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A Beginner’s Guide to Testing and Measuring Your Donor Campaigns

April 24, 2018 by Dennis Fischman Leave a Comment

A guest post by Lisa C. Dunn

 Lisa Dunn

Guest author Lisa Dunn

As a nonprofit leader, you probably already know that measuring your organization’s return on investment (ROI) is essential. However, it’s an undertaking that involves inherent challenges when compared to for-profit company leaders facing the same responsibility.

While nonprofits are adept at delivering value, they tend to be less prepared to demonstrate the value of their work, or report outcomes that make sense to donors.

Why are Testing and Measuring Such a Struggle?

Some organizations simply lack the resources to measure impact. Other nonprofits have the resources but don’t understand what factors they should be testing and measuring, or how to quantify their impact.

Despite these challenges, stakeholders hold nonprofits to the same level of standards when it comes to accountability, transparency and measurable results as their for-profit counterparts. So what can your nonprofit do to meet those expectations?

Tune In to These Success Metrics

It can be challenging to figure out exactly what metrics you need in order to identify where your nonprofit’s performance has room for improvement. Many organizations make use of core key performance indicators (KPIs), or analytical tools to help them raise more and more funds.

There are several indicators that nonprofit leadership teams should focus on when it comes to testing and measuring donor campaigns:

Cost Per Dollar Raised

This category is one of the most commonly referenced fundraising success metrics. It answers a very simple question: Did you raise money, break even, or lose money? To determine cost per dollar raised, divide expense by revenue for the specific fundraiser you are examining – such as an event, direct mail appeal, or annual campaign.

If the expense and revenue are equal, you broke even and do not need to carry out any calculations. If the expense is higher than revenue, you lost money.

Year-Over-Year Increase in Donors

Do you know how to track how many donors your nonprofit retains on a year-over-year basis? A sign of growth is the number of donors who renew their support. Pay attention to any loss of donors. Weak performance in this category can be a sign of problems that you need to deal with immediately.

Ideally, your acquisition and retention rates should be improving simultaneously. In general, some organizations place a stronger emphasis on acquisition , some on retention. Acquiring new donors is an expensive undertaking, and retention can be much more cost-effective.

Track your retention rate in a donor management system or a customer relationship management (CRM) software to understand how your nonprofit is doing and determine if your retention practices need enhancing. If you realize that you have a rate that needs improving, look to your stewardship practices and re-evaluate periodically.

Average Gift Size

Do you know your nonprofit’s typical gift size? How does it compare to average gifts from three years ago?

If newer donations remain steady but the value of each gift remains minimal, you have an opportunity to grow your annual fundraising numbers substantially. Look to your current donor pool for ideal candidates to upgrade, and never overlook slighter increases in gift size – they all add up.

Return On Investment

This metric is equally as popular and similar to cost per dollar raised. Instead of dividing expenses by revenue, you divide revenue by expenses. Once you have divided the two amounts, a number greater than one indicates that you have raised money.

You should always know if the strategy you are using is paying off with regards to how you spend time and resources. The ROI metric is comprehensive, so consider all of the factors, including the donation output of the sum total of your fundraising inputs.

For example, use this assessment to determine if your annual gala is more fun, more profitable, or even both. While unique fundraising activities are a great strategy to mix up annual campaigns, in the end, the overall funds you raise must be a top consideration.

The Proof of the Pudding

Today’s nonprofit donors require clear measures of performance and impact. They want real performance metrics as proof that you and your team are making smart decisions with their money. They also want to be shown clear results in meaningful, measurable ways, and that their donations are supporting positive impact regarding your mission.

The metrics we noted above can give you a good start as you pay closer attention to the specifics and become more familiar with your organization’s performance. The things you learn from your efforts can ultimately shape your strategies moving forward.


Lisa C. Dunn is a writer for TechnologyAdvice and a freelance writer, copywriter and ghostwriter who develops high-quality content for businesses and non-profit organizations. For over 20 years, she has worked with numerous PR and digital marketing agencies, and her work has been featured in well-known publications including Forbes, VentureBeat, Mashable, Huffington Post, Wired, B2C,  and USA Today, among others.

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Fundraising Tuesday: 3 Ways to Get Personal with Your Donors

April 17, 2018 by Dennis Fischman Leave a Comment

personalOne of the seven reasons your nonprofit is not raising as much money as you want is that you’re not making those appeal letters personal.

Making it personal means more than sending out a mass mailing that calls donors by their names. If you’re not doing that already, please start! “Dear Friend” letters are the clearest signal that the person receiving the letter is not really your friend.

But mail merge is old hat. It doesn’t make anyone feel that you, the nonprofit, know anything about them, the donor. There are better ways to tell the donor “You’re my hero.”

Make It Personal by Sending the Right Letter

The donor wants you to know whether or not they have ever given before. If you don’t know that, you don’t know them. If you don’t know them, why should they give?

Send a different letter to previous donors than people you're asking to give for the first time. Share on X

Simple, right? But in my personal experience, nine out of ten appeal letters used exactly the same language to me that they would use to someone who had never given them a penny!

Fix this by segmenting your list, writing different letters to prospects, lapsed donors, and renewing donors, and acknowledging the date and amount of the previous gift.

Make It Personal by Talking about MY Issues

Let’s say you run a community center. I came to an event where you highlighted your youth programs, and I was so impressed that I donated on the spot.

At the end of the year, you sent me an appeal letter, and it talked all about your Meals on Wheels program for seniors. It said nothing about youth.

What are the chances you’re going to get a donation from me again? Slim and none.

Appeal to people based on the things you do that actually appeal to THEM. Share on X

With a good database, you should have no trouble keeping track of my giving history and my attendance at events. With the right tools, you can even tell which of your emails I opened, showing what topics I was interested in. (And you can tell a lot about me just by listening.)

Write Me a Personal Note

It used to be a no-brainer for Executive Directors, Development Directors, or Board members who knew the donor to write a personal note on appeal letters.

People, we are going in the wrong direction on this! 90 out of 106 letters arrived in my mailbox with no personal touches whatever–even when my wife and I have known the person sending the letter for many years.

Fix this by composing your appeals long enough in advance to add those personal notes…and doing so. It will pay you back in donations, this year and for many years to come.

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What If Facebook Died Tomorrow?

March 26, 2018 by Dennis Fischman Leave a Comment

RIP FAcebookWe have all seen Facebook change the rules on us, repeatedly. We have watched as our nonprofits’ ability to reach our own followers has declined.

Now, we have read the stories about Facebook selling us out to right-wing billionaires who pay data geeks to try to manipulate our minds, our votes, and our elections.

What are we in the nonprofit sector doing to protect ourselves?

I am not talking about the #deleteFacebook movement, which I don’t think has a chance. I am not even talking about the one-day Facebook boycott on May 18. What I’m asking is simple.

Suppose Facebook disappeared overnight. What would your nonprofit use to communicate with your supporters instead? Share on X

Are You Using What You Own?

We all know that we don’t own Facebook. Mark Zuckerberg does. (And with it, he also owns Instagram, WhatsApp, and more than 60 other companies.) That’s why Facebook can change, and we have nothing to say about it.

If Facebook not only changed but actually disappeared, would we lose all contact with our Facebook followers? That’s a scary thought. It’s a reason to put more effort into the communications channels nonprofits own, themselves.

What your nonprofit owns is your website, your email list and your mailing list. You need to make sure that people are following you there. Share on X

Make Your Nonprofit Website a Must-See

When was the last time you took a look at your nonprofit website? And when was the last time you asked someone who didn’t know your organization well to look at it and tell you what they think?

If the last time was long enough ago, your website looks like a brochure that’s been moved to the web. Ugh. Your followers may go there once, but there’s nothing there to make them go back again and again. And you want them to return.

Jennifer Gmerek of Salsa Labs gives us 7 Tips for Creating an Awesome Nonprofit Website:

  1. Make your mission apparent.
  2. Use content to attract supporters.
  3. Make your site donor-friendly.
  4. Make volunteer recruitment easy.
  5. Incorporate visual storytelling.
  6. Make your website mobile-responsive.
  7. Tie your site to social media.

And I will add tip #8: Adding a blog to your website will keep it fresh. There will always be something new for your followers. Even if they don’t open the website itself, they can subscribe to the blog and get your new posts in their email inbox, thus staying in touch.

Move Facebook Fans to Your Email List

Whether you meet supporters in person or they start following you on social media, your nonprofit should get their permission to add their addresses to your email list–as soon as possible.

From your perspective, having an email address means you can send messages to your supporters directly, without Facebook’s algorithm deciding who sees what. Using the email address regularly means it will stay up to date. And studies show that email is getting to be an effective tool for fundraising.

From your supporter’s perspective, though, they need to have good reasons to share their email with you (and trust that you’ll use it wisely). You’d be wise to come up with something they really want that you can share with them by email. Also:

  • Give them a sense of how often they should expect to hear from you.
  • Segment your email list to send them what interests them most. (If you’re a hospital, for example, send people who have had family members in hospice messages about hospice, not about pediatrics.)
  • Use a mail program like MailChimp or Constant Contact to make it easy for them to unsubscribe if they really want to. Never annoy a donor!

Going Postal

Does it sound like a crazy idea to use a system that delivers your message to each person’s door 95% of the time?

Sending letters in the U.S. mail can have a big personal impact. Your supporters find it easy to delete email, but chances are they will open an envelope from you and give your letter a least a first glance. So, you have the opportunity to win their attention. And if you do, your direct mail is a highly effective method of fundraising–even if they ultimately go to your website to give online.

To keep your mailing list current, you will want to have a good database (or CRM). If you’re still using a spreadsheet, you’re doing it the hard way. Excel just won’t let you stay personal with the people you’re mailing, or emailing either. You’re apt to call them by the wrong name, or treat them like an ATM instead of a friend.

You want your supporters to think more fondly of your nonprofit than they do of Facebook, don’t you? Then take another look at your website, your email, and your mailing list, and be sure you are treating them right.

 

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