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Topic

Fundraising- Web-Based

Fundraising- Web-Based+context

see also:

Social Networking for Nonprofits
Technology for Nonprofits
Semantic Web
New Media
Internet Strategy
Mobile Giving
Blogging
Video- Online Presentation
Web Analytics
Wiki

 

+resources and best practices

Fundraising- Web-Based+background

web-based fundraising has quickly become the most cost-effective tool for nonprofits to raise money.

Fundraising- Web-Based+definitions

fundraising is the process of soliciting and gathering money or other gifts in-kind, by requesting donations from individuals, businesses, charitable foundations, or governmental agencies. Although fundraising typically refers to efforts to gather funds for not-for-profit organizations, it is sometimes used to refer to the identification and solicitation of investors or other sources of capital for for-profit enterprises. - Wikipedia at: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fundraising 

 

A nonprofit organization (abbreviated "NPO", or "non-profit" or "not-for-profit") is an organization whose primary objective is to support an issue or matter of private interest or public concern for non-commercial purposes. Nonprofits may be involved in an innumerable range of areas relating to the arts, charities, education, politics, religion, research, sports or some other endeavor. - Wikipedia at: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nonprofit_Organization

501(c) is a provision of the United States Internal Revenue Code (26 U.S.C. § 501(c)), listing twenty-eight types of non-profit organizations exempt from some Federal income taxes. Sections 503 through 505 list the requirements for attaining such exemptions. Many states reference Section 501(c) for definitions of organizations exempt from state taxation as well. - Wikipedia at: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/501%28c%29

Fundraising- Web-Based+where to start

Fundraising- Web-Based+best practices

Alltop's Fundraising Page

a continuously updated, real-time round-up of fundriasing topics from around the web

http://fundraising.alltop.com/


Email Campaigns That Work for Nonprofits

NTEN Blogs 11/02/09 Denise Moorehead, Third Sector New England

http://nten.org/blog/2009/11/02/email-campaigns-work-nonprofits

 

Google Checkout for Nonprofits

Google Checkout for Non-Profits is a fast, convenient donation process that helps you attract more donors and increase online giving to your organization – and Google Grants recipients are eligible to process donations for free until 2011.

  • Increase online donations to your organization
    With a streamlined checkout process and a single login, it's easy for your supporters to make an online donation and do it again and again.

  • Google Grants recipients process donations for free
    Receive free transaction processing until 2011 if you're a Google Grants recipient. All other non-profits can take advantage of our low standard rates.

  • Enhance data security for your organization and donors
    Google Checkout lowers

https://checkout.google.com/seller/npo/index.html

Google checkout blog: http://googlecheckout.blogspot.com/

 

YouTube’s Game-Changing New Feature for Nonprofits by Michael Hoffman | Thursday, September 10th, 2009

A few months ago YouTube announced that organizations that are in the YouTube Nonprofit Program would be able to use the overlay advertising feature to create donation links. They call the feature “Call To Action” and said that in their first test of this, Charity:Water raised $10,000 in one day.

http://blog.see3.net/2009/09/10/youtube%E2%80%99s-game-changing-new-feature-for-nonprofits/

 

10 Ways to Support Charity Through Social Media

| July 14th, 2009 | by Josh Catone for Mashable.com: http://mashable.com/2009/07/14/support-charity-sosg/


Social Giving Campaigns: On the "Obama Model":

Is Facebook a Bust or Is Obama's Model the Future? from nten: http://www.nten.org/blog/2008/02/13/facebook-is-a-bust-or-obamas-model-is-the-future

 

Free Web Services for Nonprofits -

The mission of Grassroots.org is to serve as a catalyst for positive social change by leveraging modern technologies and best business practices.http://www.grassroots.org/

 

Benchmarks for Advocacy Campaigns

a Meyer Memorial Trust New Media article about email campaigns from 5/19/2008 by Amy Sample Ward

 

Benchmarks for Fundraising Online

a Meyer Memorial Trust New Media article about email campaigns from 5/14/2008 by Amy Sample Ward

 

50 Online Applications and Sites to Consider

August 5, 2008 Chris Brogan

http://www.chrisbrogan.com/50-online-applications-and-sites-to-consider/

 

The Anatomy of an Email Campaign (presentation by Holly Ross)

Holly Ross presents to breakout session participants on email campaign design, management, and utility.

Contact Holly: email: Phone: 415.397.9000

Resources from presentation

Download Holly's presentation here: http://www.mmt.org/newmedia/HRossEmail.ppt

Study looking at the effectiveness of major American nonprofit organizations using the Internet to raise money and influence public policy: http://www.e-benchmarksstudy.com/

Information from NTEN about raising money online with emails: http://nten.org/node/1064

Excerpt from Raising Thousands (if Not Tens of Thousands) of Dollars with Email: http://www.guidestar.org/news/features/money_with_email.jsp

Session Notes

Benchmarks to think about during email campaigns: Read this report, take this action, email fundraising

How would you repeat this in organization? Your experience with constituents is unique and need to test what works for you

Keep in mind:

Who are you messaging (know what you know about who you’re messaging) – be personal Know what you don’t know so you can learn Test, refine and repeat (recipe for email campaign) Test to smaller audience before sending it to public Track open, click rates

Example:

Breast Cancer Fund Primary audience 20-65 women. Challenge grant $10,000 in two weeks. Only email Knew had 7000 emails, but didn’t know how many good. Benchmarks: 1% conversion (receive and give) rate = 70 people out of 7000 What is average gift size? $35-75 for them, so about $50 $3500 ($6500 to go) Focus for them was message envelope (Subject and From lines” Message body also important, of course When sent out campaign, sent out in way that would increase response rate on 2nd mailing

Envelope

First place to decide whether to open or not From: = everyone had commonality of breast cancer survivors, so they identify with foundation and founder. This email was from founder Subject: = active, not passive. Super-relevant and clear about what email is about (otherwise email is deleted). On average, 40 characters (others said 8 characters). The subject should be nugget Tailor subject lines for each community: Their line: Help us meet “ . . .” Challenge Went out on Wednesday. Initial push was 25% of what they needed. Sent out a 2nd email, taking out those who had donated. Sent out on Saturday (had many personal emails, so people were checking individual emails on weekend). They met the rest that Saturday.

Message Body

Key to writing good emails: Be more concise. They will not read that far down Less formal in tone (hey, how are you?) Really short sentences. NO semicolons Short paragraphs. Chunk it out If you have call to action, it should be called out with link closely behind “here is my compelling message, here is what I need you to do” with big breaks between Think Point, Support Support. Clear, concise, direct Bullet points = love them 4-6 meaningful paragraphs. Lots of link Plaintext email = pull link out with breaks surrounding One link has to be more clear than others and above the fold without needing scrolling Use words in context for links, not separated by content. It’s stronger in context

Example:

Banner with pretty pretty photos, one compelling message, and call to action box with donate button. Buttons get huge click-through buttons. People love them! They expect to connect emotionally, be urgent without being frantic (deadlines are good, “now” is not enough and more doomsdayish) Ask once. Do not ask for more than one thing You are asking them to take action and go somewhere. The destination (“landing page”) should be just as thoughtfully crafted. Might have 5 donation pages

HTML

Geeky folk prefer plaintext, but everyone else in the world loves HTML Easy to read if images don’t display

Images

People v. landscapes? Good thing to test with 2 test sets

Sending

(email list management) What people use = Constant Contact, ERY, Cooler, Emma, Vertical Response, What Counts. GroundSpring also has now. When use tools, the vendor has responsibility to maintain good relationships with servers. Outlook can be problematic and be blocked if anyone flags as spam Do NOT send list of people that have not given you permission

Kintera, BlackBlock, but they are rather pricy.

Test emails

5 people with yahoo, hotmail, gmail ? = reaching out to people. Older populations are more donors. They don’t use email. Email campaigns are skewed towards younger range

What Will Work for Me?

Open Rate = how many people are opening. How compelling is envelope?) What’s a good open rate? renewal is 25%, news is 30-40%, fundraiser is %10 Click-through Rate = seeing message, clicking, going to landing rate (how compelling is message?) Conversions = took action (how compelling is landing page?) Forward Rate =

Set up spreadsheet for self

What was message, who did I send it to, how many people, how many delivered to , open rate, click-through rate, conversion Test Subject Lines Take mailing list of 7000 people, dump into excel spreadsheet, cut in half, send to each list with different subject lines. Then can check subject lines Test Images Test Link Location GroundSpring, for example, will check which links people are using. Sometimes after content, sometime Test Landing Page One message links to one, one links to other. Does tailoring text? Can only test one thing at a time (must isolate variables). AB testing for results Keep it simple. Can get too minute and not learn anything

How to do Tracking

Example: messaging people as joint fundraiser, 2000 people that didn’t know a great deal about. Decided to test offer – 10% discount, others nothing. Sent both to same landing page, so set up page that they would pass through to landing page. Got open rate from provider, click through from landing page using Analytics (Join1 page v Join2 page). Landing page, back in database.

Analyzing results from surveys

(how often do you forward, etc.)? Surveys better for interest in content. Self-reported data is not what people actually do Have to give them a reason to give you their email (book, newsletter). Very prominent space for giving. If don’t have form online, can create image or box to draw attention to it

Embed iframe or 1x1kb to check open rate If switch providers, open rate will change because tracked differently

Email newsletter by RSS Publish by both. For NTEN, every story on newsletter is on blog, which swings RSS

Need Volunteers

Volunteermatch.org, Tap Root Foundation (not Portland). Government program, AmeriCorps Vistas to work for a year ($300 fee plus stipend).

RSS FeedBurner

TechSoup Stock does product distribution

Amy Sample Ward

Fundraising- Web-Based+issues

The State of Online Fundraising

Steve MacLaughlin, Blackbaud for the NTEN blog  09/24/2009

http://nten.org/blog/2009/09/24/state-online-fundraising

Fundraising- Web-Based+lessons learned

Research & Findings Conducted on Default Donation Amounts Online

http://googlecheckout.blogspot.com/2009/12/google-checkout-for-non-profits-in-2010.html

Phoebe Owens 12/09

 

Three Different Approaches to Twitter Fundraising: Bees, Turkeys, and Blame

Beth Kanter 11-18-2009

http://beth.typepad.com/beths_blog/2009/11/new-twists-or-tweets-on-click-fundraising.html

 

The ROI of Blogging

Marshall Kirkpatrick leads breakout session participants in a discussion and presentation of blogging.

Contact Marshall: Email: Phone: 503.703.1815

Resources from presentation

Marshall’s introduction to blogs: http://marshallk.com/introduction-to-blogs/

How to find good blogs on almost any topic: http://marshallk.com/how-to-find-good-blogs-on-almost-any-topic

Introduction to RSS: http://marshallk.com/introduction-to-rss-syndication/

Session Notes

Marshall hoped to spur ideas for 2 strategies in creating blogs: retaining stakeholders and driving new attention to the blog.

Generally blogs should be updated at least once a week.

In blogging for retention, Marshall suggested that the blog should be like organizational "talking points." There was also discussion about creating group blogs with multiple authors (vs individual blogs with one author).

Another idea that seemed useful is to be somewhat specific about what you want to focus on. In that way, one could become the expert, and the blog-to when there is a question or comment about your specific topic. Being too broad creates problems because the content is just too broad.

It is good to blog about something that you are passionate about.

Some ideas for generating content for blogs:

1) organizational updates 2) commentary about other stuff 3) using news feeds

In blogging for getting attention he suggested a variety of ideas on how to build a respected, useful blog:

- link to other blogs - comment on other blogs - use you blog posts to add to other people lives - be the first to report things - saying things best, uniquely - provide a particular tool - post "lists"

Amy Sample Ward

Fundraising- Web-Based+standards in field

Fundraising Success

is a prominent fundraising magazine for nonprofits that provides invaluable information to professionals working in the nonprofit space.

FundRaising Success, founded in 2003, is a practical guide for nonprofit organizations. It exists to help development staffs raise money for and interest in their organizations’ missions. FundRaising Success’ mission is simple: to provide nonprofits with the most useful and pertinent information, strategies and expert advice to help them generate the necessary fundraising revenue to fulfill their mission.
http://www.fundraisingsuccessmag.com

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