent stewardship builds confidence. It shows donors that your team is paying attention, and that their support is being taken seriously.
Most donors don’t churn because they’re uninterested. They leave because they don’t feel connected. That first gift goes unacknowledged. That monthly gift becomes routine. That engagement trail goes cold.
Retention improves when stewardship is consistent. Automation helps make that consistency sustainable.
▶️ Watch our HubSpot walkthrough, where Dan, a Nonprofit Tech Shop HubSpot Solutions Consultant, shows how to build out a simple automated stewardship workflow, complete with personalized thank-you emails, branching logic, and internal staff reminders.
You'll learn how to:
📽️ Bonus: It's built entirely in HubSpot, no code or plug-ins required.
Once the strategy is in place, the next step is execution.
What exactly should you automate, and how do you do it without losing the nuance your donors expect?
The answer isn’t “everything.” It’s the high-volume, time-sensitive touchpoints that often fall through the cracks: the messages that build trust when they show up consistently, and erode it when they don’t.
Here are some of the practical ways we’ve actually put into action, helping fundraising teams use HubSpot to handle the moments that matter, automatically, reliably, and in a way that still feels personal.
|
Stewardship Flow |
Trigger |
What to Automate |
Why It Works |
|
Thank-You Emails |
Gift processed |
Personalized message with gift details, donor name, campaign |
Gratitude is immediate, not delayed or forgotten |
|
Welcome Series |
First gift or new subscriber |
2 - 3 touchpoints introducing your work, impact, and team |
Builds early trust and sets the tone |
|
Milestones & Anniversaries |
Gift count, years since first donation, total giving |
“You’ve supported us for 3 years!” or “$1,000 milestone!” |
Celebrates loyalty without waiting for a major gift |
|
Recurring Gift Check-Ins |
Monthly/quarterly donors |
Periodic updates, custom impact reports, thank-you notes |
Keeps the relationship warm even without new gifts |
|
Pledge Follow-Up |
Days before due or missed payment |
Gentle reminder email, internal flag for staff |
Keeps gifts on track and avoids awkward silence |
|
Behavior-Based Outreach |
Based on email clicks, site visits, events attended |
Trigger content or calls-to-action aligned with behavior |
Makes engagement feel timely and tailored |
While automation is great, it’s also true that not every touchpoint has to be automated. Some moments carry too much emotional weight (or strategic value) to be handed off to a workflow.
These are the kinds of interactions where a real, manual response builds trust, deepens connection, and reflects the relationship you’ve built over time.
What you can do, however, is use automation to flag these scenarios by assigning a task, sending a Slack notification, or tagging the donor for personal follow-up. But let your team own the response. That’s where relationships are strengthened and where thoughtful stewardship really pays off.
Another thing to address here is the elephant in the room - not everyone loves the word “automation.” For teams who care deeply about relationships, it can sound clinical or distant. For others, it feels like an empty buzzword, one that’s just never lived up to the promise, especially if they haven’t seen it used in a way that actually saves time or strengthens relationships.
Here are some ways to start shifting that mindset:
It takes some upfront effort, but when you intentionally build around the core premise of freeing your team from manual tasks, then they can focus on the conversations and moments that actually build lasting donor relationships.