There’s one thing at your charity that requires constant upkeep to maintain cleanliness. No, it isn’t the employee refrigerator or your shelter pets’ kennels. The hardest thing to keep clean at your charity is your donor data.
But it’s worth the work: The knowledge you retain about your donors, including the history of their giving, is invaluable. Storing donor and prospect data is an inexpensive proposition, but the cost of not having that information when you need to make an important strategic decision can be exorbitant.
If you’re in the market for a new CRM, TrueSense Marketing’s Chief Data Scientist Steve Caldwell suggests, “Choose a CRM that can easily integrate with the third-party tools that you or your agency use. Integration with other platforms will extend the value of the CRM data because more personalized marketing efforts can be achieved. At TrueSense, we use our own data warehouse and a campaign management platform to ensure that all donors are carefully segmented and cultivated, and that marketing results are easily measured for maximum insights.”
Your choice of CRM should rest with your marketing and fundraising executives. As the primary revenue generator for your charity, these departments should be leading the conversation about how to store, update, and maintain constituent and marketing data. “Information Technology (IT) can help you make your database decisions,” says Stephen Ferrando, SVP of Strategy and Analytics at TrueSense. “But technology and data decisions need the marketing fundraising team’s executive guidance to help prioritize the data most critical to the organization’s future success.”
At the very least, dirty data creates missed opportunities for your nonprofit. “The list of consequences is very near endless, but each and every one ends with money being spent in inefficient ways,” says, Anthony Cerrato, Business Intelligence Manager at TrueSense Marketing.
Bad data can lead to:
In addition to keeping donor stewardship at its best, data integrity is becoming even more important with the increase of personalized data for-profit companies use to engage their customers, and the expectations they begin to possess about the way they experience those brands. “The high benchmark of personalized customer experience set by brands like Amazon and Target are reshaping the way your donors believe you know them,” says Caldwell. “The consequences of these expectations can be very dangerous for nonprofits who fail to provide similar experiences.”
And while you may not be competing against Target or Amazon for your donors’ philanthropic dollars, they are your competition for your donors’ attention. (See 7 For-Profit Marketing Best Practices Your Nonprofit Can Use.)
Donor data integrity greatly influences the success of your charity and your ability to properly cultivate your prospects and donors. By maintaining and centralizing your donor records, you will be better positioned to improve your donors’ experiences with you, and thereby make the most of your donors’ long-term revenue potential.