Measuring Communications and Marketing Archives - Nonprofit Marketing Guide (NPMG) https://www.nonprofitmarketingguide.com/category/measuring-communications-marketing/ Helping nonprofit communicators learn their jobs, love their work, and lead their teams. Tue, 27 Aug 2024 20:20:47 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.6.2 How to Set Communications Goals with Your Program Teams https://www.nonprofitmarketingguide.com/how-to-set-communications-goals-with-your-program-teams/ https://www.nonprofitmarketingguide.com/how-to-set-communications-goals-with-your-program-teams/#respond Tue, 27 Aug 2024 20:20:47 +0000 https://www.nonprofitmarketingguide.com/?p=19535 As we enter the fall season, many nonprofits are starting their annual planning processes. With that comes the need to set communications goals for the coming year. And with that comes the need to work with the programmatic teams in your organization and how you will collaborate. (Note that the annual goals we are [...]

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As we enter the fall season, many nonprofits are starting their annual planning processes. With that comes the need to set communications goals for the coming year. And with that comes the need to work with the programmatic teams in your organization and how you will collaborate. (Note that the annual goals we are discussing here are actually what we would call objectives in a larger communications strategy.)

Use the Three Stages of Engagement to Set Communications Goals

One helpful approach to discussing and setting communications goals with others is to structure the conversation using our definition of engagement.

Engagement has three stages: Awareness, Interaction, and Participation.

Think of participation as completing the call to action. So, what do your program folks need people to do? Do they need people to RSVP, sign up, volunteer, donate, attend or what?

But before they participate, people have to be aware and then they typically need some kind of interaction to warm up or prepare

Let’s look at awareness goals first. Are you growing your email list or getting more followers on social media? Is getting more traffic to your website through organic search or paid advertising important? These are all ways to build awareness that require investing time and money.

Next is interaction. Are people opening emails and clicking on the links? Are they liking or commenting on specific social media posts? Are people returning to your website or spending a reasonable amount of time on certain pages? These are all forms of interaction that have a higher level of engagement than just awareness.

At the interaction stage, you also present your calls to action for consideration and make the case for them.

Hopefully, those who have been made aware and are interacting with your content will follow through and become participants. 

As you create your plans for the coming year and try to set communications goals, consider using this framework in discussions with other teams. It should help them understand how your communications and marketing work can get them closer to their programmatic goals.

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Nonprofit Email Metrics: Three Strategic Choices in 2023 https://www.nonprofitmarketingguide.com/nonprofit-email-metrics-three-strategic-choices-in-2023/ Tue, 22 Aug 2023 16:31:54 +0000 https://www.nonprofitmarketingguide.com/?p=18168 What are the best nonprofit email metrics now, especially since open rates aren't as useful as they once were? You'll find plenty of explanations of what all the nonprofit email measurement numbers technically mean, but what should you really pay attention to? What actually matters? We suggest three different approaches to tracking your nonprofit's [...]

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What are the best nonprofit email metrics now, especially since open rates aren’t as useful as they once were?

You’ll find plenty of explanations of what all the nonprofit email measurement numbers technically mean, but what should you really pay attention to? What actually matters?

We suggest three different approaches to tracking your nonprofit’s email metrics, based on what you think is most important now. They build on each other. So work your way down the list as you have capacity.

1. Easy and Basic Nonprofit Email Metrics That Are Still Meaningful

At the most basic level, we encourage you to focus on your click-to-open rate and work to increase that over time. While email opens are still in this equation, the emphasis is on shifting your focus to clicks.

To calculate your click-to-open rate, divide unique clicks by unique opens then multiply by 100.

Now, look for trends or differences between the different kinds of emails you send. For example, what’s the difference between newsletter and fundraising emails or event invitations? Or the topics or style of the subject line?

Once you have your baseline, start to experiment.

As you optimize your emails for clicks, you’ll need to look at the text content and the design. For example, you might try using more teaser content or adding more buttons or white space around text links.

2. Email Metrics that Demonstrate Community Building and Engagement

Click-to-open rates are based on the individual emails you send. But your list health is a huge part of your nonprofit email marketing success or failure.

Nearly all email service providers help you calculate the level of email list engagement. This metric usually looks at the number of people on your mailing list who have clicked a link in the last six months. But those criteria are not uniform across all platforms. So you need to understand how your email service provider defines an “engaged” user.  For example, here is how MailChimp calculates engagement. 

Next, see if they offer any tools for you to use to adjust those criteria. Those tools are often called lead tracking. 

With this basic understanding of how engagement is calculated, you can now set your own benchmarks. What percentage of your list is engaged? Unengaged? 

How can you better manage the unengaged, for example, through re-engagement campaigns or archiving unengaged names after a certain period?  Cleaning up your email list before year-end is a fabulous idea!

What benchmarks can you set to try to reach over time (e.g., percentage of the list or total number of records at each engagement level when there are several levels)? 

3. Nonprofit Email Metrics that Demonstrate the Value of Email Marketing with Your Communications Strategy

So you are optimizing your emails for clicks and watching your nonprofit’s email list engagement. What’s next?

It’s time to think about how well your email strategy contributes to your big marketing goals at your nonprofit like community engagement.

One excellent approach is implementing UTM links, which allow you to track where your website traffic is coming from, including your own emails. Here’s our basic explanation of how they work.

UTM links allow you to look outside your email service provider and get email performance data through your website metrics (like Google Analytics).

The trick to making UTMs work is deciding which parameters to use (start with Source, Medium, and Campaign) and then creating a naming convention — or a consistent menu of options for each parameter.  You want to use the same term every time so that Google Analytics properly collates the data.  

For example, you don’t want to call your email newsletter “news” one day and then use “newsletter” the next because Google will think those are two different things. Same with campaign names: “year-end” and “Yearend” won’t be combined.  Don’t use spaces and stick with lowercase to keep things clean.

This doesn’t have to be all or nothing. Implement UTMs on one set of emails (like a series of emails in a campaign or welcome series) to see how it goes and expand from there.

What Other Email Metrics Should We Track?

Are there more things to track? Always.

Tracking overall list growth and the number and frequency of your email sends are also important to your long-term email strategy.

But you can add those things when you have time. Pick where you are above now and see what you can learn.

What About Nonprofit Email Benchmarks?

We always recommend that you benchmark against yourself. Your particular list and email strategy, including sending frequency, segmentation, and content, are the biggest drivers of your email success. However, if you do want nonprofit benchmarks, you can start with Neon One’s data as well as the M+R benchmarks

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Visitor or Attendance Goals Must Be Shared Between Marketing and Programs https://www.nonprofitmarketingguide.com/visitor-or-attendance-goals-must-be-shared-between-marketing-and-programs/ Tue, 01 Aug 2023 16:27:50 +0000 https://www.nonprofitmarketingguide.com/?p=18096 If you are a communication pro working at a museum, a performing arts center, a discovery center, or any other facility that relies on ticket sales or folks coming through the door, you are probably wondering what your marketing goals should be. Should they include attendance or ticket sales revenue? Yes, of course, because [...]

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If you are a communication pro working at a museum, a performing arts center, a discovery center, or any other facility that relies on ticket sales or folks coming through the door, you are probably wondering what your marketing goals should be.

Should they include attendance or ticket sales revenue? Yes, of course, because that will often be your call to action.

BUT.

And that’s meant to be a BIG BUT.

Yes, it’s your goal. But it must be a shared goal with programmatic staff.

That’s because the quality of the exhibit or performance has a major effect on your ability to market it. The choices that the programmatic staff or curators are making have a very direct effect on your ability to build awareness of the event and then to encourage ticket sales or attendance.

Some exhibits or events are much easier to market than others. Program staff and communications staff both need to listen to what folks want and to create programming that is easier to market.

That doesn’t mean everything should be popular, however! Nonprofits often exist to push boundaries, raise new or hidden voices, and start difficult conversations. It is absolutely appropriate for program staff or executives to deem something important to the mission, regardless of the general appeal.

And it’s still your job to market it. This is what we here at Nonprofit Marketing Guide call “putting cheese on the broccoli.” Broccoli is good for you, but not a lot of people love it. Potatoes and tomatoes are much more popular. But nonprofits have a lot of broccoli to get into the world. That means you need some serious time, talent, and budget going toward putting cheese on that broccoli.

In other words, everyone else in your organization must acknowledge that certain events or exhibitions will be more challenging for the marketing staff, take more time, and demand more creativity.

That means the goals will also be different. Communications, programmatic, and executive staff must set realistic expectations for organizational performance and then individually for each team member.

You may even want to develop a system where you rank the expected effort required to market the exhibit or event together. Then in your annual planning, you ensure the right mix that works for both the mission-oriented staff and the communications team.

If programmatic staff fail to work with you on setting goals, I recommend you make yours about community engagement more generally.

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Social Media Metrics for Nonprofits – What You Should Really Care About https://www.nonprofitmarketingguide.com/social-media-metrics-for-nonprofits-what-you-should-really-care-about/ Wed, 05 Apr 2023 01:11:31 +0000 https://www.nonprofitmarketingguide.com/?p=17338 How should you decide which social media metrics your nonprofit should really pay attention to? Sure, you could make a case for tracking every number that the social media companies give you. But let's face it . . . that's a ridiculous waste of your time. So many social media metrics provided to nonprofits [...]

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How should you decide which social media metrics your nonprofit should really pay attention to?

Sure, you could make a case for tracking every number that the social media companies give you. But let’s face it . . . that’s a ridiculous waste of your time.

So many social media metrics provided to nonprofits are there because it’s easy for the companies to give you those numbers, not because they are actually of any real value to you.

Here’s an abbreviated version of the process I recommended today to our All-Access Pass Holders during one of our special nonprofit marketing and communications workshops called Jump Starters. 

Step 1: What is the point of your social media work, really?

We have data from the 2023 Nonprofit Communications Trends Report about the social media objectives nonprofits are pursuing.

But really, it boils down to two related questions:

  • At what level are you good with on-platform engagement alone? 
  • At what level do you need follow-throughs on calls to action, such as clicks off social to your website where another action may occur? 

During the training, I asked participants to decide that ratio for themselves. For example, are they good with 80% on-platform engagement / 20% calls to action, or the reverse, or somewhere in the middle?

This is just another way to talk about your goals for social media. But it also has a big impact on which numbers you watch most closely.

Step 2: Start with what you actually have control over without spending

When we talk about social media metrics, we talk about Activity, Reach, Engagement, and Impact. 

You can buy Reach on social media with ad dollars.

But it makes no sense to spend your money without first analyzing your Activity. I recommend that you look at three characteristics of the content you are producing:

  1. Frequency of posts — how often do you post on average per week or month?
  2. Topics of posts — what are some easy ways to categorize what you talking about in your posts? Think about maybe 3-5 categories. For example, a farmers market might post about
    • Farmers and other people posts
    • What’s in season now; products farmers are bringing to market
    • Events at the farmers market
  3. Formats of posts — Are you using images, videos, text only, or links? You can also get more specific (live video versus recorded, or graphics versus photos as your images)

Step 3: Look at the “Engagement” over “Reach”

Now you know what you are posting. With those categories in mind, now you can look at both the Reach and Engagement numbers. Reach is how many people saw it; Engagement is how many people did something with it (liked, commented, shared, clicked).  We used Meta metrics (Facebook and Instagram) to keep this simple, but the same concepts apply everywhere. The metrics will just be a little different.

You’ll look at Reach and Engagement from two perspectives.

The first is a bigger-picture number that’s more focused on the people. Let’s say over the last 28 days, Facebook says your “post reach” is 23,366 people.  That is the number of people who saw any of your posts at least once. And Facebook also says your “post engagement” was 2,869. That is the number of reactions, comments, shares, and clicks on your posts.

I recommend you divide Post Engagement by Post Reach. So in this case it’s 2869 divided by 23366, which is 0.12.  This is a decent metric for the overall performance of your content on Facebook. Based on the number of people seeing it, how much engagement are you getting in a given month? Now, you can use that as a benchmark and try to increase that over time.

You can also look at Post Engagement over Followers. But honestly, I really prefer the Engagement over Reach numbers because those are the actual people seeing the content, regardless of whether they follow you or not. We all know that not all of your followers see the content.

Next, you’ll get into the post-level data, and this is where you need those post topics and formats from above. 

Meta tells you what your top posts are by Reach and by Engagement.

I recommend you keep track of the top 5 to 10 per month if you post several times a week.

  • Top posts by Reach
  • Top posts by Engagement
  • Top posts by Engagement / Reach (yes, you have to do that math again)
  • Changes in Reach or Engagement across your post topics and formats. Put them in order! Which topics got the best reach and engagement? Which formats?

This is what can help you make better decisions about your content strategy!

Step 4: Stop there with engagement or continue on to impact metrics

If you are mostly happy with on-platform engagement, you can stop here. Make your spreadsheet and start tracking. You’ll be off to a great start!

If you are more interested in calls to action, then you’ll need to get more specific about what that looks like. For most of you, it’s diving into that engagement number to separate out the Clicks specifically. You can then run the numbers above, but replace the full Engagement number with just the Clicks.

Can you do A LOT more than this? Of course. Do you need to? For most of you who are just trying to produce the most engaging content you can, this is plenty. 

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Finding Meaning in Your Social Media Metrics by Defining Objectives https://www.nonprofitmarketingguide.com/finding-meaning-in-your-social-media-metrics-by-defining-objectives/ Thu, 13 Oct 2022 16:56:46 +0000 https://www.nonprofitmarketingguide.com/?p=15085 We all know how much time nonprofit communicators spend on creating and posting social media content (Hint: A LOT). But what's it all for? I recommend that you connect your social media strategy back to specific nonprofit marketing goals and objectives. Here are the 12 categories of nonprofit communications objectives that we suggest you [...]

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We all know how much time nonprofit communicators spend on creating and posting social media content (Hint: A LOT). But what’s it all for?

I recommend that you connect your social media strategy back to specific nonprofit marketing goals and objectives.

Here are the 12 categories of nonprofit communications objectives that we suggest you start with for all of your work.

  • Newly joining, subscribing, or following (e.g., increase newsletter subscriptions by 20% this year)
  • Expressions of loyalty, including retention or renewal (e.g., maintain a 75% donor retention rate this year)
  • Participation levels, such as registrations, donations and RSVPs (e.g., sell out 90% of the workshops this year)
  • Financial gains or savings (e.g., increase the percentage of race revenue raised via peer-to-peer fundraising by 20%)
  • Increased levels of influence or share of conversation (e.g., get invited to speak at 5 events this year)
  • Increased demand or desire for something (e.g., increase appointment requests by 30% next quarter)
  • Change in knowledge or understanding (e.g., 75% of beginners move to the intermediate level in 6 months)
  • Change in tone, sentiment, attitude or preferences (e.g., the majority of social media comments on our profiles are positive or neutral this year)
  • Increased preparedness or empowerment to act (e.g., 70% of petition signers continue to open educational emails six months later)
  • Change in behavior (e.g., 50% fewer students use inappropriate language this semester)
  • Increased satisfaction (e.g., raise the Net Promoter Score for the program to +60)
  • Expressions of trust (e.g., three new organizations agree to partner with us on the new project)

Now, let’s look at some ways to get more specific about social media objectives.

Newly joining, subscribing or following is an obvious one as you build your list of followers. This is a good indicator for goals like raising awareness of issues, brand building and reputation management, and engaging our community to keep people inspired and active.

How about increased level of influence or share of conversation? When you look at conversations on the topics you care about, are your posts included?

Same with a change in tone, sentiment, attitude or preference.  When you look at the conversations you are in on social media, is the vibe of the conversation changing in meaningful ways?

Or consider change in knowledge or understanding. If you see a lot of engagement around posts on a particular topic, that can be an indicator of change in knowledge.

Working through how these and other objectives can apply to your social media work is a great way to be more strategic and to add real meaning to all that time spent.

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Should You Track Your Website’s Bounce Rate? https://www.nonprofitmarketingguide.com/should-you-track-your-websites-bounce-rate/ Tue, 22 Mar 2022 14:40:37 +0000 https://www.nonprofitmarketingguide.com/?p=13934 The quick answer to whether you should track your bounce rate: Maybe? Not helpful, I know, so let's get into bounce rates a little more. My quest to figure this out started with a question asked in our community during month's Community Spotlight which is on measuring your communications. At that point I realized I [...]

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The quick answer to whether you should track your bounce rate: Maybe?

Not helpful, I know, so let’s get into bounce rates a little more.

My quest to figure this out started with a question asked in our community during month’s Community Spotlight which is on measuring your communications. At that point I realized I spend most of my time on email metrics as opposed to website metrics and decided to do a little digging into the bounce rate and why it’s so divisive.

What exactly is a bounce rate anyway?

Your bounce rate is the percentage of visitors who enter your site and then leave (“bounce”) without viewing other pages on your website. It is calculated by counting the number of single page visits and dividing that by the total visits. It is then represented as a percentage of total visits.

So, if your homepage has a total of 100 sessions and 50 of those sessions are only single page visits your bounce rate is 50%.

On the surface, it seems like that would be a good metric to know, right? If people are leaving without looking around, then you aren’t giving them what they need, right?

Not exactly.

Is a high bounce rate bad?

That depends on the type of site you have and the particular page in question.

Blog posts or other informational pages can have high bounce rates because people find what they are looking for on one page, then leave. Think about what you do after reading a news article.

Also, if you have a lot of visitors from mobile devices, then you may also have a higher bounce rate as most users on these devices don’t look at multiple page during a session.

On the other hand, your homepage probably directs visitors to different areas of your website so a high bounce rate here could warrant further investigation.

High bounce rates can also be a sign of poor quality images, disruptive ads, or slow load times so be sure this isn’t an issue with your site.

Should you track your bounce rate or not?

Unfortunately I go back to my first answer: Maybe. While bounce rates can help identify an issue with engagement, it doesn’t paint a full picture. If you don’t have time to further investigate a high bounce rate on a certain page, then don’t bother. A bounce rate by itself won’t tell you anything helpful.

If you only have a single-page website, then again, this is not a helpful metric. Everyone will bounce because there is nowhere else for them to go.

It also does not affect your Google rank.

But as said above, it can show an issue with your homepage or other back-end issues like load time.

Yes, I know how annoying “Well, it depends” answers are so I will leave you with this news:  

Google Analytics 4 did away with bounce rates and replaced it with “engaged sessions” so I think that may be the final word on this misunderstood metric.

Want to join our Community? Become a Free Member or Pass Holder or register for a training event.

Want to learn more about how to measure your communications success? We are doing a Master Class this Thursday on measuring your communications where we will show you practical, strategic approaches to tracking and evaluating communications work.

 

 

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Measuring Your Nonprofit Marketing Success https://www.nonprofitmarketingguide.com/measuring-your-nonprofit-marketing-success/ Thu, 17 Mar 2022 20:55:27 +0000 https://www.nonprofitmarketingguide.com/?p=13922 Are you ready to get serious about measuring your nonprofit marketing success? It's a challenge, but one definitely worth taking on. We have lots of advice to get you started! Choosing Your Objectives One of the reasons that measuring nonprofit marketing communications work is so hard is that we have a lot of different marketing [...]

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Are you ready to get serious about measuring your nonprofit marketing success? It’s a challenge, but one definitely worth taking on. We have lots of advice to get you started!

Choosing Your Objectives

One of the reasons that measuring nonprofit marketing communications work is so hard is that we have a lot of different marketing and communications objectives to consider.

Based on our research, there are 12 different categories of nonprofit marketing objectives. But all of these must be customized and made SMART (Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Results-Oriented, and Time-Bound). Couple that with the sheer amount of data that many of your online marketing channels give you, and you have hundreds if not thousands of choices for what to measure.

Try to narrow that down by focusing on what you really want to know. That will help you decide between what you could measure and what you should measure. 

Measurement Frameworks for Communications and Marketing

It’s helpful to understand some of the different ways we talk about measuring nonprofit marketing or communications success.

One easy way to think about it is Outputs, Outcomes, and Impacts.

  • Outputs are what you create, like an email fundraising campaign and your posts on Facebook.
  • Outcomes are what people do with what you create, like opening, clicking, and donating.
  • Impacts are the results or the changes produced by your outputs and the outcomes. For example, having people attend an event or donate money are impacts of your communications.

Wondering what to measure first and where to start? Describing your outputs, especially in relation to your editorial calendar, is a great start. After all, we know that how often nonprofits communicate is a really important indicator of success. That’s why keeping track of how often you are communicating and whether you are following through on your editorial calendar or not is meaningful, even if you aren’t quite ready to measure outcomes or impacts.

Another popular approach to marketing measurement is tracking Activity, Reach, Engagement, and Impact, which basically takes “Outcomes” above and splits it into Reach and Engagement.

Activity, like outputs, measures what you create.

Reach is how many people saw what you created. Sometimes people use the concept of “impressions” here.

Engagement is akin to Outcomes above. It’s some percentage of those you “reached” actually doing something with the content.

Impact is the same in both frameworks: the results or the changes produced when your activity reaches someone and they engage with it.

Let’s take measuring awareness-raising for example. You might decide to focus on building the size of your permission-based mailing lists. That will increase your reach over time. You could also look at the activity (the content you are producing and sharing) that brings people to those opt-in and other engagement opportunities.

Reporting Results to Others

You may be wondering how often you should report marketing and communications results to others.  This depends in part on just how interested your leadership team is and whether they really care about communications results. 

Most nonprofit communicators try to develop some kind of dashboard to share results. You may have a few different versions: one very high-level dashboard for your board, a more detailed one for your internal management team, and even more specific ones for you personally. (We teach a Dashboard Jump Starter for All-Access Pass Holders.)

Auditing and Testing to Learn Even More from Your Data

Auditing or reviewing what you are currently doing can go hand in hand with a measurement strategy.  Depending on what you are most interested in learning, you may want to conduct

  1. A Channel Mix Audit
  2. A Content or Messaging Audit
  3. A Brand Audit
  4. A Strategic Objectives Audit
  5. A Tactical Best Practices Audit

You can learn more about the five different types of nonprofit communications and marketing audits here. These will help you get some ideas for how to move the numbers you are tracking.

You will also want to experiment with new approaches to your messaging or communications channels to see if you can move your number in the right direction. Just doing the same old thing isn’t likely to produce significant results. Why leave it up to chance or luck?

Instead, experiment and try some new ideas out. For example, here are 14 easy tests to run to improve your nonprofit’s email marketing. 

Ready to Create a Marketing Measurement Plan?

Here are three measurement concepts to keep in mind and five questions to help you walk through the process of deciding what to measure.

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5 Types of Nonprofit Communications and Marketing Audits https://www.nonprofitmarketingguide.com/5-types-of-nonprofit-communications-and-marketing-audits/ Thu, 17 Feb 2022 22:36:30 +0000 https://www.nonprofitmarketingguide.com/?p=13801 The word audit can feel really scary. It feels like someone is coming for you and looking for all of your mistakes. But that's not what we mean when we talk about a communications or marketing audit! Instead, think of it more as a review or a check-up. We just want to see how things [...]

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The word audit can feel really scary. It feels like someone is coming for you and looking for all of your mistakes. But that’s not what we mean when we talk about a communications or marketing audit! Instead, think of it more as a review or a check-up.

We just want to see how things are going. We want to know what’s working, so we can do more of those things. We want to know what’s not working so we can stop doing those things or make adjustments. Audits are also helpful in planning for future growth — you need to know where you are before you can plan those next steps.

All of that said, the idea of doing a full communications and marketing audit at your nonprofit can feel very daunting because it feels like a lot of work. And you are right about that! It is a lot of work! 

One way to make the communications audit process more manageable is to focus on the answers you are really seeking and then choose the kind of audit you start with.

We recommend and do training on five different kinds of communications and marketing audits.

1. The Channel Mix Audit

This big-picture audit focuses primarily on which communications channels you are using and how often you are posting or publishing content in each one. We know from our annual Nonprofit Communications Trends Report research that the number of communications channels used and how frequently content is published to them is one indicator of communications effectiveness. This is a great audit to start with when you are looking at your communications team’s capacity.

2. The Content or Messaging Audit

This communications and marketing audit looks specifically at your messaging. What topics are you talking about? What are your calls to action? Is the mix of topics and calls to action appropriate for the target audiences and communities you are trying to reach?

3. The Brand Audit

The review is centered on your visual brand and style guide in this type of communications and marketing audit. How do your communications and marketing look? For example, are the use of your logo, colors, fonts, etc. consistent across your communications? Do your communications follow your style guide in terms of the written content’s voice, style, and tone? Consistency in how you present your communications is important and so a brand audit helps you review that.

4. The Strategic Objective Audit

To perform this audit, you first need to know what your marketing strategies and marketing objectives are! Let’s say one of our objectives is to raise awareness about a topic. During this audit, you would look at all the communications you do that are intended to raise awareness on that topic. Are you delivering the right messages to the right people in the right places and the right times to raise that awareness? This audit will help you answer that and likely lead to recommendations for improvement.

5. The Tactical Best Practices Audit

The previous four audits looked across multiple communications channels. In the tactical best practices audit, you pick just one tactical communications channel at a time and do a very granular and specific analysis of whether you are implementing the best practices for that channel. For example, the best practices for an email newsletter are quite different from the best practices for Instagram stories. That, of course, means that you know what those best practices are and can gauge how well you are implementing them.

See, it’s not so scary when you break down the idea of a big communications audit into more realistic steps.

 

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14 Easy Tests to Run to Improve Your Nonprofit’s Email Marketing https://www.nonprofitmarketingguide.com/14-easy-tests-to-run-to-improve-your-nonprofits-email-marketing/ Tue, 24 Aug 2021 21:24:02 +0000 https://www.nonprofitmarketingguide.com/?p=13017 It's really hard to guess whether a change you want to make will actually get better results, especially when improving your email marketing. You just have to give it a try and see! One way to do that is through A/B testing or split testing.  You pick one variable with two different options. You [...]

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It’s really hard to guess whether a change you want to make will actually get better results, especially when improving your email marketing. You just have to give it a try and see!

One way to do that is through A/B testing or split testing.  You pick one variable with two different options. You send Option 1 to half of your list and Option 2 to the other half, and see what works better. Or, you can send each option to a part of your list (say Option A to 20%, Option B to 20% and then you send the winner to the remaining 60%).

For example, MailChimp will let you test different subject lines, from names, content, and send time and will randomly split the list for you.  Constant Contact, Campaign Monitor, Active Campaign, Hubspot, and Emma also offer some level of A/B testing. It’s a fairly standard feature these days, especially for paid plans, so check with whatever provider you use to send your emails.

Here are some tests you could run:

  • Which day of the week is best? Some nonprofits get great results sending on weekends, for example.
  • What time of day is best? Have you tried evenings, for example?
  • Which words in your subject line seem to produce the best response?
  • What about emojis in the subject line?
  • Should the email come from your nonprofit, a staff person, or some combination of the two in the “from” field?
  • Are people more likely to click on a button, linked text, or an image?
  • Do images help or hurt clicks?
  • What about GIFs in the content?
  • Which wording for your calls to action perform best?
  • Does a plain and simple email template (as if you typed it in Gmail or Outlook) work better than a designed template?
  • Do images with people work better than other kinds of images you use?
  • What seems to be the optimum number of stories or links?
  • Does including stories, testimonials, or quotes help?
  • Should you structure the mail as a letter with a signature and a PS?

Of course, you also have to define what “works best” means in each case. Are you measuring open rates, click-through rates, or something else? Typically, you’d look at opens for things like who the email is from and your subject line and use clicks for content. Sending time could be measured either way.

We’d love to hear the results of your split testing. Feel free to share in the comments.

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What to Measure First https://www.nonprofitmarketingguide.com/what-to-measure-first/ Thu, 11 Feb 2021 17:30:03 +0000 https://www.nonprofitmarketingguide.com/what-to-measure-first/ We know from our Trends Report research and experience that measuring marketing and communications work is hard. Most nonprofits don't really take it on in a meaningful way that influences their strategies (e.g. making real changes based on data) until they reach an "expert" level of experience. So if you are just starting out with [...]

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We know from our Trends Report research and experience that measuring marketing and communications work is hard. Most nonprofits don’t really take it on in a meaningful way that influences their strategies (e.g. making real changes based on data) until they reach an “expert” level of experience.

So if you are just starting out with measurement, where should you begin, especially if you are fairly new to comms work or you are the first comms staffer at your nonprofit?

You have outputs (what you create–like an email fundraising campaign), outcomes (what people do with what you create–like opening, clicking, and donating), and impacts (the change that results–what you able to do with the money).

Yes, eventually you want to get to all three. But that’s hard at first.

So I suggest you start with Outputs, and specifically measure that in three ways:

  • How much new content you are producing
  • The frequency with which you are share content (original, repurposed, and curated) across your primary channels
  • How consistent you are with meeting your ideal communications schedule

Let’s look at each of these a bit more, so you can see how to customize them for your work.

How Much New Content Did You Produce?

Content marketing is an essential strategy for nonprofits, so keeping track of how much original content you produce is a good start. I’m talking substantive content here, like articles, blog posts, and videos, not quick social media posts (that’s included next). Also look at the topics you write about.

Example: Last month, we wrote four original blog posts (two on Project A and two on Project B), seven original newsletter articles (two on Project A, and one each on Projects B, C, D, E, and F), and a press release (on Project D).

How Often Did You Share Content?

Sharing content at the right frequency is a real struggle for many nonprofits. Many don’t communicate often enough. So the pace at which you share content — how often you email, post to social etc. — is also an indicator of your potential effectiveness.

Count up how many times you posted or sent content through each of your major channels. This should include both original content AND repurposed content AND curated content — all of it.

Example: Last month, we created 8 blog posts, 4 email newsletters, 4 single topic emails, 1 press release, 12 Facebook posts, 12 Instagram posts, and 30 Tweets. You can also note how this volume compares to what you’d like to do and what topics were covered.

How Consistently Are You Meeting Your Editorial Schedule?

Now, the question is, did you share that content on a consistent schedule? If you do a whole bunch of social media posts at the beginning of the month, but then fall silent (or close) in the second half of the month, that’s not good. So take a look at the pattern — How closely were you able to follow your editorial calendar?

Example: The blog was updated on schedule. Two of the email newsletters went out more than a day late, because internal reviewers missed deadlines. Social media frequency is lagging — we posted about 3 times a week on Instagram and Facebook, but we want to post 5 times a week. We met our schedule for Twitter.

What’s Next

Tracking only this information may feel like you are missing important information, like outcomes — and you are! But it’s OK. You have to start somewhere, and we know that creating original content, sending content frequently, and sticking to a consistent schedule are super important to your success. Work on that first, and then you’ll be in great shape to measure the effectiveness of the content.

If you are ready to move beyond measuring your content production, then I recommend you ask these five questions to decide what to measure next.

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