A Beginners Guide to Building a RAG App Using Open Source Milvus
Strategic Social Networking for Fundraisers
1. Strategic Social Networking
for Fundraising
Eric Horner
October 18, 2011
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Eric Horner
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8. 8
Strategic Social Media for
Fundraising
How to improve the return on investment
from a social media campaign by incorporating a
complete communications plan
Eric Horner
Eric_Horner@yahoo.com
EchoFundraising.com
Eric Horner - EchoFundraising.com -
9. Eric Horner’s Background
9
10+ years as a Frontline Fundraiser
– Alumni Reunions, Non-Profit Boards, & Peer-to-peer Donors
– Built strategic partnerships with best firms in social media
– University of Chicago
• 2008 Alumni & Friends Web Community- the largest project in higher ed
– Rehabilitation Institute of Chicago
• 2010 SkyRise Chicago fundraiser >$1MM online
What I do as Fundraising Consultant
– Helping clients create a strategy for their Online Giving and Social Media
– Improving Social Media outreach when it is not achieving desired results
– Explaining the importance of Social Media to stakeholders
Eric Horner - EchoFundraising.com -
10. Critical Components
10
A Social Networking Strategy is enhances Online Giving and begins
with Annual Fund/Direct Response & these pre-requisite items:
Organizational Website
Online Credit Card processor
Donor Database
Broadcast Email
Policy open to the use of Social Media tools
Eric Horner - EchoFundraising.com -
11. Why Online Giving is important to NPOs?
11
Since 2005, every successful public donor outreach campaign raising over $100
million has utilized an online giving platform. Early adoption of online tools is the
key component to acquiring new donors and successfully closing a campaign on
schedule.
Your website is the first point of entry for acquiring the majority of new donors and
is indispensable to expand beyond a regional-specific market to a larger national and
international appeal.
Adding an Online Giving approach maximizes potential new philanthropic
support, builds higher donor loyalty from our current audience, and adds virtual
infrastructure that assists the front-line fundraising staff‟s engagement.
Starting soon is critical to the success in reaching short term annual goals as well as
long term capital campaign targets because it takes several months to build and
grow into an online campaign successfully.
Eric Horner - EchoFundraising.com -
12. World events changed Online Giving attitudes
12
2005 Tsunami response by Red Cross raised $9.6M in 12 months;
average gift = $121 and $100k an hour reported online at a high point
2006 Katrina response grew online fundraising 40% from „05; total giving to
humanitarian and religious NGO‟s totaled $4.25B with almost half raised online
2008 Presidential Campaigns
– Over $1.3B raised from over one million people; average gift around $100
– More than 50% of funds raised online for first time ever
– Demonstrated how to utilize social network fundraising for multiple gifts
– Strategy of consolidating traditional “fundraising bundlers” defeated 2:1 by
open online platforms that accept all networking groups
– Volunteers participate in the campaign structure remotely from any location
US Postal Service reports 29% less mail volume 2007 compared to 1998 due to
increase in email and electronic traffic. In 2010, USPS posts loss of $7B and
estimates volume will continue to decline citing increased use of web/email
*Tsunami and Katrina reports from Charity Navigator – “Where did my money go?” 2006
*2008 Presidential figures from www.campaignfinanceinstitute.org
*USPS figures from Area Mail Process Report 2010 http://www.usps.com/all/amp.htm
Eric Horner - EchoFundraising.com -
13. Online Giving is a major part of Overall Philanthropy
13
For many donors, the website and emails will be how they know &
trust you. They may use your website to research you. Some donors
never set foot in an organization.
– Make it easy to donate, find out about more about you, and get involved
– The quality of your information needs to convey the best about you quickly
and pleasantly.
– An opportunity to show them how sophisticated, professional, and
compassionate your organization is.
Strategic Communication includes the
acquisition, development, involvement, and stewardship of donor
relationships in support of your campaign – must also include Online
Giving
– Email & Website content is 100% linked and need to be considered together
Eric Horner - EchoFundraising.com -
14. Online Giving is a Process; not just a Web Product
14
Cost-effective means of maximizing the reach of development
– Quickest way to expand donor pool and attract new donors
– Web enabled tools are available 24/7 for professionals and volunteers alike
– Improves message delivery avoiding SPAM violation and rejection
– Automated follow up can improve stewardship and inform new donor interests
– Opens outreach to audiences that are not currently serviced by development
officer visits including International donors; in fact it creates new leads
– Customized micro-sites can promote specific appeals within networks
Increased investment enhances credibility with potential donors
– Makes it easy for interested parties to learn about you and donate
– Grabs their attention and states “value proposition” clearly & succinctly
– Improves customer service responsiveness to frequently asked questions
– Provides efficiency, security, and higher satisfaction for donor experience
Eric Horner - EchoFundraising.com -
15. Online Giving is a Process; not just a Web Product
15
Online giving contains the main elements of direct response
(target, ask, follow up) with distinct advantages over mail or phone
solicitation
– 100% measurable– tracks all response actions both pro & con
– Personalization tools remove impersonal messages;
– Records all history and tracks actions for follow up
– Segmentation tools customize emails and web information to the particular
interests and cultivation plan of each donor
– Information readily available; allows donors to self-identify interests
– Viral marketing – donors passing information to new contacts
– Provides a conduit for listening to comments and testing messages
– Communication can be adapted quickly in response to latest news
– By analyzing campaign performance, we learn from successes and each wave
of communication improves on the efficiency from the last
Eric Horner - EchoFundraising.com -
16. Nonprofits increased ROI with Online Giving
16
Source: Blackbaud
Eric Horner - EchoFundraising.com -
17. Capacity of Online Gifts increasing each year
17
Eric Horner - EchoFundraising.com -
18. Facts about Capacity & Online Donors
18
Survey of 3,443 donors from a national sampling who contributed more
than $1000 per year (online & off line) to 23 major US nonprofit
organizations as of March 2008 reveals many similarities among donors
who gave online. (Convio’s report- The
Wired Wealthy, March 24, 2008)
Demographic breakdowns:
High household incomes. 57% report >$100,000; 27% report
>$200,000
Younger baby boomers represented the demographic center of
gravity. Mean = 51 yrs old; Median = 50 yrs old; 63% under 55 yrs
old.
Highly educated: 51% have grad. degrees; 87% have 4-year
degrees
Internet proficiency self-reported:
On average have been active online for 12 years
Majority use email both
Eric Horner - EchoFundraising.com - at work as well as at home
19. Facts about Online Donors (cont.)
19
Online Donors also have these activities in common:
90% make purchases online (58% regularly)
78% bank and pay bills online
65% read the news online (36% regularly)
51% have taken political action online
43% download or listen to music online (18%
regularly)
39% view videos online (11% regularly)
25% read blogs (9% regularly)
20% use SMS (text messaging) (10% regularly)
8% post comments on a blog (2% regularly)
*from The Wired Wealthy 3/24/08
Eric Horner - EchoFundraising.com -
20. Most donors who give more than $10k/year…give online
20
*from The Wired Wealthy 3/24/08
Eric Horner - EchoFundraising.com -
21. Reasons wealthy donors cite for preferring online giving
involve speed, efficiency, and instant gratification.
21
72% believe Online Giving is more efficient and helps
charities reduce their administrative costs.
70% say Online Giving lets them donate immediately
while they are thinking about it, otherwise they might
forget.
68% agree that Online Giving lets charities respond more
quickly to crisis or emergency situations.
53% prefer to Give Online because they like the benefit
of credit card rewards, frequent flyer miles, and points.
48% consider Online Gifts easier to track overtime.
28% get a feeling of immediate satisfaction with Online
Giving as opposed to direct mail. *from The Wired Wealthy 3/24/08
Eric Horner - EchoFundraising.com -
22. Online Giving > Social Media
22
Technology is always changing and the lines are blurring between
Website and Email, Bulletin Board and Profile, Personal and
Professional, Office and Mobile…
Community
Connections
Content
Calculating metrics
Social Media is a broad term encompassing the various activities
that integrate technology, social interaction, and the construction
of words, pictures, videos and audio.
Do you know your audience’s tendencies toward Social Media?
Eric Horner - EchoFundraising.com -
23. 73% of US Population Active on the Internet in 2009
23
Eric Horner - EchoFundraising.com -
24. Social Media Facts
24
Nielson, Global Faces and Networked Places, 2009
2/3 of the global internet population visit social networks
Visiting social sites is now the fourth most popular online
activity, ahead of personal email
Time spent on social networks is growing at 3x the overall internet
rate, accounting for ~10% of all internet time
“Technology is shifting the power away from the editors, the
publishers, the establishment, the media elite. Now it‟s the
people that are in control.”
- Rupert Murdoch, Global Media Entrepreneur
Eric Horner - EchoFundraising.com -
25. Social Media Facts (cont.)
25
Twitter users increased 1,382% from 2009 to 2010
There is an average of 3,000,000 tweets per day on Twitter
People spend 5 Billion minutes on Facebook each day
People share 1 Billion pieces of content each week on Facebook
If Facebook were a country, it would be the 8th most populated in
the world, ahead of Japan
YouTube is now the 2nd most popular online search
engine, behind Google
100 Million YouTube video‟s viewed per day
In 2009, 3.6 Billion photos were archived on Flickr.com
Eric Horner - EchoFundraising.com -
26. Basics of Social Media Strategy
26
Ultimately, the goal of social media is to build awareness, increase
exposure, encourage participation and interaction, and become a
resource to your community. It is most effective for philanthropy
as an enhancement to your overall Online Giving plan.
Create a Plan
Monitor & Listen
Measure
Engage
Adapt quickly
Eric Horner - EchoFundraising.com -
27. Social Media Strategy: Create a Plan
27
Every organization is unique, but still needs to ask some common questions:
What are we trying to accomplish?
Why are we using social media to do this?
How will we encourage participation?
– More than just setting profiles – you need to encourage participation by promoting
social media sites through offline activities and reminders such as displaying links
in headers, email signatures, business cards and print advertising.
Who will maintain our social media presence?
Do we have the resources to keep this up?
– Social media is only effective as long as it is engaging the audience
How does social media integrate into our overall
marketing/communications strategy?
What will we do less of if we are spending resources on social media?
Eric Horner - EchoFundraising.com -
28. Social Media Strategy: Monitor & Listen
28
Where does your donor audience currently communicate?
– Facebook is the largest network statistically, but you may find your audience is more active on
LinkedIN or Twitter, or YouTube.
– Conduct a basic census of your people in each network
What is my audience discussing?
– You need to join the groups and find out what the topics are.
– If you find that there is a lively discussion going around one subject, encourage it instead of
trying to control it. Participation of any kind is building bonds with your organization.
– Create some Google Alerts about your key words so that you can find out where they are
talking about you.
When do you moderate?
– You need to establish some basic rules of use which can be different depending on the size
and age of the audience. Start with very basic rules – most communities do a good job of self
policing. Profanity is not acceptable, for example, nor is it okay to utilize the group for
solicitations.
– Often times, organizations want to steer the communication, however in social media that
tends to push your audience away. Try not to dictate the discussion. The content you provide
is sufficient to create topics.
Eric Horner - EchoFundraising.com -
29. Social Media Strategy: Measuring
29
All social networking activity can be tracked. Basic metrics for
social media include referrals, page views, unique visitors, visitor
loyalty, comment count, members, etc. Custom key performance
indicators include buzz index and engagement scores.
– Google Alerts
– Google Analytics
– Open rates & click thru's
– Engagement scores
You need to start getting in the practice of regularly tracking your
metrics – even it if your metrics are basic at first.
Eric Horner - EchoFundraising.com -
31. Social Media Strategy: Engaging
31
Establish your profiles – Feed new content regularly
“build embassies” – Use syndication tools
– Facebook
– Twitter
Track the progress
– LinkedIN
– LMAIS baseline averages:
– YouTube • Facebook 88% use it
– Others - depends on audience – (496 followers);
Find volunteers who love it • Twitter 59% use it
– (99 followers);
– Empower them as your
• LinkedIN 65% use it
agents to work on your behalf
– (97 followers)
– Listen to their suggestions
– Be prepared to run with new
ideas as they are developed
Eric Horner - EchoFundraising.com -
32. Syndication of Content
32
RSS
Links to the bigger story
Gathering and responding to
comments
Hootsuite, Tweetdec, Seesmi
c, and What?
<- Graphic by B. Liedke
Eric Horner - EchoFundraising.com -
33. What results to expect from your social network
33
In any online community, you are always going to have the majority
of people acting as dead-weight most of the time. Reasonable
success is getting people to graduate up one rung of the ladder.
– .5% = Superstars – you wish you had 100‟s of these because they do
things that impress you
– 5-10% = Evangelists – these people spread your message and connect
with the community for you
– 10-15% = Donors/Online Participants/Volunteers – you count on them
to come through for you when you need them
– 10-20% = Responders – sometimes they can be involved, sometimes not
– 40-50% = Affiliates – they like what you do, and more importantly like
being connected with you
– 20% = Free Loaders – they are always there, but you get nothing
Eric Horner - EchoFundraising.com -
34. Best Practices
34
Tell a story using short blurbs that point to something bigger
Organize your data into segmentation groups
Use the “Spaghetti Factor” (throw everything and see what
sticks), but you must test quickly and adapt
Let the data set your course – it‟s not always what you thought
would happen when you planned (donor-centric model)
Take “little people” seriously; listen to all ideas
Be ready to deal with both good and bad luck –you will get both
Communication must be positioned appropriately in your
leadership in order to succeed- less than 3 people‟s approval
Eric Horner - EchoFundraising.com -
35. An Email – Explained
35
“Email has rules as a genre that need to be respected.” -T. Gensemer, Blue State Digital
Email is an action-oriented writing style; it‟s not a flyer
Emails should be less than 250 words. Can link to larger articles on web
Email is never ANONYMOUS
– must always have a person sign it
– what personality, tone, and style is conveyed?
Schedule your delivery of emails when the timing is right for the recipients
(usually Tuesday-Thursday between 9 AM – 5 PM)
Donors are also Activists – give them something to talk about and they will
Your audience will ask three questions every time they read your email:
– Why am I on this recipient list?
– What does this email want from me?
– What do I do next?
Know the rules – regulations like CAN-SPAM, HIPAA, FERPA as well as etiquette
Eric Horner - EchoFundraising.com -
36. Know what to look for on a website for donors
36
Basic Marketing Website is:
•Marketed to general public
•Not oriented to donors interests
•Passive interaction – no email or
donor acquisition tools
•One-way communication device
•Giving tool sits on a deeper level
page that is not obvious on top
level
•Giving page not designed to
handle high volume of
transactions securely
36
Eric Horner - EchoFundraising.com -
37. Better Online Giving Website Example
37
Pro- Online Giving Website
has:
•Multiple giving opportunities
•Donor needs to be able to find
the GIVE button and make a gift
in less than 30 seconds
•Shows where funds are going
•Designed to handle high volume
of transactions securely
•Fully usable on multiple
browsers and accessible to
mobile devices; Check your site
out with IE, Firefox, Chrome,
Safari, and mobile – from home
as well as the office
Eric Horner - EchoFundraising.com -
38. Donor-Centric Website Example
38
Donor-Centric Website has:
•A separate donor-centric web
community from hospital
business
•Asks you for info, involvement
•Two-way communication portal
with content from other donors
•Multiple paths to get involved
•Use of video and social
networking links.
•Allows users to make
suggestions for new ideas.
38
Eric_Horner@yahoo.com LMAIS
Eric Horner - EchoFundraising.com -
7/13/11 slide 38
39. Email Examples
39
Email Standards
•Email is incorporated into
website
•Donors email/web actions
tracked
•Learns your interests and
encourages related topics
•Responsive to user
preferences for email volume
and type
•Conforms to CAN-SPAM
•What about the rules…
•To/From someone?
•<250 words?
39 Eric_Horner@yahoo.com LMAIS
Eric Horner - EchoFundraising.com - •Action oriented? slide 39
7/13/11
40. Discussing Advanced Strategy
40
Is it time to launch a new online platform?
Categorize the current online situation – content & community
Conduct a needs analysis; be reasonable about your scale
Define your audience
Rally your stakeholders
Prepare a multi-year budget
Introduce RFP’s or design specs
Meet the Consultants & Vendors
Rate the Products and their users
Integration with the rest of your community
Eric Horner - EchoFundraising.com -
41. 5 Phases of Online Platform Introduction
41
Planning & Assessment- outlining the building blocks for the
conception, ideation and planning of your online donor community.
Design & Build - includes detailed design and implementation
planning.
Launch & Rollout - outlines the marketing activities our platform &
team can employ to attract, encourage, sign up and retain donors.
Manage & Sustain - involves the ongoing execution of the plan to
achieve our goals and objectives for revenue.
Grow - includes the process by which you
create, implement, manage and monitor sustainability over the
short & long term.
Eric Horner - EchoFundraising.com -
42. Eric Horner, Echo Fundraising
42
EchoFundraising.com
Eric_Horner@yahoo.com
773-329-3609
Eric Horner is a front-line fundraiser with ten years of experience in traditional development
operations who also believes in the importance of leveraging web technology and social
media to reach an emerging audience. He understands how to enhance an
organization‟s annual fund by adding to the overall online giving plan and email
solicitation practice while staying consistent with a donor relationship model. Through
his career in strategic communications and fundraising, Eric has helped higher
education, health care, and community non-profit organizations build stronger
solicitation programs that both acquire new donors as well as enhance relationships
with existing supporters.
Eric Horner - EchoFundraising.com -
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