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“Rightsizing” Your Development Operation 2004 NCDC Annual Conference Orlando, FL September 2004 Kevin Whorton, Director Direct Response Fundraising Catholic Relief Services Baltimore, Maryland kwhorton@catholicrelief.org phone: (410) 951-7491. Overview. Catholic Benchmarking
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“Rightsizing” Your Development Operation 2004 NCDC Annual Conference Orlando, FL September 2004 Kevin Whorton, Director Direct Response Fundraising Catholic Relief Services Baltimore, Maryland kwhorton@catholicrelief.org phone: (410) 951-7491
Overview Catholic Benchmarking Other Charity Benchmarking Our Market A Self-Assessment
Proportion of Total Revenue NCDC Comparative Giving Survey: 2003-05 “Other” includes e-giving (1%), events (5-8%), and unsolicited.
Proportion of Total Revenue: Larger Organizations “Larger” indicates revenue of at least $2 million. “Other” includes e-giving, events, and unsolicited.
Proportion of Total Revenue: Medium-sized Organizations “Medium-sized” indicates revenue between $500k and $2 million. “Other” includes e-giving, events, and unsolicited.
Proportion of Total Revenue: Smaller Organizations “Smaller” indicates revenue of under $500,000. “Other” includes e-giving, events, and unsolicited.
House File Activity: Number of Mailings to Active Donors Total pieces mailed: average 4.4 million overall, 7.3 million among large (19% increase over 3 years).
Activities within the Department Online survey conducted among DMA Nonprofit Federation member and prospect organizations, July 2004. A total of 35 organizations completed the study.
Results: Charitable Org. Study:Revenue, Efficiency, Size, Effort
We Have a Massive Audience More people, larger congregations: • 63.3 million members, 19,356 congregations • Southern Baptist (40,000) & Methodist (35,100) more congregations • Southern Baptist (15.6m), Methodist (8.3m), Lutheran (5.0m), Presbyterian (3.4m) all much smaller • Catholic members per congregation very high (3,270) • Compares to Lutheran (470), Baptist (390), Methodist (235), Presbyterian (310) • But do they attend? 715 on average for Catholic, compared to just over 120 among Protestants Source: Bryan Froehle, PhD: presentation at 2004 NCDC Fundraising Summit; United States Congregational Life Survey, 2001
Market Penetration Total US - 273 Million Total Catholic - 65 Million Typically Attend Mass - 20 Million CRS Aware –14 Million Donors - 400,000
Market Concentration • Where is the bulk of your support coming from • Geographically • Generationally • By source • And, does it make sense? • Can you do things to change it: • Improve the top • Rectify the bottom
Issues Among Young, Diverse Constituencies 60+: I pray daily (90%) or seldom (3%) 20-39: I pray daily (53%) or seldom (15%) 60+: I attend weekly (63%) or once a month or less (27%) 20-39: I attend weekly (24%) or once a month or less (58%) “Church is important”: 59% say yes 60+; 29% yes 20-39 “I would never leave the Church”: 83% 60+; 50% 20-39 Source: Bryan Froehle, PhD citing Search for Common Ground, by James Davidson et al.
Message Challenge and Opportunity: Increasing Ethnic Diversity • Pre-Vatican II: 88% white, 9% Latino, 3% other • Vatican II: 83% white, 13% Latino, 4% other • Post-Vatican II: 70% white, 23% Latino, 7% other • Today’s Teens (Jubilee Generation): 56% white, 35% Latino, 9% other • Latinos more likely born outside U.S.:15% pre-Vatican II, 23% Vatican II, 32% post-Vatican II Findings reported in CARA Special Report, Fall 2002
The Congregational Life ofCatholic Mass Attenders Percent of Mass Attenders involved in: • 10.2% prayer, discussion, Bible study • 18.9% clubs or social groups • 6.6% evangelization or outreach • 13.3% community service/social justice groups Does this parish have clear vision, goals, or direction? • 25% unaware; 11% “ideas but no clear vision” • Yes, but 23% strongly, 26% somewhat, 15% not committed Source: Bryan Froehle, PhD: presentation at 2004 NCDC Fundraising Summit
Good News: Potential Generational Transfers of Wealth • $41b generational transfer by 2052 (Paul Schervish, Boston College Social Welfare Research Institute) • 2/3 of this total comes from 7% of estates (collaborator John Havens, Boston College) • Boomers more benefactors than beneficiaries (only $7b directly to boomers as heirs) • Golden Age of (Catholic) Philanthropy Source: Bryan Froehle, PhD presentation at 2004 NCDC Fundraising Summit
What Common Obstacles Do We Face: • Awareness • How well recognized with your target audience? • How clearly do donors understand you and your mission? • Perception • How legitimate is your mission, relative to other causes one can support? • Affinity • For how many individual donors are you sole charity, primary charity, or just “among the top 5” • What is your trend (slipping lower, rising, stagnant)?
Common Obstacles: Competition, Atittudes • Competitive Environment • Claim to the affinity of best donors • Successful positioning in niche • Layers of review, autonomy, and priority • Diseconomies of scale • Current attitudes • Greater public skepticism/antipathy toward charities • Scandals and negative press • Need • What if you’re already the right size relative to your program?
Internal Challenges: Where Are Your Limits? • Internal Culture • Speed of decision-making and market response • Layers of review, autonomy, and priority • Diseconomies of scale • Flexibility • Ability to be aggressive • Acceptance of varied media • Willingness to invest--lose money to make money later • Latitude • Relative positioning: “negative campaigning” • How aggressively can you follow: a license to boast • Tendency to homogeneity, inoffensive/indistinct messages
Internal Challenges: Knowledge, Structure • Structure • How restrictive are budgets, vendor relationships? • Do they inhibit experimentation--diversification into potentially more successful techniques and tactics? • Are you able to incorporate successful new ideas over the year as they occur to you? • Able to discontinue things that simply aren’t working • Knowledge • Surveys, focus groups, and learning conversations • What do you know about your donors--their candid perceptions, their history
Tactical Improvements • Evaluate, implement changes at key leverage points: • Improve synergies between DM and MG, PG • Improve frequency, timing of renewal efforts • New vehicles: creative use of radio/TV/e-/events • Acknowledgement program: speed, second asks • Improve timing, appeal of new donor conversions • Increase acquisition programs: long-term benefit
Strategic Choices • With benchmarking/self-assessment of program metrics: • Understand your ‘business model’ • Effective fundraising and alignment with mission • Determine if operation needs to be ‘new and improved’ • If so, identify resources to make ‘new and improved’ possible • Implement key points of improvement
More Tactical Improvements • Mid-level programs: improved upgrading, more personal service and special treatment • Other segments: low dollar, Hispanic, etc. • Better segmentation • Monthly giving/sustainer programs • Improved creative: more personal, new inserts • Parish programs, brochures, lead • Other viral, peer-to-peer marketing • Personalization: use of variable copy and personal data
Resources: Staff and Vendors • Evaluate your internal/external operations • Senior management positions • Production management • Special projects • Web marketing • Events management • Advertising/marketing • Technical staff • Data management, marketing analysts • Creative • Editor/Copywriter, design • Administrative • Financial, budgeting, general admin assistance
Creative Human Resources • Position and changes in management • Adding, eliminating external suppliers • Working creatively with part-time positions • Shared resources • Retainer arrangements with freelancers • Interns from colleges • Collaboration with other parts of organization • Cross-training, career ladders/lateral movement • Flexible work teams, building bridges with other depts • Working with suppliers • Maintaining self control over strategic direction
Supplier Relationships • Evaluating balance between internal/external: • Mailing list brokers • Arranging exchanges, new list recommendations, techniques (multiple use agreements, omit priors) • Creative • Freelancers and agencies who can bring strategic vision • Striking a balance consistent with organizational needs and your image • Data processing • In house systems • Periodic analysis of file: hidden patterns
Improving Donor Acquisition • Avoid bias toward control packages in test evaluation • Changing rules to allow “ties” to be remodified • Re-tests, multiple iterations may yield differing results • Often results are not statistically significant: confidence intervals suggest equal performance • Understanding second-gift performance • Resting and rotating controls • Modifying the next step • Creating new buckets/segments/tracks • Adding media: e-, phone
More Changes to Acquisition • Variations with testing, sometimes without • Logo, color scheme, attention-getters (token) • Anything that gets it opened • The price of rigidly following testing “rules” • Seeking Kaizen—non-incremental change • “Local optimum,” not the overall best