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Stats are Sexy! Metrics and Testing. That’s HOT!. “The only truth is what actually happens.”. The number of people who did the thing you wanted them to do. Give. Act. Volunteer. Come to Get Together. The data. Oh NO! Let’s take a closer look. What are all these metrics?.
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Stats are Sexy!Metrics and Testing That’s HOT!
“The only truth is what actually happens.” The number of people who did the thing you wanted them to do. Give. Act. Volunteer. Come to Get Together.
The data Oh NO! Let’s take a closer look...
What are all these metrics? • It’s easy to get lost in the result metrics, some common calculations are: • Delivery rate • Open rate • Click-through rate • Conversion rate • Tell-a-Friend rates
Delivery Rate = Number of emails Received/ Total emails Sent Delivery Delivered Emails, not yet opened
Open Rate = Number of emailed members who opened at least 1 email/ Total Emails Sent Opening the email Opened email
Click-through Rate = Number of emailed members who clicked on at least one link/ Total Emails Sent Click-Through
Response Rate = Number of emailed members who participated in the campaign/ Total emails Sent The Response
Tell-a-Friend Usage Rate = Number of emailed members who told at least 1 friend/ Total emails Sent Tell-a-Friend Usage
Tell-a-Friend Recruitment Rate = Number of Friends who joined a center/ Total Emails Sent Tell-a-friend Recruitment
Which Rates are the most important? • Conversion Rates are the best measure of a campaign’s immediate success • Click-through rates can be good indicators of how members are interacting with your messages • Open rates are deceiving for short term data, but if measured over several years can become interesting. They also are good for normalizing other data.
This is a numbers game … … do the math • If you want 10 people to TAKE ACTION, then: • (at least) 20 people need to click to the advocacy page • (at least) 30 people need to open your e-mail message • (at least) 100 people need to receive your message
This is a numbers game … … do the math • If you want 10 people to DONATE, then: • (at least) 50 people need to click to the donation page • (at least) 250 people need to open your e-mail message • (at least) 1,000 people need to receive your message • Yes, your results may vary…dramatically!
It all starts with the list • Good direct marketing is all about the list • It starts with the list • It ends with the list • It is all about the list • But building a good list requires you to be good at everything else: your work, copy, layout, timing, etc.
Typical response rates • Nothing is typical, really • Big lists usually = lower response… • …and smaller lists usually ROCK • But if you make us…
Making the most of the numbers to get the most out of your online program…Segmenting and Testing
Segmenting is… …dividing your e-mail list when running campaigns to learn more, personalize, and generate higher results.
Segmentation example • Donors • People on direct mail list with e-mail • E-mail subscribers
Other segmentation strategies • Giving level • Campaign-based • Donors who have taken action • Donors who have not taken action • Non-donors who have taken action • Non-donor, non-action-takers • Recency • Source • One-time and lapsed online donors • Active and inactive non-donors
Testing … …Once you’ve determined how best to segment your particular list, you can begin to test what works within each of these segments.
Testing • Open rates • Time of day, day of week • Subject lines • Straightforward subject lines vs suggestive ones. • Your action will help a child eat today vs. • How can you help the orphans? • To Mention The Ask Or Not? • Looking ahead, more animals need your help in 2007 vs. • Last chance for your tax-deductible gift to animals • Subject lines that in different ways ask for a renewal of commitment. • Renew your commitment for 2007 vs. • Your membership is expiring vs. • Renew today—and save even more puppies
Testing, continued • Click through rates • Premiums • Offer • Signer • Short or long copy • Link placement • Conversion rates • Short vs. long page • Images and insets • First things first! • Giving levels
How to create a good test... • Pick one variable you want to test • Keep everythingelse the same • Randomly 50/50 split the population of the campaign • Compare the results from each test group using a “significance calculator” • “Significant” results mean the results can be repeated
Testing Do’s and Don’t’s • DO • Ask a question and design a test to answer it • Select a RANDOM sample of your list • Test ONE thing at a time • Keep everything the same except for the thing you are testing • Check for statistical significance • Make sure your list segments are large enough to produce meaningful results • Understand that some test results are only applicable to the message you were testing
Testing Do’s and Don’t’s • DON’T • Assume that test results apply across lists or list segments • Bite off more than you can chew • Read too much into the numbers • Assume that every test will yield statistically significant results
What Happened? • Too many variables • Tried to answer every question at once • The result: • Hours of work to set up 10 segments • Data was messy and difficult to decipher • We didn’t learn much about our list
What We Should Have Done Picked one variable Had a clear question to answer Split the list in half or thirds instead of in tenths
And the winner is…. • Subject Line Test • What metric should be used to evaluate a subject line? • Which is the winner?
And the winner is… Open Rate Two-way tie
And the winner is… • Link placement test • Which is the most important metric? • Which segment is the winner?
And the winner is… Click Through Rate Below the first paragraph
And the winner is…. • Short Email vs. Long Email • What metric(s) should you look at? • Which message is the winner?
And the winner is… • Click through rates and response rates • Trick question – the results are statistically insignificant. • You can’t always eyeball test results – be sure to test for statistical significance
And the winner is… • Which campaign is more successful? Why?
And the winner is… • Arctic campaign most likely to raise money (fewer donors, but higher average gift) • Public lands campaign most likely to get engage donors (more donors, lower average gift). • Depending on the goals of the campaign (raise a lot of $, or get more people to give), both are a success.
And the winner is…. • From line testing – by list segment • What should the organization do moving forward?
And the winner is… • Even thought the inactive segment had a lower open rate with the from line “Kathy, Organization” all of the other segments saw improved open rates. • You could segment out the inactive folks and continue to send them messages with the old from line, but it’s probably not worth the effort.
Question 1 Which group of people on my email list is the most likely to take action, tell a friend, or donate?
Answering Question 1 • Two words: Source Codes • Suffix on imports or on any link someone may click to come on your list, starts with ‘?source=’ • Advocacy campaign (?source=advo1) • Viral Flash game or movie (?source=funny_movie) • Banner ads (?source=yahoo_banner) • Paid source (?source=care2) • Donation campaign (?source=moneybags) • Source codes are attached to a member so you always know where they originally came from
Answering Question 1 • Each cell in the table is a member select • Query members who have the source code you want AND have donated, taken action, etc. • The results can help you compare how valuable names from various sources are to your organization
Question 2 How do I know how fast my list is growing?
Answering Question 2 • List Growth Rate: # new sign-ups/# of deliverable addresses • Shows % list growth over a period of time (month, 3-months, year) • List Hurdle Rate: # removals/# of deliverable addresses • Shows % of list that leaves over a period of time • # removals tells you how many new names you need to get before you achieve net growth