FundRaising Success

You will be automatically redirected to fundraisingsuccessmag in 20 seconds.
Skip this advertisement.

Advertisement
Advertisement
 
 

The Tools Every Charity Should Have in Its Online Fundraising Toolbox

August 12, 2009 By Philip King

I hope you enjoyed last month’s article “Fundraising Big Online: How Little Charities Are Punching Above Their Weight.” For those of you who missed it, let me provide this disclaimer: I  run an online fundraising company, so my perspective is very pro-digital … but it’s also informed by 10 years of Internet fundraising experience, so I hope it will be of some value to you.

This month’s topic is dear to my heart. As the leader of a tool-building company, I spend a lot of time talking to organizations about the digital tools they’re using, the tools they like and the tools that don’t work. To keep this simple, I’ll group tools into categories or levels. Imagine you’re in the elevator of an e-philanthropy department store, and you’re ready to shop …

Level 1: Your Web presence
Your homepage defines who you are online. Many current and future donors will form an impression of you simply by what they see in a few seconds on your homepage. The good news is that there’s a shift away from spending lots of money on expensive Web site management tools and toward taking advantage of a new breed of powerful and inexpensive solutions available on the market. Keep in mind that even the most inexpensive Web site management tools require care and feeding by someone, so plan accordingly.

The best Web sites are those that change at least slightly each day, each week and each month.

More and more, organizations are realizing that it isn’t enough to simply have a single Web presence. Though important to manage your own domain effectively, the fact is that most people on the Internet will never visit it. This makes it important to have a page on Facebook, Wikipedia, YouTube and other networks that are frequented by the kind of people you’d like to reach.

Level 2: Basic donations and e-mail tools

Once you’ve established your Web presence, you need to make sure your sites have basic plumbing to allow someone to leave an e-mail address and a donation. Good news again: There is an abundance of both of these types of tools, so it’s worth shopping around to find the one that best suits your needs. Price, security and branding capabilities should be primary considerations as you compare one toolset to the next.

You can really leverage all of your direct-response skills on this level: Build an e-mail list as big as possible; solicit that e-mail list carefully to drive donations and repeat.


Level 3: Fundraising and social-networking tools
The next level of tools allows organizations to move beyond direct-response techniques. Tools on this level enable a volunteer or donor to become a fundraiser for a campaign or cause. Such tools typically involve a series of personal and/or team fundraising pages and depend on the volunteer to solicit his or her own network of friends and family by e-mail and, increasingly, on sites such as Facebook.

More and more, organizations are viewing their “Fundraise Now” button with equal importance as their “Donate Now” button.

Some new tools on this level allow organizations to create their own private-label versions of Facebook. Dubbed “social software” tools, such as Igloo Software, these tools are becoming increasingly popular alternatives to "just" Web site content management tools. But it takes a plan for care and feeding to produce active online communities; software alone won’t do it.

Level 4: Relationship-management tools
Tools on this level allow organizations to have a collective memory about their past relationships. Formerly known as “donor databases,” these tools are an important part of any online fundraising strategy. Trends in this category are moving increasingly toward browser-based solutions for both cost and ease-of-use reasons. Tip: Make sure any relationship-management tool you choose can easily import and export data, since no one solution can really do it all.

A final piece of advice

As you are considering your online fundraising budget, don’t spend all of it on tools. I’ve seen too many organizations spend large sums of money on sophisticated tools, only to find that they don’t have sufficient budget for staff to leverage all of the features. As a result, they end up using only about 20 percent of the power even though they paid for 100 percent; and as staff turnover occurs, training and retraining demands soar.

Please keep your eye out for next month’s column, "Social Networks: How to Make Them Work for Your Organization." If you are enjoying this content, I invite you to search for my “Digital Fundraising Podcast” on iTunes and listen to interviews with top thinkers in the world of digital fundraising. Also, if you have any thoughts or comments I’d love to hear them at philip.king@artez.com

Philip King is president and CEO of Artez Interactive.

 

Companies Mentioned:

SPONSORED CONTENT

MORE ON E-PHILANTHROPY/WEB-BASED >>

FROM THE BOOKSTORE

<I>Hitting the Email Inbox</I> covers all the bases of email deliverability, including everything from the very basics, to reputation management, as well as coding and design, and the connections between email deliverability and ROI. <BR><BR>As any good email marketer today knows, there are a number of obstacles standing between you and your prospect’s inbox. With anti-spam technology becoming more and more powerful and prospects being blitzed by rapidly increasing email volume, an email marketer’s concern isn’t just open rate anymore; it’s getting the email successfully delivered in the first place. <BR><BR><EM>Hitting the Email Inbox</EM>: Protect your sender rep, clean up your e-list and improve design to add dollars to your email marketing ROI features five chapters full of industry-proven best practices to achieve maximum inbox delivery. <BR><BR>You’ll also get dozens of surefire tips and methods for improving your deliverability, including: <BR>• Developing a trigger email program <BR>• Segmenting and reviewing your results by service <BR>• Understanding the whitelist/blacklist process <BR>• Using different addresses for different segments of your file <BR>• Not falling into the whole openers/non-openers/clickers trap <BR>• Test mailing at different times of the day <BR>• Being smart about timing <BR>• Use an ECOA service <BR>• Looking into certification, and much more! <BR><BR>The report also includes four detailed case studies, providing practical examples of what email deliverability tactics did and didn’t work for four real-life companies. Hitting the Email Inbox

Hitting the Email Inbox covers all the bases of email deliverability, including everything from the very basics, to reputation management, as well as coding and design, and the connections between email deliverability and ROI.

As any good email marketer today knows, there are a number of obstacles standing between you

...

ORDER NOW

Hitting the Email Inbox: Protect your sender rep, clean up your e-list and improve design to add dollars to your email marketing ROI

<i>Hitting the Email Inbox</i> covers all the bases of email deliverability, including everything from the very basics, to reputation management, as well as coding and design, and the connections between email deliverability and ROI. 

As any good email marketer today knows, there are a number of obstacles standing between you and your prospect’s inbox. With anti-spam technology becoming more and more powerful and prospects being blitzed by rapidly increasing email volume, an email marketer’s concern isn’t just open rate anymore; it’s getting the email successfully delivered in the first place. 

<i>Hitting the Email Inbox: Protect your sender rep, clean up your e-list and improve design to add dollars to your email marketing ROI </i> features five chapters full of industry-proven best practices to achieve maximum inbox delivery.

You’ll also get dozens of surefire tips and methods for improving your deliverability, including:

•	Developing a trigger email program
•	Segmenting and reviewing your results by service
•	Understanding the whitelist/blacklist process
•	Using different addresses for different segments of your file
•	Not falling into the whole openers/non-openers/clickers trap
•	Test mailing at different times of the day
•	Being smart about timing
•	Use an ECOA service
•	Looking into certification, and much more!

<b><u>The report also includes four detailed case studies</b></u>, providing practical examples of what email deliverability tactics did and didn’t work for four real-life companies. 

<b><u>100% Money-Back Guarantee</b></u>
Your order is risk-free. If you are not completely delighted with <i>Hitting the Email Inbox</i>, notify us within 30 days for a complete credit or refund, no questions asked.

<b><u>About DirectMarketingIQ</u></b>
The Research Division of the Target Marketing Group, DirectMarketingIQ (www.directmarketingiq.com) is the go-to resource for direct marketers. Publishing books, special reports, case study stockpiles and how-to guides, it opens up a new world for those who seek more information, more ideas and more success stories in order to boost their own marketing efforts. DirectMarketingIQ has unparalleled access to direct marketing data - including the world's most complete library of direct mail as well as a growing library of promotional emails across hundreds of categories - and proudly produces content from the most experienced editors and practitioners in the industry.

<b>Note: You must have Adobe Acrobat Reader in order to read <i>Hitting the Email Inbox</i>, which is in PDF format. </b> Hitting the Email Inbox

Hitting the Email Inbox: Protect your sender rep, clean up your e-list and improve design to add dollars to your email marketing ROI Hitting the Email Inbox covers all the bases of email deliverability, including everything from the very basics, to reputation management, as well as coding and design, and...

ORDER NOW

 

COMMENTS

Click here to leave a comment...
Comment *
Most Recent Comments: