I’d like to share a couple of lessons learned.
Long, long ago in a galaxy far away, I took my first fundraising job.
I had run a department at another nonprofit theater – managing a full-time staff of 25.
So in a way, it felt like I’d been knocked down a few pegs.
But I didn’t realize then just how lucky my timing was.
In the absence of a development director, the theater was reorganizing.
So the marketing director and I had a chance to build the theater’s first individual giving program.
Looking back, it was great we didn’t come to it with no preconceptions.
The first lesson: keep an open mind.
When you don’t know enough to know you don’t know enough, it can be a good thing.
We hired consultants to help us get started.
One guy was the outward face of the team.
He had lots of experience in politics. He was polished. And he knew people and dropped a name or two. He hooked us up with a good copywriter.
The other consultant was the data guy.
Quiet. Not flashy. He was usually left to talk with me as the junior member of the team.
Now, remember, this was long ago. Computers were dummy terminals connected to a single mainframe. Software was pretty basic.
Our software was a quickly-written fundraising module sold with a ticketing program. Honestly, it was an afterthought.
This quiet, number-crunching consultant taught me the importance of keeping good records.
Good records. Without fancy software, we used paper to track our mailings.
I tallied things by hand. We kept the sheets in a binder.
Crazy, right?
But it worked. I could put together reports so we knew things like our response rates.
And I could tell you how many days after we mailed to expect our best response, or how much we’d raised to date.
Even on paper, I could see what worked and what didn’t work.
I never left the care of our data alone again.
I checked even when I had a trusted staff person to do data entry.
Why? Because I couldn’t sit back and assume it was below me if I wanted it to be perfect.
(I still stuff envelopes, too, when needed. And in fact, I’m an envelope-stuffing machine.)
Being without a good database is like missing an arm. Because you need good information to do a good job. Information tells you who your donors are.
A good CRM tells you how they give and when they give. It might even give you clues about why they give.
It allows you to treat your donors well, too.
How do you like it when you get a solicitation with your name spelled wrong? Or the wrong gift amount?
The second lesson – don’t dis your data. Or undervalue it.
And don’t hand off data entry to the newest, least experienced staff person and forget about it.
Watch it like a mother hen. Be persnickety.
Because as Yogi said,
You’ve got to be very careful if you don’t know where you’re going, because you might not get there.
Rochelle Bayless says
I was there and learned along side of you. And, to this day, I still encounter database management as an afterthought and it makes me crazy. Or, even worse, having the technology and not knowing how to use it or directors who think it’s too expensive to invest in training or practice and principles documents so the data becomes the wild wild west and anything goes. In my current position I have been driven back 10 years in my career. I am working with RE, all the expensive modules but am hitting barriers of ignorance when it comes to investing in training. If I hear, “just figure it out” and “just make it work” one more time somebody’s gonna get hurt. 🙂
Mary Cahalane says
Oh yes… I remember the contortions necessary to get anything useful from that database back then. I was forced to find ways to make it work. I knew I’d done that when the folks at the software company sent other clients to me with questions!
I don’t understand why so many organizations are unwilling to invest in their most valuable tools – their people. And then in the most critical tools their people need. RE is really powerful, but if you don’t have a stable staff and the funds to invest in training, why bother with it? I prefer the stuff I can learn in an hour or two.
And for pete’s sake, take the time to set things up right! Bad conversion, bad practices at the start… and everyone from then on is screwed. Just wasteful.
Whew. And I now that I’ve ranted, I feel a little better, lol. Thanks, Shelly!