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Analytics: Statistics for Fundraisers May 15, 2013

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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Analytics: Statistics for Fundraisers May 15, 2013

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  1. Analytics: Statistics for FundraisersMay 15, 2013

  2. The key to maximizing value and sustained growth is getting the right information to the right people at the right time Analytics

  3. What We Will Cover • Data Sources • Types of Analytics • Campaign Analytics • Forecasting Analytics • Monitoring Outcomes

  4. Old Model New Model – need a plan to integrate DATA SOURCES

  5. Sources: The Old Model TM Web Sites Donor/ Customer Events/Major Gifts Direct Mail

  6. You Need a Plan that Integrates the Data

  7. Integrating Data to Develop Strategy

  8. Balancing Analytical Needs Description of Types of Analytics TYPES of ANALYTICS

  9. 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

  10. Analytics – a Few Types • Campaign Analytics • Performance Reports • Package Testing Results • Forecasting Analytics • Budget Forecasting • Cash Flow Forecasting

  11. Analytics – a Few Types • Digital Media Analytics • Web Site Traffic Analysis • Paid Advertising ROI • Communication Analytics • Segmentation Analytics • Predictive Analytics

  12. Analytics – a Few Types • Performance Indicator Reports • Trend Analysis (historic donor value) • Multi-Year Forecasting (future donor value)

  13. Performance Reports Metrics CAMPAIGN ANALYTICS

  14. 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!

  15. 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.

  16. 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

  17. 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

  18. 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

  19. 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!

  20. Acquisition Campaign Report

  21. 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

  22. Appeal Campaign Report

  23. 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

  24. 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!

  25. 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)

  26. 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!

  27. Package Testing – For Statisticians • Confidence Intervals • Bell Curves • Z Score • P Value

  28. Bell Curve CONFIDENCE INTERVAL Lower Upper Actual

  29. Bell Curves Intersecting Package A Package B Overlap? Upper (A) Lower (A) Upper (A) Lower (B)

  30. Acquisition Testing Report

  31. Appeal Testing Report

  32. 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

  33. Budget Forecasting Cash flow Forecasting Multi-year Forecasting FORECASTING ANALYTICS

  34. 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.

  35. 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.

  36. Budget Analysis: Results

  37. 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.”

  38. 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.

  39. Forecast Analysis - Results

  40. 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.

  41. 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.

  42. Multi-Year Forecasting - Results

  43. 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

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