Title: Informed Attention: Delivering The Amazon Experience in Advancement
1Informed AttentionDelivering The Amazon
Experience in Advancement
- The University of North Carolina
- Advancement Conference
- July 27, 2006
2Informed AttentionDelivering The Amazon
Experience in Advancement
- Jon Thorsen
- Vice President, Professional Services
- Kintera, Inc.
3Agenda
- What do our supporters want?
- What are they receiving?
- How do we engage them positively?
- How do we hone our messages?
- How do we improve our results?
4Signal to Noise
- Donors receive far more messages than ever before
- From more charities
- From other sources competing for their time and
attention - Through more media
- With greater immediacy and frequency
- Standing out from the crowd is simultaneously
more important and more difficult
5Registered 501(c)(3)Organizations, 19952005
Source Giving USA Foundation /Giving USA 2006
6Everything on the Verge ofBecoming Something Else
7How Much is Too Much?
- On his way to Diego's, Jeffrey discovers a woman
harmed by information excess. All the symptoms
are present bleeding from the nose and ears,
vomiting, deliriously disconnected speech,
apparent disorientation, and the desire to touch
everything. - -Ted Mooney, 1981
8Who Wants Your Supporters Time Money?
9And You Are?
10Whos Choosing Whom?
11And You Want What?
- How many have bought an airline ticket on the
Net? Toffler asks. Hands are raised across the
room. We buy our own airline tickets we track
our own packages we do our own financial
research. Many functions that we used to pay
somebody to do, we now do ourselves. We can do it
ourselves because our technology makes its
possible. The consumer has been turned again into
the prosumer. We are producing our own services.
- - John Dunn, Economic Revolution
12The Future is Here
- Always on
- Customer-Driven Interactions
- Customer-Driven Expectations
- Electronic Funds Transfer
- Communication modes of choice
- Greater Accountability (Tell them what you did
with the money)
13 Donor and NPO expectations differ
Characteristic
NPO
Donor
Easy to use Significant content on cause Visually
pleasing Memorable URL Info on getting
involved Donate online Info on how donations are
spent Volunteer opportunities Become
member Advocate for cause Forum for discussion
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11
3 1 6 9 4 8 2 7 5 10 11
14The Future is Here
- One year plan five year vision
- Solicitation by professional staff
- The return of the venture philanthropist
- Tax-exempt (not non-profit)
- Donor stewardship at multiple levels
- Distinguishing ourselves in an expanding field of
choices
15New Rules, New Responses
- Kelly Mooney, Laura Bergheim
16(No Transcript)
17The Amazon Experience
18The Customer Manifesto
- I want to have a say.
- I don't want to do business with idiots.
- I want to know when something is wrong, and what
you're going to do to fix it. - I want to help shape things that I'll find
useful. - I want to connect with others who are working on
similar problems. - I don't want to be called by another salesperson.
Ever. (Unless they have something useful. Then I
want it yesterday.) - I want to buy things on my schedule, not yours. I
don't care if it's the end of your quarter. - I want to know your selling process.
- I want to tell you when you're screwing up.
Conversely, I'm happy to tell you the things that
you are doing well. I may even tell you what your
competitors are doing. - I want to do business with companies that act in
a transparent and ethical manner. - I want to know what's next. We're in
partnershipwhere should we go? - (Source Social Customer, October 26, 2004 )
19(No Transcript)
20Ask Me What I Want
21Thanks, Ill Get it Myself
22The Donor Manifesto
- Among donors' top expectations of any charity
they support - It will be honest in its business practices and
in its relationship with donors - use their gifts only as it said it would
- not treat them rudely
- manage its operations well
- avoid budget shortfalls
- refrain from using guilt or manipulative tactics
to persuade them to give. - Among lapsed donors, one in five said that not
being adequately thanked or acknowledged would
cause them to stop or decrease gifts, - while 35 percent said that they would curtail
their giving if the charity did not treat them as
a partner.
23Opportunity Knocks Where Weve Set the Bar
- More than 60 percent of both active and lapsed
donors say they would consider reviving their
giving to charities that had not met their
expectations if those charities apologized or
somehow made up for doing a bad job.
24Testing the Waters
- Affluent investors (500K) have an average of 12
investment accounts and three checking and
savings accounts. - This complexity increases for investors with more
than 5M in investable assets, who have an
average of 17 investment accounts. - Philanthropists support 20-25 organizations on
average with the top 3 receiving 60 of the money
25The Hierarchy of Needs
- I'll give you all I got to give if you say you
love me too I may not have a lot to give but
what I got I'll give to you I don't care too
much for money - Money can't buy me love
- - John Lennon Paul McCartney Money
Cant Buy Me Love
26Time Is Money
- From the Attitudes Values column of the
February 1996 issue of American Demographics. - "Affluent Americans report that money can buy
them lots of things, but not time or happiness. - In at least one way, the rich are not so
different from the rest of us. They, too, are
limited to 24 hours a day. And if they had more
time they would spend it with their loved ones.
27One World
- Washington, DC -- January 25, 2006
- The Internet and email expand and strengthen the
social ties that people maintain in the offline
world, according to a new report released today
by the Pew Internet American Life Project.
28The Internet Improves Americans Capacity To Get
Help
- 45 of Internet users about 60 million
Americans say the Internet has played an
important or crucial role in helping them deal
with at least one major life decision in the
previous two years. - Helping another person with a major illness or
medical condition About 17 million said the
Internet had played a crucial or important role
in this. - Choosing a school for yourself or a child About
17 million said the Internet had played a crucial
or important role in this. - Buying a car About 16 million said the Internet
had played a crucial or important role in this. - Making a major investment or financial decision
About 16 million said the Internet had played a
crucial or important role in this.
www.pewtrusts.com
29Kintera-Luth Survey Results
- 65 of donors visit the website of the non-profit
organization or fundraising event before making
the donation - 50 of donors always go on-line before making the
donation - 75 of donors who go on-line before making a
donation say that going on-line made some impact
on their decision whether or not to give - 25 said the impact was significant
30The Katrina Effect
31NOTE If you followed an outside link to get to
this page, please refer to the Latest Trends
section of our website to ensure that you are
viewing the most recent version of this table
http//www.pewinternet.org/trends.asp
32Moving at Net Speed
- Time to Reach 10 Million Users
- Radio 20 years
- Television 10 years
- Netscape 2 ½ years
- Hotmail 7 Months
33CRM The Established Model
- A business (for-profit) model Customer
Relationship Management - Developed in the 1990s
- to enable organizations to better serve their
customers through the introduction of reliable
processes and procedures for interacting with
those customers. (CRM Today) - Reliant on (relatively static) data and
information
34Moves Management The Non-Profit Application
- Doing whats necessary
- Focus on organization moving donors where we
want them to go - Narrowly defined single level of relationship
- Continued reliance on (uni-directional) data and
information
35Social CRM Moving Beyond Moves
- Beyond data and information
- Knowledge platform (Staff facing)
- Interactive communities (Constituent facing)
- Data analytics (Benchmarking, P!N, Predictive
Modeling) - Configurable data drives workflow
- Focus on donors
- Novel social financial technology
- Enhancing donor experience
36The Constituents Perspective
37Delivering the Giving Experience
38Alumni Relations
Engineering
Major Gifts
Athletics
Development
Campaign
Annual Fund
Arts Sciences
Law School
Planned Giving
Medical Center
39Poor Reception
- Words are flying out like endless rain into a
paper cup They slither while they pass They
slip away across the universe - - John Lennon, Paul McCartney Across the
Universe
40Communication Channels
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44Supporter Receives the Benefit of Sharing
Information
45All Together Now
- Even the best fall down sometimes
- Even the wrong words seem to rhyme
- Out of the doubt that fills your mindI somehow
findYou and I collide - - Howie Day, Collide
46Build online relationships
Its all about online Relationships
- We communicate
- They respond
- Community sells for you
- You listen analyze
- Lather, rinse, repeat
47CRM and Segmentation
Reports and Forms
Web Database
ASP Hosted Solution
48Connected-Giving
Database
49If At First You Do Succeed
- Breadth and depth
- Mission and message
- Expanding the reach
- Standing out from the crowd
- Beneath the numbers
- Planning for success
- Eyes on the real prize
50 Lifetime engagement leads to lifetime giving
- In its last campaign, the University of Virginia
was successful at cultivating the loyalty and
support of its top tier of alumni those with
capacity to make significant gifts - Events, special mailings, publications, new
volunteer opportunities, and presidential visits
were aimed at the very top of the pyramid - These activities are sure to increase in scope
and sophistication as the University enters a new
campaign - The great majority of alumni, however, largely
remain unengaged and underserved - Far too many alumni have the perception that they
do not matter to the institution
- Targeted Content
- Highly Personalized
- 2-way Communication
- Regular, cost effective
- communications
Source University of Virginia Alumni Relations
Task Force, June 2004
51Building Engagement
52Deliver Customized Stewardship
53Deliver Customized Stewardship
54Special Delivery
- Everything weve learned
- Everything weve received
- Everything weve processed
- Everything weve focused
- Everything to which weve responded
- Every donor need and interest weve met
55Refinement
- People say information is Power
- Information is actually fuel
- Fuel must be processed before it becomes powerful
- We must refine our messages to reinforce our
missions - Those who receive refined information gain
knowledge - Those with knowledge return power