Developing e-Relationships with Constituents Most development professionals understand the value of strong constituent relationships for driving donations. However, the high-touch nature of relationship building typically makes it impractical to do with every constituent. The Internet can help. Because it's a fast, cost-effective channel for ongoing constituent communications, nonprofit organizations can build online constituent relationships quickly and easily. Sending email newsletters, notifications of upcoming events and updates on the organization's progress, as well as creating an online community, all help to keep the organization “top-of-mind” and make constituents feel more connected. This, in turn, makes them more likely to support the organization when they receive an appeal. Following are a few ways a nonprofit organization can build strong online relationships with constituents. Offer Better Services To Drive Online and Offline Donations Online fundraising turns this approach around. Through email, an organization can communicate with donors and prospects at close to zero cost, so acknowledgements and general updates no longer have to be cost-justified. In addition, online Constituent Relationship Management (eCRM) technology makes it easy to learn what is important to donors and then personalize updates and appeals according to their interests and giving history. For example, the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (ASPCA), one of the nation's leading animal welfare organizations, achieves positive results by focusing on donor treatment. Donors with email addresses receive frequent email updates that explain how the ASPCA is using their dollars to fulfill its mission. These communications encourage visits to the organization's Web site (http://www.aspca.org/) to get more information, share stories about animal adoption successes and engage in advocacy. Additionally, the ASPCA has captured constituent information on pet preferences so it can personalize constituent communications, including appeals, based on interests. These strategies are working. In the last two years, the segment of donors receiving regular email communications has given 2.1 times as many dollars -- primarily driven by higher giving frequency -- as those who do not receive emails. While there may be natural loyalty differences for donors who volunteer their email addresses, this only explains part of the story. Strong evidence suggests that higher levels of online donor service influence donations. For example, donors choosing online renewal have increased their average gifts by more than 40 percent. Additionally, donors receiving targeted appeals based on their pet preferences have responded at two to three times the rate of those receiving neutral -- or non-pet-specific -- messages. Give Constituents a Voice Create a Sense of Shared Identity Offer Rewards Summary About the author: Gene Austin is CEO of Austin-based Convio, Inc. -- the market-leading provider of software and services to help nonprofits use the Internet for developing strong constituent relationships to drive fundraising, marketing, advocacy and other forms of support. For more information, please visit www.convio.com.
|
|