The New Marketing Model With momentum building for the last few years, 2003 may be the year that the nonprofit sector broadly begins to embrace the Internet as an indispensable tool. Organizations that rely primarily on traditional methods are finding it tougher to sustain fundraising and other forms of constituent support. Now, the data is beginning to amass on “early adopter” nonprofits that began incorporating the Internet into their operations a year or two or three ago. The numbers make a compelling case for groups to go online in a big way, especially in the current challenging environment for philanthropy. Nonprofit groups today are struggling to do more with less. Budgets have tightened in the wake of: declining endowments; reduced government, corporate and foundation funding; and rising competition for donor dollars, especially as supporters reduce the number of causes they support. But the need for programs and services continues to grow. Given these conditions and the growing uncertainty as our country prepares for war, maximizing “mind-share” with your constituents, getting them involved, and increasing and sustaining your relevance is more important than ever. To achieve that, the nonprofit “marketing model” must change. Time for a new marketing model The traditional nonprofit marketing model is not working. Although major and planned giving donors/prospects receive a lot of personal attention, constituent-to-nonprofit staff ratios typically are too high for sufficient direct interaction and the human touch that produces strong relationships. Annual giving and membership programs yield poor returns as groups churn 30-50 percent of supporters from year to year, use costly acquisition techniques that take 12-36 months to break-even and spend heavily on paper-based communications. Special events fundraising suffers from low contributions per participant and weak participant retention. Groups relying on earned revenue often under-invest in marketing, most of which is loosely targeted. Grassroots advocacy programs tend to tap a narrow constituency. Finding and retaining good volunteers also remains a challenge for many groups. Nonprofit departments operating as “silos” fail to leverage the synergies between functions such as development, volunteer recruitment, client services, advocacy and special events to cross-market from one constituency to another and maximize involvement. Uncoordinated communications result in a lack of congruency in constituents’ eyes, or no “single version of the truth.” The eCRM model: creating and managing constituent relations online Not surprisingly, acceptance and preference of the Internet as a communications and direct response channel is growing. Organizations using online Constituent Relationship Management (eCRM) are starting to raise meaningful dollars and achieve significant program results. They are realizing that:
The proof that eCRM works Nonprofits following these principles are achieving strong results. Consider these Convio clients:
These types of results from organizations large and small and in different segments of the nonprofit sector prove that the Internet does help nonprofits build strong constituent relationships which, in turn, optimizes fundraising, marketing, special events management and advocacy. As more data comes in, watch for more nonprofits to follow suit by assimilating the Internet into their mission-critical operations. |
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