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Analytics: Statistics for Fundraisers May 15, 2013. The key to maximizing value and sustained growth is getting the right information to the right people at the right time. Analytics . What We Will Cover. Data Sources Types of Analytics Campaign Analytics Forecasting Analytics
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The key to maximizing value and sustained growth is getting the right information to the right people at the right time Analytics
What We Will Cover • Data Sources • Types of Analytics • Campaign Analytics • Forecasting Analytics • Monitoring Outcomes
Old Model New Model – need a plan to integrate DATA SOURCES
Sources: The Old Model TM Web Sites Donor/ Customer Events/Major Gifts Direct Mail
Balancing Analytical Needs Description of Types of Analytics TYPES of ANALYTICS
Analytics – Balancing LCLS • There are basically 4 types of data that need to constantly be balanced in decision making –each has different value • L – Lagging Benchmarking • C – Current Campaign Reports/Testing • L – Leading Forecasting/Budgeting • S – Strategic Scenario Building/Multi-Year Growth
Analytics – a Few Types • Campaign Analytics • Performance Reports • Package Testing Results • Forecasting Analytics • Budget Forecasting • Cash Flow Forecasting
Analytics – a Few Types • Digital Media Analytics • Web Site Traffic Analysis • Paid Advertising ROI • Communication Analytics • Segmentation Analytics • Predictive Analytics
Analytics – a Few Types • Performance Indicator Reports • Trend Analysis (historic donor value) • Multi-Year Forecasting (future donor value)
Performance Reports Metrics CAMPAIGN ANALYTICS
Performance Reports • Key metrics help determine campaign success • What are they? • How are they calculated? • Why is it important? Why may it be limiting? • Which is most important when? • It depends on your goals! • It depends on the program!
Response Rate • What? • The percentage of the quantity mailed that responded • How? • (# of Gifts/Quantity)*1000 • Why important? • Indicator of package success. More gifts the better! • Why limiting? • Does not factor in revenue, size makes a difference.
Average Gift • What? • The average size of the contribution • How? • Gross Income/# of Gifts • Why important? • The higher the gift, the more valuable the donor • Why limiting? • Does not factor in response, large gifts can skew performance
Gross/M • What? • Gross income per thousand pieces mailed • How? • (Gross Income/Quantity Mailed) * 1000 • Why important? • The more revenue per piece, the better • Why limiting? • Does not factor in cost
Cost/M • What? • Cost per thousand pieces mailed • How? • (Total Cost/Quantity Mailed) * 1000 • Why important? • Tracks costs • Why limiting? • Test vs. rollout pricing need to be considered
Investment/Donor (CTA) • What? • Net Investment to acquire a new donor • How? • Net income/# of Gifts • Why important? • Factors in response AND revenue AND cost • Why limiting? • Only used in prospecting, but it’s a key indicator!
Net/M • What? • Net income per thousand pieces mailed • How? • Gross/M – Cost/M • (Net Income/Quantity Mailed) * 1000 • Why important? • Factors in gross and cost, measures net productivity • Why limiting? • Not really applicable in prospecting when there is traditionally no net revenue
Which variable is most important when? It depends, but general rule of thumb is … • Acquisition – Investment/Donor (CTA) • Appeals – Net/M • Renewals – Response Rate • Upgrades – Average Gift
Package Testing – Why? • Build on what’s working, change what isn’t • Tweak Tests, New Package • Move the needle on a specific variable based on program goals • Response rate, Average gift, Net (etc.) • Stay one step ahead of your peers!
Package Testing – When? • As often as possible! • Try and test at least one variable in every mailing • Tests aren’t limited to creative/design • RFM segment testing in appeals • List testing in prospecting (80/20 rule)
Package Testing – How? • Ensure there is enough quantity (and gifts) to be statistically significant • Test only one variable at a time • Make sure segments are equally distributed • Ensure you wait long enough to make a conclusion!
Package Testing – For Statisticians • Confidence Intervals • Bell Curves • Z Score • P Value
Bell Curve CONFIDENCE INTERVAL Lower Upper Actual
Bell Curves Intersecting Package A Package B Overlap? Upper (A) Lower (A) Upper (A) Lower (B)
Package Testing – For Everyone Else • 9 times out of 10 the result will be the same • Lower and Upper Bounds • Best Case/Worst Case Scenarios • Overlap • Which metrics to consider depend on goals of the test
Budget Forecasting Cash flow Forecasting Multi-year Forecasting FORECASTING ANALYTICS
Budget Analysis • Question: “Based on where I am today in my fiscal year cash flow and how campaigns have been performing, where am I going to end the fiscal year.” • Approach: Combining current cash flow to date along with a forecast of “active” campaigns gives an excellent real-time approximation of total fiscal year revenue.
Budget Analysis: Tools • Campaign Budgets: All TM, DM, Web, etc. budgets with expected outcomes. • Predictive Flow: using different tools for each channel flow out budget (i.e., DM would use a standard days out). • Estimation of Carry In/Carry Out: Based on timing of prior FY campaigns how much revenue will be “carried into” this FY. Same for current FY Campaigns.
Forecast Analysis Question: “Recent performance metrics are soft compared to last year, how is recent performance going to affect my fiscal year budget.” Approach: “Look at recent cash flow trends based on which campaigns are active and use tools to forecast the remaining months.”
Forecast Analysis: Tools • Historical performance by day. • Time-series analysis to utilize recent trends along with historical performance to predict outcome. • Create several forecasts based on assumptions of environment changes.
Multi-Year Forecasting • Question: “Determine the baseline scenario of business models based on declining performance.” • Analyze what investment levels are realistic given current trends in each business model • Approach: “Establish benchmarks for growth in each program areas including investment levels, return on investment targets, donor return rates, retention targets, donor conversion, and upgrading targets, etc.” • Identify the donor segments of greatest value to guide investment decisions.
Multi-Year Forecasting - Tools • Segment the file into the investment channels (i.e., DM acquisition, Web Ads, F2F, etc.) • Estimate performance of the new acquisition channels based on the investment. • Use historical activation, retention and upgrading measures to predict future donor value. • Create scenarios based on modifications of investments or changes in the base file.
Thank you! Jim Emlet Principal 202-452-9732 jemlet@integral-dc.com www.integral-dc.com Bryan Evangelista Account Supervisor 202-296-9660 bevangelista@lautmandc.com www.lautmandc.com