Learn Four Nonprofit CRM Strategies from NetSuite

Preview:

DESCRIPTION

Nonprofits looking for constituent relationship management systems (CRM) are often enamored by the features and bells and whistles. Successful CRM, however starts with strategy – how does your nonprofit go about achieving your mission? During this free, hour-long webinar, we'll review the basic concepts behind CRM, giving attendees a lay of the land.

Citation preview

Four Nonprofit CRM Strategies

April 3, 2014

Using ReadyTalk• Chat and raise hand • All lines are muted• If you lose your Internet

connection, reconnect using the link emailed to you.

• If you lose your phone connection, re-dial the phone number and re-join.

• ReadyTalk support: 800-843-9166Your audio will play through your computer’s speakers.

• This seminar will be available on the TechSoup website along with past webinar presentations: www.techsoup.org/community/events-webinars

• You will receive a link to this presentation, material, and links.

• Twitter hashtag: #techsoup

You are being recorded…

Four Nonprofit CRM Strategies

David Geilhufe, NetSuite

April 3, 2014

Presenters

Becky WiegandInteractive Events Producer

TechSoup

Assisting with chat: Ale Bezdikian, TechSoup

David GeilhufeSenior Director

NetSuite.org

• Introducing TechSoup• Participant Poll – What matters most?• What Is CRM?• Four Strategies• NetSuite.org• Q&A

Today’s Agenda:

TechSoup is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit with a clear focus: connecting fellow nonprofits, charities,

public libraries, and foundations with tech products and services, plus learning resources to

make informed decisions about technology.

Who Is TechSoup?

Who Is TechSoup?• Since 1987, TechSoup donation programs have served more than

210,000 charitable organizations.• We’ve distributed more than 11 million software and hardware

donations and enabled recipients to save more than US$3.75 billion in IT expenses in 60+ countries around the world.

• We reach more than 400,000 nonprofit, library, and philanthropy subscribers in the United States with our newsletters each year.

What’s New at TechSoup?Consulting ServicesThinking about updating software, investing in new computers, or deploying a network or server? TechSoup now offers consulting services to help!

QuickBooks 2014Want more time in your day? Automate your bookkeeping by using QuickBooks.

Windows 8.1Support for Windows XP ends in April of 2014, so make sure you’re ready to upgrade.

• Which of the following is most important/true of your needs? – We need to know who we know and what we said

to them. – We need to know how our constituents interact

with us and one another.– We need to know which of our constituents have

the most value/biggest financial impact.– I need the infrastructure to accommodate

changing needs and dynamic CRM strategies.

Participant Poll

Four Nonprofit CRM Strategies

David Geilhufe

Senior Director, NetSuite.org

dgeilhufe@netsuite.com

Contacts, Relationships, Revenue, Silos

Tracking meetings, calls and emails

Integrated Quotes/ProposalsDocument ManagementDocument PublishingCertification

Customer PortalProject TrackingService TrackingTime & Expense

Lead trackingSegmentationMass E-Mail

Group CalendaringResource Availability

+

Lead

Prospect

Qualify

MeetQuote

Order

Service Delivery

Repurchase

Suspect

+

+

+

+ +

+

+

+

What Is CRM?Constituent Relationship Management

Institutional memory about interactions with all constituents that is used to further your mission

Potential supporters, volunteers, clients, donors, etc.

Order MgmtBook services

What Is CRM?

What is CRM?

© NetSuite 2010 15

What Is CRM?

© NetSuite 2010 16

Where Are You Today?

It Starts With StrategyFour CRM Strategies

CRM Strategy

What Problem Does CRM Solve?

Depends, what is your strategy?

What is the Strategy?

How do you work with and/or serve constituents?

What is the most important part of your mission vis-à-vis constituents?

What critical organizational/business processes involve your constituents?

What Problems Does CRM Solve?

Institutional memory

Disconnected data silos

No complete view of the constituent

CRM Strategy

Features ≠ Mission Outcomes

Endless possibilities do not drive mission outcomes

Bells and Whistles are useless if you don’t need to make noise

Getting stuck in features lists is confusing

Four CRM Strategies

Contacts

We need to known who we know and what we said to them

Relationships

We need to understand how our constituents interact with us and with one another

Money/ Revenue

We need to understand which constituents are most valuable and/or which constituents have the biggest financial impact

Silos

I need the infrastructure to accommodate changing needs and multiple, dynamic CRM strategies

These are common strategies, but there are many others.

Implementing CRMCRM Isn’t About Software

1. Define the Strategy

2. Document (and Improve) Process

3. Implement Process (in software)

4. Test Process

5. Revise until Process is Accepted

6. Launch Process

Implementing the Software

1. Identify all data required by the process2. Identify where that data is today3. Consolidate data in a single location & standardize data collection4. Configure software to match the documented process

a) The more you conform to software, the less time and money you will spend

5. Load your data6. Run the reports required by your process

Benefits

Better process & constituent experience

More time freed up for your mission from busy work and inefficiency

CRM Strategy: Contacts Four CRM Strategies

ContactsThe Strategy

I’m a small organization with limited resources. I just need to get organized.

The Challenges

I can’t find anything– 50% of nonprofits use post its and excel; data is scattered everywhere

I can’t make a list of constituents– Who gives us money, who we serve, who gets invited to the next event

Everything is out of date or wrong– Five addresses for each constituent, which one is right?

ContactsThe Features

Multi-user, anytime/anywhere access (cloud)

Enter constituents

Search constituents

List constituents

Implementation

Planning and process : minimal

Generally just turn it on and start typing

Accidental techies help, but are not necessary

Generally no need for paid consultants

Contacts: ResultsThe Good

One source of the truth

One organizational contact list

Staff gets used to databases (and will be ready for more later)

The Limitations

Can’t track rich information about constituents

Can’t track relationships

Can’t track activities

Can’t track transactions

Can’t prepare for the future (but moving up isn’t very hard)

CRM Strategy: RelationshipsFour CRM Strategies

RelationshipsThe Strategy

My constituents, their interrelationships, and their activities drive my mission (example: politics, advocacy)

The Challenges

I can’t take action based on a constituent’s relationships– Who is on the board of a funder? Who knows a key constituent?

I can’t take advantage of new technology like social media – Who cares about the same causes as our organization?

I can’t respond to constituents in a timely manner– Follow up and communication gets lost in the shuffle

RelationshipsThe Features

Arbitrary relationships between constituents

Track activities and communications (email, phone, task, notes, files)

Specific support for specific relationships (events, for example)

Implementation

Planning and process: medium

Requires some technical implementation, accidental techies required

Complex process means paid consultants

Relationships: ResultsThe Good

Personalized constituent experience; sense of intimacy with constituents

Broader audience can be mobilized for your mission

Things don’t fall through the cracks through activity tracking

The Limitations

Requires organization commitment to the process & the tool

Can’t track transactions (often)

Garbage in; Garbage out

Requires care & feeding

Can create silos if system does not support other priorities (e.g. events)

CRM Strategy: Money/RevenueFour CRM Strategies

Money/RevenueThe Strategy

My constituents are the source of my revenue, I need to maximize revenue and/or minimize costs (major donor, direct mail, grants, sales, membership, etc.)

The Challenges

I don’t know who my best donors are– Who gave me the most money last year?

I can’t steward high touch relationships (major donors) – Actions fall through the cracks, staff confusion

I can’t determine ROI of proposed actions/ innovations– The campaign costs $5K, but only brought in $2K

Money/RevenueThe Features

Track transactions (donations, services, etc.)

Prebuilt reports that do what you need

Dashboards and Key Performance Indicators (KPIs)

Flexible reporting for the end user

Implementation

Planning and process: medium – high

Look at pre-built fundraising solutions

Paid consultants required + accidental techies

Money/RevenueThe Good

Solid basis for tracking actual and projected ROI

Optimal constituent experience

Raise more money, deliver services more efficiently

The Limitations

Requires organization commitment to the process & the tool

Requires internal data, analysis & reporting capacity

Garbage in; Garbage out

Can create silos if system does not support other priorities (e.g. events)

CRM Strategy: SilosFour CRM Strategies

SilosThe Strategy

Information about constituents is spread across systems that do not share data well and we need a complete view of the constituent.

The Challenges

My silos don’t talk with one another– Half of nonprofits manage 4+ repositories of siloed constituent data

I have five addresses for each constituent, which one is right?

I waste time getting data from multiple locations– Spreadsheets are error prone

SilosThe Features

Role-based system

Platform – should support customization & provide APIs

Segmentation

Scalable from small to very, very large

Implementation

Planning and process: high

Data planning & consolidation are critical to success

Avoid pre-built stand alone solutions (fundraising, for example)

Paid consultants required

Silos: ResultsThe Good

Platform for the future

360 degree view of constituent

No one/ nothing falls through the cracks

The Limitations

Requires significant time and money to implement and maintain

Requires organization commitment to the process & the tool

Requires internal data, analysis & reporting capacity

Every new system is an integration project

Brief NetSuite.org CommercialFour CRM Strategies

NetSuite.org : Quick Take

400+ global grantees

Solutions for fund accounting, donor management, grant accounting, volunteer management, etc.

Corporate Citizenship of NetSuite (NYSE:N)

Product donations, SuiteVolunteer pro bono & social solutions

Base donation free, 50-80% discount beyond base donation

Grantees Partnerships

Background Community

NetSuite: ERP, CRM & Ecommerce

DonationWhat it Does

Accounting

Fundraising/ CRM

Inventory/ ERP

Project Management

Ecommerce

Timesheets & Expenses

$0 base donation: 5 users, support & training renewed yearly

50% or 80% discount beyond base

SuiteVolunteers, capacity building & dedicated account management

Get It Today

Get more information from a social impact

account executive (email donations@netsuite.com)

Visit www.netsuite.org to get the donation

Donations processed through

TribeHR : The Donation

DonationWhat it Does

Core employee HRIS

Performance tracking

Applicant tracking & job board

$0 base donation: 10 employees, group edition

50% or 80% discount beyond base

SuiteVolunteers, capacity building & dedicated account management

Get It Today

Free Trial: www.tribehr.com

Visit www.netsuite.org to get the donation

Donations processed through

LightCMS: Website & Online Store

DonationWhat it Does

Get It Today

Website

Online store

$0 base donation: 25 pages, 3 GB storage, 1,000 products and support renewed yearly

50% off unlimited edition

SuiteVolunteers, capacity building & dedicated account management

Free Trial: www.lightcms.com

Visit www.netsuite.org to get the donation

Donations processed through

Q & A

Please type your questions in the chat

window.

Follow-up questions can be posted in the community

forum: www.techsoup.org/community

Upcoming WebinarsJoin TechSoup for free webinars each Thursday:

Getting Tech Donations Through TechSoupApril 10, 11 a.m. Pacific / 2 p.m. Eastern

Thank You to Our Webinar Sponsor!

ReadyTalk offers dedicated product demos for TechSoup organizations 4 times per week.

For more information:www.techsoup.org/readytalk

Please take a moment to complete the post-event survey that will pop up in a new window when you close this screen.

Recommended