From Fundraising to Engagement - building a new experience for supporters
-
Upload
henry-rowling -
Category
Government & Nonprofit
-
view
1.504 -
download
1
Transcript of From Fundraising to Engagement - building a new experience for supporters
2 May 2023 1
Fundraising Regulator Conference Manchester – 21st February 2017
Henry Rowling
Director of Supporter Experience
@henryrowling
Changing our charity Fundraising model, for ever
2 May 2023 2
In 1881, a young Sunday School teacher named Edward Rudolf was appalled by the poverty affecting the lives of children in his parish and reached out into his community to do something about it
Thus began The Children’s Society
135 years later, the concept of a community taking action together to achieve positive change for children is still at our core
Each year over a million committed volunteers, donors, supporters, campaigners, and communities join forces with the professional staff
They ARE The Children’s Society
They have done so for decades - and will continue to do so because they want to stop children facing terrible problems in their daily lives
The Children’s Society
2 May 2023 3
Like other charities we watched with great sadness as the events of 2015 unfolded after the death of Olive Cooke and subsequent media coverage of poor practice in the sector
As the spotlight swung sharply onto the fundraising practices of charities in the UK, we paused for thought. The sector was found wanting.
The reasons for this are multiple and complex - and for discussion another day
We had never stopped valuing our supporters – but were we behaving in a way that genuinely demonstrated this?
We have been raising money for children through building relationships for 130 years
Was the experience of getting involved with The Children’s Society as positive and inspiring as we believed it should be?
We know some fundraising methods have become over-used and put the sector in a poor light.
From Fundraising to Supporter Engagement
2 May 2023 4
We can fix this by taking firm, principled and positive actions.
People still want to support building a better world and community through engaging with charities - but we must listen and adapt to them more and build better internal systems to do this
We need to change our business model:
We are moving away from product led fundraising – to true supporter engagement – with the experience of supporters paramount in key decision making.
We are not there yet - it is hard work and we don’t have all the answers.
Continue Fundraising
2 May 2023 5
We took immediate action from mid-2015 Reduced our investment in recruitment channels with high cancellation rates – particularly street
fundraising, door to door and telephone campaigns.
Created four work streams and 18 priority change projects that will catapult us into a supporter-led future.
Committed to using a different set of metrics to measure performance
Our Life Time Value takes into account non-financial actions as well as financial contributions to include campaigning, volunteering and networked contributions, so that we are considering the total value of our supporters engagement.
We know that if we only use metrics that focus on short-term returns on a campaign by campaign basis then that will focus the way our supporter engagement staff behave
Actions
YES: supporter satisfaction, lifetime value, % of opt-ins by channel and a loyalty index
NO: shorter-term product-focussed ROI, response rates and net present value
2 May 2023 6
Longer term measures of success focus staff on building better relationships with supporters
Reduced the number of “solicitation” communications (with sole direct financial asks) and increased the number of “engagement” communications (with no direct ask to supporters).
Using the ‘non-ask’ communications to find out and understand more about our supporters, thank and recognise their contributions and offer more feedback on impact.
Increased focus on innovation and insight so we understand supporters lives better and how they can support children through what they do day to day
Continue Actions
2 May 2023 7
Increased the amount of call listening we conduct with our telephone agency and ensure we have a systematic way of recording outcomes of that listening
We are seeking to increase non-financial engagement with the organisation that will build supporter trust, commitment and satisfaction – creating much stronger loyalty across the supporter base.
Became full members of the Direct Marketing Association (DMA).
Immediately audited the activities of the supporter facing teams against the IOF Codes of Practice
Continue Actions
2 May 2023 8
There are limited charity cases that prove greater supporter engagement definitively increases income in the short and medium term.
We have a financial picture that suggests it will – but we have taken a leap of faith and are doing all we can to make it a reality.
If ultimately it does not increase overall value to children and young people we will not have succeeded.
Moving from a business model that delivers short-term returns to one that may take longer to deliver results there is a danger that we lose patience if we cannot see immediate results.
Risks
9
But we have a commitment at CEO, Trustee and senior leadership levels to this new supporter engagement model
We are committed to making every single interaction with The Children’s Society an enjoyable one. We won’t always get that right. But when we don’t we will listen, adapt and learn.
ContinueRisks
2 May 2023
10
• So far we have had staff discussions around why we want to take this approach – when in the short-term it will mean we have less money to fund our work with children and young people.
• This is a difficult conversation to have with colleagues in an environment when funding from all sources is being squeezed.
ContinueRisks
2 May 2023
• We have painted a picture of a richer future – with more engaged supporters – who fully and deeply understand our work – and support in a variety of different ways – to create better opportunities for young people.
2 May 2023 11
Yes there are risks in this approach
But it is not an optional decision.
It is something we have to do.
We are confident - in 5 years time when we have supporters who have positively opted in to hearing from us; who have the right communications from us, at the frequency they want they will be more involved and engaged in our work –
And that can only be a good thing for children.
Opportunities
2 May 2023 12
Building a movement
Conducted a thorough
internal and external review,
Considered data, theory
and case studies from a wide range of sources,
Undertaken research with
our supporters
(existing and potential),
Engaged with
trustees and staff at all levels.
We have:
• Nevertheless, this approach still requires a leap of faith.
• We can’t “know” that deeper richer engagement focussed on long-term relationships over short-term transactions will grow our income.
• But everything about our values, philosophy and
approach to achieving social change gives us confidence
that this is the right direction for us.
2 May 2023 13
Of course, we have to perform well against our planned approaches – and hold firm and true to the Supporter Engagement principles.
We will not retreat into the old ways of working at the first sign of challenge.
Our aim and vision is to build a dynamic movement of people collectively transforming the lives of vulnerable children and young people through their actions.
Building a movement
2 May 2023 14
Seeing the whole person: from “fundraising” to “supporter engagement”
Moving beyond siloes - don’t treat people ‘just’ as donors, see all the huge value they can bring to your organisation
Compliance vs experience: much of the regulatory debate has focussed on codes and compliance
Seeing the whole person and putting supporter experience at the forefront, we see compliance as the baseline but the quality of the supporter experience is the key driver above and beyond sector codes
Key Shifts
2 May 2023 15
Importance of innovation: we must innovate around how we fundraise and engage our supporters; the wake-up call has not been one of refining/revising business-as-usual, but the need for step-change in our sector
Joy of giving: science and personal experience tell us that the act of giving – be that money or time – brings joy to the giver as well as making a difference to those in need
Our new approach focuses on releasing that joy so we can both maximise the impact of our supporters for young people AND maximise the positive experience for our supporters;
We’ve changed our team name to “Supporter Impact” because that’s our priority – connecting people directly to the cause
Key shifts continued
2 May 2023 16
Whole organisation approach: to achieve great supporter experiences and maximum impact for our beneficiaries everyone must be involved – trustees, senior leadership, colleagues from across the charity; it must not be seen as a job just for the fundraisers.
We have been lucky that The Children’s Society gets this, and our new approach to supporter engagement is owned by the whole organisation not any one team, with trustees acting as proactive champions for our approach
Whole organisation approach
2 May 2023 17
We are still only starting on our journey to supporter-led fundraising but if Edward Rudolf were still with us today he’d
approve – and across The Children’s Society we are excited about the
Building a movement