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Focus on marketing efficacy
rather than “good
looks” to assure that you have a site that works overtime for
you
By Vinay Bhagat, Founder, Convio, Inc.
In 1999, surveys conducted with nonprofit
organizations indicated that
only a mere 15 percent had a Web site. With the exception of very large
groups like the World Wildlife Fund, nonprofit Web sites were
“online brochures,” rarely updated and, invariably,
managed by IT staff.
Today, virtually all nonprofit organizations recognize a Web site as a
necessity. Many have moved beyond online brochures, building custom Web
sites that allow staff to update content on a regular basis.
Unfortunately, many organizations find these custom sites inflexible,
difficult to evolve and ineffective at capturing and utilizing data for
marketing purposes.
Nonprofits still commonly focus more on Web site aesthetics than
marketing efficacy. However, now the communications department often
manages an organization’s Web site, with modest input from
the fundraising and/or marketing functions.
In contrast, many for-profit organizations such as American Airlines
have, for years, used their Web sites in conjunction with outbound
email to drive tangible marketing results. Through their Web sites,
these companies have systematically registered subscribers; used
aggressive promotions to drive impulse travel; promoted loyalty
programs; and personalized content according to a consumer’s
profile, e.g., their travel preferences. In recent years, political
campaigns (like those of Howard Dean, John Kerry and George W. Bush)
have used their Web sites to systematically capture email addresses,
promote fundraising appeals, build community, recruit volunteers and
mobilize constituents to take action.
A few nonprofit organizations have also started to fully embrace the
Internet for marketing. For example, Chicago-based Mercy Home for
Boys & Girls launched a web-powered
initiative to enable online outreach, fundraising and constituent
relations. The communications and fundraising teams have worked closely
to define an integrated strategy, and add online marketing programs to
their traditional mail appeals and special events. In the
first five months of operations, Mercy Home grew its email file 4x and
raised 8 percent of all appeal funds online. The organization
even started to explore how it can leverage its Web site and online
relationship management capabilities to support major gift efforts.
What accounts for this evolution? In the last five years, nonprofit
market software vendors have introduced online Constituent Relationship
Management, or eCRM, technology. Now, nonprofit organizations can
easily turn their Web sites into robust marketing tools. These
solutions are available “out of the box,” so
nonprofits no longer have to build custom sites from scratch or invest
money and IT staff time in customizing -- really retrofitting --
content management tools intended for
for-profits. Today’s eCRM-powered Web sites:
- Effectively capture
constituent email addresses through online registration, polls etc.;
- Have a database that
collects all email address data;
- Track each online
visitor’s additional Web site interactions, e.g., return
visits, clicks on specific content (which provides insight on his or
her interests) and stores that information in the same
database;
- Share the same online
constituent database with other online tools for fundraising, email
marketing, advocacy, event management, directories, etc.;
- Share data with offline
systems such as donor databases;
- Use the data in the
constituent database to personalize content for different audiences;
and
- Have content management
tools that make it easy for non-technical personnel across the
organization to create and post content, with the appropriate controls
and testing procedures.
Nonprofits also may want to reconsider how they measure Web site
effectiveness. Most organizations measure success in simplistic terms
that include the number of visitors and page views. Others
look to online donations, without necessarily analyzing what really
drives these numbers. Alternatively, a nonprofit assessing the success
of its eCRM-powered Web site should look at:
- Unique monthly Web site
visitors -- the most effective measure of Web traffic;
- Rate of conversion of new
visitors to email subscribers;
- Rate of conversion of
visitors and subscribers to supporters (donors, activists, other);
- Average duration of stay on
site -- a measure of how compelling content is;
- Amount of support generated
online (donations, advocacy etc.); and
- Impact on offline programs;
for example the identification of major donors and planned giving
prospects; enhanced retention of mail or telemarketing
donors, etc.
In summary, as more people move online and weave the Internet into
their lives, fundraisers and marketers need to act now to transform
their organizations’ Web sites into highly effective
marketing tools. Play an active role in the design, layout and
management of your organization’s Web site. Set
tangible marketing goals to measure success and
impact. Don’t reinvent the wheel by building custom
technology that is expensive and difficult to use when robust, easy to
deploy and use “out of the box” software exists
today.
Vinay Bhagat founded
and heads strategy for Convio, Inc., a leading
provider of on-demand software and services to help nonprofit and
individual-supported organizations use the Internet to become more
effective at fundraising, mobilizing support and managing constituent
relationships. Software and services with all of the features
outlined in this article are available from Convio. For more
information, visit www.convio.com.
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