Learn how to better fundraise when the media spotlight shines on the media spotlight shines on your organization's mission. Deck from the talk given by Wendy Husman and Whitney Broadwell at the 2016 Bridge Conference.
A New Way to Listen to Your Donors: How you can use Donor Behavior to Increas...donordigital
We've all asked the questions. Do mid-level donors want to belong to a named giving society? Do the interests and likes of your donors influence how and when they will give? How can we target communications to donors based on what they want to hear, not on what we have to tell them? This session will provide you with real world examples of how you can take the data already in your database to improve your fundraising efforts and develop a donor-centric communication pathway that will result in immediate and long-term improvements in your retention and donor value. We will use Ocean Conservancy's membership program as a case study, and provide examples of successes and failures in targeting, cultivating and upgrading donors through a data-focused approach.
Presentation about mobile engagement for nonprofit fundraising: mobile optimized emails and web pages, especially donation forms; text fundraising; and apps.
Monthly Giving Programs: Slides from Donordigital & No Kid Hungry for the 201...Wendy Marinaccio Husman
Slides from our #15NTC session "Play it again, Sam: Monthly Giving Programs For Sustaining Donations
'As Time Goes By'. Gather ideas for growing your monthly giving program, as well as strategies for retention, stewardship, and upgrades once your sustainer file is built.
Wendy Marinaccio Husman of Mal Warwick | Donordigital and Jeanne Horne of No Kid Hungry's #Bridge14 conference presentation about nonprofit monthly giving programs.
How To Fundraise When The Media Spotlight Shines on Your Organization’s Mission, by Whitney Broadwell of International Medical Corps and Wendy Marinaccio Husman of Mal Warwick | Donordigital
This document summarizes a presentation about developing successful monthly giving programs. It discusses strategies for recruitment, upgrades, retention, and testing to increase the number and lifetime value of monthly donors. Key aspects include targeted asks across channels, stewardship of existing donors, and focusing on stopping lapsed donations as much as gaining new ones. Testing different donation forms and segmentation is important to continually improve programs. Long-term tracking of metrics like revenue and donor duration is also recommended.
A New Way to Listen to Your Donors: How you can use Donor Behavior to Increas...donordigital
We've all asked the questions. Do mid-level donors want to belong to a named giving society? Do the interests and likes of your donors influence how and when they will give? How can we target communications to donors based on what they want to hear, not on what we have to tell them? This session will provide you with real world examples of how you can take the data already in your database to improve your fundraising efforts and develop a donor-centric communication pathway that will result in immediate and long-term improvements in your retention and donor value. We will use Ocean Conservancy's membership program as a case study, and provide examples of successes and failures in targeting, cultivating and upgrading donors through a data-focused approach.
Presentation about mobile engagement for nonprofit fundraising: mobile optimized emails and web pages, especially donation forms; text fundraising; and apps.
Monthly Giving Programs: Slides from Donordigital & No Kid Hungry for the 201...Wendy Marinaccio Husman
Slides from our #15NTC session "Play it again, Sam: Monthly Giving Programs For Sustaining Donations
'As Time Goes By'. Gather ideas for growing your monthly giving program, as well as strategies for retention, stewardship, and upgrades once your sustainer file is built.
Wendy Marinaccio Husman of Mal Warwick | Donordigital and Jeanne Horne of No Kid Hungry's #Bridge14 conference presentation about nonprofit monthly giving programs.
How To Fundraise When The Media Spotlight Shines on Your Organization’s Mission, by Whitney Broadwell of International Medical Corps and Wendy Marinaccio Husman of Mal Warwick | Donordigital
This document summarizes a presentation about developing successful monthly giving programs. It discusses strategies for recruitment, upgrades, retention, and testing to increase the number and lifetime value of monthly donors. Key aspects include targeted asks across channels, stewardship of existing donors, and focusing on stopping lapsed donations as much as gaining new ones. Testing different donation forms and segmentation is important to continually improve programs. Long-term tracking of metrics like revenue and donor duration is also recommended.
Multichannel Fundraising Workshop - Care2, Big Duck, NWFCare2Team
With more communications channels out there, your supporters are getting bombarded with more messages from charities, companies, friends, and family members. So how can you make sure your organization stands out?
In this workshop, Farra Trompeter from Big Duck, Dane Grams from Care2, and Danielle Brigida from National Wildlife Federation, share ways you can build stronger campaigns through multichannel communications, leveraging online communities, embracing social media, and sharing some successful case studies.
Participants will take away:
*Ideas and lessons learned from nonprofit campaign case studies
*Tactics to build your list and use social media
*Ways to integrate best practices into your communications
*Tips to make your campaigns stronger
How to Craft a Strategic Nonprofit Online Communications Plan - First HalfJulia Campbell
This document outlines a nonprofit capacity series hosted by a nonprofit capacity program in partnership with another organization. It provides details on various training sessions to be held on topics such as strategic nonprofit communications, strategic financial management for nonprofits, technology literacy for leaders, and fundraising and grant writing. It also provides contact information for the hosts and notes that sessions will be held at a meeting house. The document then provides background on one of the trainers and learning objectives and outlines for her session on strategic nonprofit communications.
The Future is Now: Tomorrow’s Fundraising Models Starting TodayDavid J. Neff
#14NTCfuture
Online fundraising has changed tremendously over the past decade. The importance of social, mobile, and crowdfunding mean that what worked before might not work in the future. This session will focus on today's proven best practices and emerging online giving opportunities. We'll be showing real examples from real nonprofit organizations leveraging the real next generation of online fundraising options.
Tweak Your #GivingTuesday Social Media: Expert Tells Allgjhassin
Dana Bakich and Patty Ruland presented tips for nonprofits to optimize their #GivingTuesday social media efforts. They discussed current giving trends showing an increase in online donations since COVID-19. They provided a 4-week social media plan template focusing on goals, messaging, partnerships, and analytics. Top fundraising tools were highlighted, including mobile donate/give options, live thermometers, and text messaging. A special offer was made for nonprofits to access mobile fundraising tools at a discounted rate.
Last year, the number of #GivingTuesday gifts reached 3,600,000, with the dollar amount peaking at $400 million.
There is no question that people are making hefty contributions…but are they making these donations to your organization? And if not, why?
The truth is that while #GivingTuesday provides an opportunity to bring in large donations and expand your donor base, you should be aware of the challenges that come with making fundraising appeals during this popular event in order to be successful.
During Give by Cell’s webinar, we discussed how to handle:
* Stiff holiday competition
* The limitations of social media
* Converting one-time gifts in recurring donations
The Money Advice Service (MAS) provides free money advice and resources to help improve financial capability in the UK. This document outlines how journalists and bloggers can work with MAS by utilizing their website, research reports, tips and advice articles, guest blog posts, tools and content, campaigns, and spokespeople. Key contacts are provided for press inquiries, the blog, partnerships, and social media. The goal is to help inform readers and support stories that encourage people to better manage their money.
The document provides a marketing plan for The Economist magazine to increase its female readership among 21-29 year olds in the UK. The plan includes launching pop-up shops on university campuses, a social media campaign, and offering discounted digital subscriptions for students. It sets targets to acquire 11% more subscribers and shift perceptions of the magazine from neutral to positive among young people by the end of 2017. Metrics like retention rates, acquisition costs, and return on investment will evaluate the campaign's success.
Best Practices to Build a Multichannel CampaignAmy Sample Ward
Highlights from the new book, Social Change Anytime Everywhere by Allyson Kapin and Amy Sample Ward; 8 Steps to Build a Multichannel Campaign Plan. Learn more at socialchangeanytime.com
The document summarizes marketing campaigns for several Australian companies: Optus, News Corp, Black Hawk, and ING Direct. It then focuses on describing ING Direct's "Spender Saver" campaign in more detail. The campaign aimed to acquire more multi-product customers from ING's existing savings customer base. It used a quiz to profile customers and engage them with content about balancing banking and life. The campaign far exceeded its benchmarks through high participation and capturing valuable customer data to improve cross-selling.
The document discusses how nonprofits can inspire more giving through data-driven storytelling and impact measurement. It recommends that nonprofits measure their impact using key metrics and outcomes, and share stories of transformation from the field. It also emphasizes the importance of impact data and stories in building donor trust and highlights tools like impact reports and multi-channel storytelling that nonprofits can use to communicate their impact effectively. The presenter argues that nonprofits who measure and market their impact in this way will be better positioned to inspire donors, retain funding, and scale their organizations.
How to create a viral #GivingTuesday campaignUniVoIP
This document outlines a webinar on creating a viral #GivingTuesday campaign. It includes an agenda with topics on the history and impact of #GivingTuesday, best practices for campaigns, creative campaign ideas, and a case study of a nonprofit that improved its communications with a VoIP system. The webinar aims to provide nonprofits guidance on developing an effective #GivingTuesday campaign through social media engagement and creative tactics like matching donations or events.
Strategize for Success with the Vocus Marketing Consulting TeamCision
These slides will show you how to:
• Discover and plan your most effective marketing mix.
• Compete better by profiling your competitors.
• Shape your strategy with a SWOT analysis.
• Connect better with segmentation and targeting strategies.
At VM Summit 16, we heard from members of the Hunger Volunteer Collaborative including VolunteerMatch, the
Alliance to End Hunger, and the Taproot Foundation about how they fight hunger with pro bono programming that leverages logistic and safety expertise. Learn about ways to get involved and reduce food insecurity in the U.S., as well as examples of how companies are joining the effort.
View this webinar to learn:
- How crowdfunding can find you new supporters
- How to use what’s working in the commercial world and bring the right elements over to make your charitable crowdfunding successful
- How to benchmark for success in crowdfunding
Using best practices and up-to-date case studies, learn how to do more than just raise money to make potato salad – learn how to raise money, find new supporters, build brand and make your organization stronger with crowdfunding.
Don't launch your Kickstarter or Indiegogo crowdfunding campaign before completing these 10 essential steps.
This crowdfunding campaign launch checklist is also available as LinkedIn pulse post and downloadable PDF: https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/crowdfunding-checklist-dont-launch-before-completing-10-josef-holm
How many times have you heard that the last few months of the year are critical to online fundraising? Simren Deogun from Stephen Thomas shares 30 online fundraising tips to help make your end of year appeal a success. December alone can bring your charity 30% of your online donations for the year, so this is one session you don’t want to miss!
Topics discussed:
How many emails should you be sending?
Is there a time and place for multiple asks?
Do donors really care about the tax deadline?
And much more!
Multichannel Fundraising Workshop - Care2, Big Duck, NWFCare2Team
With more communications channels out there, your supporters are getting bombarded with more messages from charities, companies, friends, and family members. So how can you make sure your organization stands out?
In this workshop, Farra Trompeter from Big Duck, Dane Grams from Care2, and Danielle Brigida from National Wildlife Federation, share ways you can build stronger campaigns through multichannel communications, leveraging online communities, embracing social media, and sharing some successful case studies.
Participants will take away:
*Ideas and lessons learned from nonprofit campaign case studies
*Tactics to build your list and use social media
*Ways to integrate best practices into your communications
*Tips to make your campaigns stronger
How to Craft a Strategic Nonprofit Online Communications Plan - First HalfJulia Campbell
This document outlines a nonprofit capacity series hosted by a nonprofit capacity program in partnership with another organization. It provides details on various training sessions to be held on topics such as strategic nonprofit communications, strategic financial management for nonprofits, technology literacy for leaders, and fundraising and grant writing. It also provides contact information for the hosts and notes that sessions will be held at a meeting house. The document then provides background on one of the trainers and learning objectives and outlines for her session on strategic nonprofit communications.
The Future is Now: Tomorrow’s Fundraising Models Starting TodayDavid J. Neff
#14NTCfuture
Online fundraising has changed tremendously over the past decade. The importance of social, mobile, and crowdfunding mean that what worked before might not work in the future. This session will focus on today's proven best practices and emerging online giving opportunities. We'll be showing real examples from real nonprofit organizations leveraging the real next generation of online fundraising options.
Tweak Your #GivingTuesday Social Media: Expert Tells Allgjhassin
Dana Bakich and Patty Ruland presented tips for nonprofits to optimize their #GivingTuesday social media efforts. They discussed current giving trends showing an increase in online donations since COVID-19. They provided a 4-week social media plan template focusing on goals, messaging, partnerships, and analytics. Top fundraising tools were highlighted, including mobile donate/give options, live thermometers, and text messaging. A special offer was made for nonprofits to access mobile fundraising tools at a discounted rate.
Last year, the number of #GivingTuesday gifts reached 3,600,000, with the dollar amount peaking at $400 million.
There is no question that people are making hefty contributions…but are they making these donations to your organization? And if not, why?
The truth is that while #GivingTuesday provides an opportunity to bring in large donations and expand your donor base, you should be aware of the challenges that come with making fundraising appeals during this popular event in order to be successful.
During Give by Cell’s webinar, we discussed how to handle:
* Stiff holiday competition
* The limitations of social media
* Converting one-time gifts in recurring donations
The Money Advice Service (MAS) provides free money advice and resources to help improve financial capability in the UK. This document outlines how journalists and bloggers can work with MAS by utilizing their website, research reports, tips and advice articles, guest blog posts, tools and content, campaigns, and spokespeople. Key contacts are provided for press inquiries, the blog, partnerships, and social media. The goal is to help inform readers and support stories that encourage people to better manage their money.
The document provides a marketing plan for The Economist magazine to increase its female readership among 21-29 year olds in the UK. The plan includes launching pop-up shops on university campuses, a social media campaign, and offering discounted digital subscriptions for students. It sets targets to acquire 11% more subscribers and shift perceptions of the magazine from neutral to positive among young people by the end of 2017. Metrics like retention rates, acquisition costs, and return on investment will evaluate the campaign's success.
Best Practices to Build a Multichannel CampaignAmy Sample Ward
Highlights from the new book, Social Change Anytime Everywhere by Allyson Kapin and Amy Sample Ward; 8 Steps to Build a Multichannel Campaign Plan. Learn more at socialchangeanytime.com
The document summarizes marketing campaigns for several Australian companies: Optus, News Corp, Black Hawk, and ING Direct. It then focuses on describing ING Direct's "Spender Saver" campaign in more detail. The campaign aimed to acquire more multi-product customers from ING's existing savings customer base. It used a quiz to profile customers and engage them with content about balancing banking and life. The campaign far exceeded its benchmarks through high participation and capturing valuable customer data to improve cross-selling.
The document discusses how nonprofits can inspire more giving through data-driven storytelling and impact measurement. It recommends that nonprofits measure their impact using key metrics and outcomes, and share stories of transformation from the field. It also emphasizes the importance of impact data and stories in building donor trust and highlights tools like impact reports and multi-channel storytelling that nonprofits can use to communicate their impact effectively. The presenter argues that nonprofits who measure and market their impact in this way will be better positioned to inspire donors, retain funding, and scale their organizations.
How to create a viral #GivingTuesday campaignUniVoIP
This document outlines a webinar on creating a viral #GivingTuesday campaign. It includes an agenda with topics on the history and impact of #GivingTuesday, best practices for campaigns, creative campaign ideas, and a case study of a nonprofit that improved its communications with a VoIP system. The webinar aims to provide nonprofits guidance on developing an effective #GivingTuesday campaign through social media engagement and creative tactics like matching donations or events.
Strategize for Success with the Vocus Marketing Consulting TeamCision
These slides will show you how to:
• Discover and plan your most effective marketing mix.
• Compete better by profiling your competitors.
• Shape your strategy with a SWOT analysis.
• Connect better with segmentation and targeting strategies.
At VM Summit 16, we heard from members of the Hunger Volunteer Collaborative including VolunteerMatch, the
Alliance to End Hunger, and the Taproot Foundation about how they fight hunger with pro bono programming that leverages logistic and safety expertise. Learn about ways to get involved and reduce food insecurity in the U.S., as well as examples of how companies are joining the effort.
View this webinar to learn:
- How crowdfunding can find you new supporters
- How to use what’s working in the commercial world and bring the right elements over to make your charitable crowdfunding successful
- How to benchmark for success in crowdfunding
Using best practices and up-to-date case studies, learn how to do more than just raise money to make potato salad – learn how to raise money, find new supporters, build brand and make your organization stronger with crowdfunding.
Don't launch your Kickstarter or Indiegogo crowdfunding campaign before completing these 10 essential steps.
This crowdfunding campaign launch checklist is also available as LinkedIn pulse post and downloadable PDF: https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/crowdfunding-checklist-dont-launch-before-completing-10-josef-holm
How many times have you heard that the last few months of the year are critical to online fundraising? Simren Deogun from Stephen Thomas shares 30 online fundraising tips to help make your end of year appeal a success. December alone can bring your charity 30% of your online donations for the year, so this is one session you don’t want to miss!
Topics discussed:
How many emails should you be sending?
Is there a time and place for multiple asks?
Do donors really care about the tax deadline?
And much more!
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"Use The News" - 2016 Bridge to Integrated Fundraising Conference
1. #Bridge16 @IMC_Worldwide @jwbroadwe @donordigital @wendymarinaccio
Use The News:
How To Fundraise When The
Media Spotlight Shines on
Your Organization’s Mission
Whitney Broadwell
International Medical Corps
Wendy Marinaccio Husman
Mal Warwick | Donordigital
2. #Bridge16 @IMC_Worldwide @jwbroadwe @donordigital @wendymarinaccio
International Medical Corps
Whitney Broadwell
Senior Resource Development Officer
International Medical Corps
Global nonprofit dedicated to saving lives and relieving suffering through
health care training and relief and development programs
Strive to be first there, no matter where to provide medical care to
survivors of disaster, disease and war and conflict – often within 24 hours
Train local health workers and rebuild health care infrastructure
3. #Bridge16 @IMC_Worldwide @jwbroadwe @donordigital @wendymarinaccio
Mal Warwick | Donordigital
Wendy Marinaccio Husman
Account Director
Donordigital
Integrated, multi-channel strategy
High-level and granular analysis
Full copywriting and design creative service
Production and management services
4. #Bridge16 @IMC_Worldwide @jwbroadwe @donordigital @wendymarinaccio
Use the news
Prepare a fundraising and communications
plan in advance
Implement that plan as quickly as possible
when your mission is in the spotlight
Leverage unexpected events into more
supporters for your organization
5. #Bridge16 @IMC_Worldwide @jwbroadwe @donordigital @wendymarinaccio
Carpe momentum!
Be prepared logistically
Know your goals
Have something in your back pocket
Build on successful strategies
Be creative
7. #Bridge16 @IMC_Worldwide @jwbroadwe @donordigital @wendymarinaccio
Speed is the critical factor
You are competing with others for attention, so
the perfect is the enemy of the good.
In many cases, you are competing with other
nonprofits for donations.
Make quick decisions
Get buy-in ahead of time for a quick approval process
Success after one event increases the likelihood of
success in the next one, because your supporters,
email list, and media outlets will look to you again.
8. #Bridge16 @IMC_Worldwide @jwbroadwe @donordigital @wendymarinaccio
Digital fundraising channels are a perfect fit
Website
Email messages
Facebook – organic posts (& promoted posts)
Facebook – ads
Search marketing – Google Grant, paid ads
Mail & phones are great but less nimble
12. #Bridge16 @IMC_Worldwide @jwbroadwe @donordigital @wendymarinaccio
How to be nimble
Emergency/Media Alert email template
Donation form ready to clone
Pre-approved media budgets for paid ads
Social media strategy
Online/social media ads template
Don’t forget back-end operations!
25. #Bridge16 @IMC_Worldwide @jwbroadwe @donordigital @wendymarinaccio
Approval process is too long
Too many people
Too much second-guessing
Creating everything from scratch each time
Not tracking your performance
Common pitfalls
26. #Bridge16 @IMC_Worldwide @jwbroadwe @donordigital @wendymarinaccio
Communications/PR team ready to pitch your
organization to media outlets
Agreements with celebrities or corporate sponsors
regarding their support
Offline direct response strategies:
Direct mail urgentgram
Telemarketing vendor agreements & scripts prepared
Take it to the next level
27. #Bridge16 @IMC_Worldwide @jwbroadwe @donordigital @wendymarinaccio
Recipe to drop a mailing quickly:
Printing done and held at mailshop
Monthly data files sent to mailshop
Postage payment plan set up
Copy written immediately & lasered
Choose segmentation
We were able to drop this mailing the Monday
after the Nepal earthquake hit (approx. 40 hours)
Mail “Urgentgram”
28. #Bridge16 @IMC_Worldwide @jwbroadwe @donordigital @wendymarinaccio
Ensure you have source coding/tracking
systems in place so you are able to track your
success
More…? Example of metrics spreadsheet?
Tracking your efforts
NEPAL RESTRICTED FUNDING
*Cash Received
Online Gift Count Average Gift Amount
Main Nepal Donation Page/Email 2722$ 110.67 $ 301,244.76
Facebook Landing Page 8227$ 71.67 $ 589,664.50
Nepal Press Release Landing Page 598$ 120.84 $ 72,264.56
Facebook Ads 111$ 62.61 $ 6,950.00
Google Search Ads 17$ 46.76 $ 795.00
Google Display Ads 17$ 46.29 $ 787.00
38. #Bridge16 @IMC_Worldwide @jwbroadwe @donordigital @wendymarinaccio
Thank donors immediately after they donate
Ensure they are tracked by people interested
in that event and with the method they joined
Follow up to keep donors updated with news
of your efforts on the topic they joined on
Steward them regarding how their gift helped
After a media event: donors
40. #Bridge16 @IMC_Worldwide @jwbroadwe @donordigital @wendymarinaccio
Once they have been thanked, continue to ask
Incorporate their topic of interest in future
appeals
Include these donors in mail appeals
Don’t forget the sustainer ask
Renewing these donors
43. #Bridge16 @IMC_Worldwide @jwbroadwe @donordigital @wendymarinaccio
Welcome series
Ensure they are tracked
Follow up to keep donors updated with news
of your efforts on the topic they joined on
Mention the way they joined in appeals
After a media event: non-donors
47. #Bridge16 @IMC_Worldwide @jwbroadwe @donordigital @wendymarinaccio
Social share
Easily create social sharing
code for free on our website:
www.donordigital.com/socialshare
48. #Bridge16 @IMC_Worldwide @jwbroadwe @donordigital @wendymarinaccio
Response significance
Ensure your tests have a statistically significant
response
90% confidence indicates a 10% chance the
result is not significant; best to be at 95%+
Use our calculator:
http://malwarwick.com/response-significance-
calculator/
50. #Bridge16 @IMC_Worldwide @jwbroadwe @donordigital @wendymarinaccio
Take-Aways
Don’t let an opportunity pass your organization
by
Always be prepared
Know what you’re authorized to do
Track your efforts
52. @IMC_Worldwide @jwbroadwe @donordigital @wendymarinaccio
Don’t forget to visit the
Solutions Showcase!
Many of the ideas discussed today are on display at the
Solutions Showcase!
Whitney Broadwell
wbroadwell@internationalmedicalcorps.org
(202) 828-5155
www.internationalmedicalcorps.org
Wendy Marinaccio Husman
wendy@donordigital.com
(510) 473-0366
www.donordigital.com
Editor's Notes
Integrated fundraising agency, Mal Warwick Donordigital, in business for over 30 years, since 1979; Donordigital in business 15 years. Offices in DC and Berkeley, CA. Direct mail, online, telephone, mobile, and social marketing fundraising and advocacy. B Corp, certified green & socially responsible.
.
Wendy
We had the idea to create this session after the Nepal earthquake last April, where IMC was the first emergency responder on the ground in the country and we raised over $19M in support of those critical efforts to provide medical support. Later on in this session, we’ll show you the case study of how we quickly rolled out our fundraising and marketing efforts in the days after the Nepal Earthquake, when IMC raised $x in that first week after it happened.
But importantly, for all organizations, not just disaster response, we believe it’s important to capitalize on times when your mission is in the spotlight. It gives you the ability to get in front of large new audiences who may not have found your organization otherwise. So today, we’ll talk about how to plan for the unexpected in advance so you can take best advantage of those opportunities.
We’ll talk about how you can implement that plan as quickly as possible, and we’ll show a bunch of examples from a variety of organizations who have done so.
Finally, we’ll talk though how you can leverage those unexpected events into new donors as well as hit a number of other goals:
Grow email list
Reingaging your current email list and donor list, renewing prior supporters converting nondonors into supporters
Increase Facebook likes/other social media likes
Tag people for remarketing
Raise awareness of your organization
Whitney
Whitney
Whitney
- Redundancy amongst staff
Whitney
Email segmentation? IMC includes major donors, sustainers
Performance of emergency groups during rest of year
How to get a 2nd gift
Whitney
Emergency response plan example
Wendy
Emergency response plan example from another of Donordigital’s disaster response clients
This organization actually has 4 emergency response plans based on levels of severity, with this screen shot representing a level 4 disaster, the most severe. It’s much longer than this, I just included the first few hours after a disaster strikes so you could see how detailed it is.
Social media is one way to quickly respond
Adwords ideas.
Wendy
How can you ensure that you are organized in such a way that you’re capable of implementing your plan?
Wendy –
Ensure that you’ve set yourself up so that responding quickly will be as easy as possible. Any technical, implementation, or budget issues that will slow you down have been determined in advance.
With IMC, after some issues we had during the response to the Nepal earthquake, we created an emergency email template that could easily be cloned in their system, currently NetCommunity, and built out quickly to that emails could be launched without needing a representative photo from the field.
We created a donation form that would be ready to clone. We also recommend creating a vanity URL, for example /ebola or /emergency. We’ll show examples of these next.
We had an ad budget approved at the beginning of the fiscal year so that we would be ready to create FB and Google ads quickly without waiting for VPs to approve a budget and the accounting team to approve the funds.
We had a strategy for who and how we would respond on which social channels – and where we would use a spend. Specifically, it’s Facebook promoted posts and ads.
To make Google ads easier, we have created a design template to use, and we’ve also seen success with text ads, where a design is not needed.
Don’t forget the behind the scenes work in your online tools – call your CMS (Blackbaud for example) and tell them you expect a large volume – have someone to call directly if there are problems with the page; test the page to make sure donations are charging properly; you could do an emergency run-through ahead of time to make sure you are dotting all your I’s and crossing your T’s
Whitney
Donation form to clone; have images sorted well so you can choose from by issue/country etc.
Whitney
Landing pages
Whitney
Templates for emails
Just used for cyclone Winston/Fiji
Whitney
EXAMPLE OF IMC TOPICAL EMAIL SIGNUP FORM HERE (WEBSITE AND FACEBOOK PERHAPS)
1:55 – on time
Whitney
EXAMPLES OF EBOLA AND NEPAL PROMOTED BY FACEBOOK
Share Our Strength received word that their national spokesperson Jeff Bridges was being featured in a super bowl ad for SquareSpace, the website platform. The ad directed to a squarespace website where people could by Jeff Bridges sleep sounds tapes. It’s a long story, but the important part is that when people bought tapes the proceeds went to Share Our Strength, and the website invited people to make a donation was well, with a link to the website.
We decided the best way to handle this was to add a homepage lightbox during the super bowl and the following few days featuring Jeff Bridges and inviting donations. We discussed what was best to take advantage of what we anticipated would be a lot of new traffic, and we decided that what was important to us was bringing in monthly donations. In a position to be able to take the long-term view to give up the larger single gifts in favor of bringing on monthly donors, who have a higher lifetime value and higher donor loyalty. Luckily they knew this ask was successful because of another media hit they received a few years prior from the Food Network and from the Dr. Oz show, and they still have monthly donors active today who came in through those media events.
Happened in the middle of a donation form optimization test regarding how to give a boost to monthly gifts where we tested a “nudge” to the monthly giving option vs a monthly giving upsell lightbox post-donation.
Web: ~6,000 visitors on Sunday 1/31, with almost 90% of the traffic new visitors
Email (donation specific): 26 gifts on 1/31 totaling $1645 – 19 were monthly gifts – 12 first time givers
Wendy
Mercy For Animals example – organization working to improve conditions on factory farms and slaughterhouses. They planted an undercover investigator and horrifying video had just come out from one of their investigations, resulting in criminal charges against an employee of that factory farm.
Which is great.
Except that the news broke in December during our very busy and well planned year end campaign. But we pivoted, changed the email calendar a bit, and added an informational email about the breaking news to the year end email series and also changed a planned email to fundraise off of that specific breaking investigation.
We also, by the way, created that breaking investigation email template so that MFA would be able to push out emails more quickly when the results of their undercover investigations come to light.
Wendy
AmeriCares, an international response organization, also responded quickly to Nepal
Just couple things to mention:
Google Alerts set up on brand terms, general terms related to the mission (earthquake, tsunami, etc in this case)
Remarketing tag set up for Google and Facebook so they could keep following around nondonors who had visited americares.org in the wake of the disaster
Template set up for ads so that Google display ads, remarketing ads, Facebook ads can quickly be created and posted
Wendy
AFSC is an organization that works on, among many other issues, immigration and human rights. With both of these campaigns, AFSC created flash campaigns to respond to increased needs for support because their on the ground work was increasing.
In one case, Muslims from Myanmar and Bangladesh currently living in Indonesia were facing discrimination and being denied citizenship. They were turned away from Thailand and Malaysia, and were seeking refuge in Indonesia.
This was happening and starting to get media coverage late May/early June. This campaign was in mid-June. There was the email pictured here, a homepage promo and boosted Facebook posts – that’s it. There was a stated goal of $20K in order to motivate people to give quickly in the 3-day period.
Similarly, in summer 2015 the Dominican Republic suddenly decided to deport Haitians, many of whom had lived there for generations. The DR decision to do deportations was made in June with increasing media coverage throughout the summer, AFSC’s series of emails went out in August. There was a $30K goal—raised almost all of this online thanks to the email series, homepage promo and boosted FB posts.
AFSC is also using Attentive.ly as a tool for social listening so they can tap into people who are interested in the work the organization is doing; for example, listening for Black Lives Matter and connecting those people with information about AFSC’s work in Ferguson.
Wendy
Look your Google Analytics to discover for yourself what newsworthy issues you’re working on. For AmeriCares, we were interested in seeing if the Zeka virus is something that might resonate. Even though the pages they had about it weren't even listed on their drop down menu it was their third most visited page. (people were finding it on Google and by the site search).
We were able to discover something interesting with our client Sempervirens Fund, as we manage their Google Grant. We know that redwood forests are aiding during the drought because of the way they gather coastal fog and disseminated it through their roots. But again, that information was buried on their site. We also knew that the drought in CA is an issue that people are deeply concerned about right now and is getting a lot of news coverage.
Once you know information like that, you can drive people to the site to learn more about an issue that is making news. Show people that you are an expert on the issue and working to fix it.
We weren’t able to change the copy of Sempervirens Fund’s page, but we did add the right sidebar to the landing page about the drought to encourage people to get more involved. Then we created keywords in the Google Grant advertising the drought & redwoods to drive more people to the site on that topic and introduce them to Sempervirens Fund.
We also have remarketing tags across the site for google and Facebook so that we can reach out to this new traffic later with ads.
Wendy
Sempervirens Fund was also able to post a Change.org petition about the CA drought in order to grow their list.
Change.org pledge up quickly to gather new names – Americares had an Ebola pledge;
IMC has worked with partners over the years including Mother Jones, Care2, eMiles, MyPoints, focusing on a variety of facets of their work based on what was in the news—most recently, the Syrian refugee crisis and the need for healthcare. We’ll talk more about this shortly, but we created specific welcome series to follow up with these groups of new names based on the vendor partner and the subject.
2:10
Whitney
Now that we’ve shared a number of examples, how can you avoid common issues with replicating these plans for yourself?
Whitney
Add not preppeds for volume
Whitney
Examples: AmeriCares & “how you can help in a disaster” lists
IMC Urgentgram example – 4 days – no stock in-house, data on Sat., copy Monday, procurement Monday, setups Tues.
Celebrity support example…?
Wendy
Example with another client, AmeriCares, who had a plan in place to be able to get a letter in the mail lightning-fast.
- size of mail program
- Amount raised
Whitney
Tracking/metrics – not sure how to format this
Whitney
Both of us talk about our own experience of Saturday.
Whitney:
Woke up by boss
Explain what different colleagues do
Wendy:
Woke up to NYT alert, checked work email
Email chain already started
Team meeting, ensure everyone was working
Had trouble getting emails coded in time and Whitney eventually sent out this message w/o fixing the Donate button
Whitney:
Tracking codes
Ad budget approved
Looking ahead to Monday email
If could change anything: cache of organized photos by type of disaster? Region?
Wendy:
Already had ad approved, got it live
Needed to get the remarketing pixel live
Waited for photos to come in and then immediately made display & remarketing google ads
Posted without tracking codes, just accepted we wouldn’t know the source of the gifts, but didn’t want to wait
Developer working Sunday night on the Monday email
If could change anything: baby shower
Whitney:
DM Urgentgram
Launched message on Monday – signed by emergency person
More Facebook ads posted
Added tracking codes to everything
If could change anything: email signer slowed down approval process
Wendy
Homepage lightbox live – delay in getting licensed images
Launched another email – had the standard email template in place
Whitney
Urgentgram launched
More Facebook & google ads, continued getting more budget
Facebook partnership
More info re: Facebook
Whitney
Take a breather when you can, have a team plan that allows for people to cycle on and off, have redundancies on the team so that more than one person knows how to do things
2:24
Whitney
Whitney
First 30 days is most important
Whitney
Wendy
Include them in future asks, both online and in the mail.
Online donors much more likely to convert to the mail channel, and once donors are giving across channels it’s a good indicator of their loyalty and donor value.
As much as possible, include a callout to the topic/issue/media event they joined on in future appeals. Show your donors you know who they are. Much easier to do in email since it’s just a data issue, can also do in the mail if you’re lasering.
Have had a little bit of success although admittedly not a ton of success renewing emergency donors on the same disaster they gave on the year before. So, instead, we more typically do what Whitney will show you on the next slide.
Whitney
EXAMPLES OF CALLOUTS TO DIFFERENT EMERGENCY GROUPS IN E-APPEALS
Wendy
People are most interested in converting to monthly donors right after they make their first gift. Can be counterintuitive.
Be sure to thank them first, then ask them to join as monthly donors—a welcome series is a good tool for this.
Ask – how many have welcome series? How many incorporate a monthly ask?
2 examples here – Americares following up with donors to the Philippines Typhoon Haiyan with a monthly ask. On the right is MFA’s donor welcome series, which promotes the monthly giving ask for the first 2 messages in the series with a very soft ask, just one button at the bottom, ending with this appeal all about joining their monthly giving club.
Outside the welcome series, we push our clients to conduct dedicated monthly giving campaigns and to periodically send email appeals specifically promoting the monthly giving ask.
Wendy
Have gained a large number of new email addresses of folks who have not yet decided to give. Begin the process of converting them to donors with a welcome series – we recommend a slightly different series for donors vs. nondonors. But as with donors, mention the issue they joined on throughout the welcome series. We’ll show an example in a moment.
Ensure these people are tracked so that you can send customized messaging in the future.
Report back with this group so they know you know who they are, in both cultivation and appeal messaging.
Wendy
Sempervirens Fund change.org special welcome series & example of year end appeal with special content for this group
Drought messaging
Whitney
For donors you are assuring them that their money did a lot of good
Non-donors – remind them who we are and what we do, enforce name recognition while event is still fresh in their minds, encourage them to become donors – ready for the next disaster
Picture worth 1,000 – video worth a million!
Other multimedia besides videos – links to infographics or decks – keep info on your site and offer a way to give on the page – bite size chunks of info
Wendy
Wendy
Wendy
Tests: Subject line, sender, design, time of day, day of launch,