Canadian donors and giving channels. Source: www.convio.com

Online marketing and fund-raising should be an integral part of any charitable organization’s marketing efforts.  Nowadays, Canadians are more likely to donate online versus mailing in their donations according to a recent study by hjc, Strategic Communications Inc. and Convio.  To help give you some tips on where to start and how to improve in this channel, I’ve outlined some best practices for online cause marketing.

Be transparent

  • - Ensure that your organization’s vision, mission and financial structure are transparent and upfront.  Your organization’s goal should be easy to understand and meaningful to the target audience.
  • - Enable donors to see exactly where their money is going and what they are supporting.

Keep it simple and give a clear call to action.

  • - Be specific in what you’re asking for and why, and don’t complicate the donor’s decision with too many barriers.
  • - For example, instead of “We need your help to make a difference in a child’s education” consider “Donating $30 will provide 5 children with school supplies for 1 year.”

Encourage and facilitate advocacy.

  • - Encourage donors to be marketing mediums through advocacy programs.  Reach out to your top supporters and show them how to use peer-to-peer tools to increase fund-raising. And don’t forget, you already have a strong base of potential advocates to start with – your employees.
  • - Create the core messaging for fund-raising campaigns and efforts, but enable your donors to personalize the message for their own online networking and recruitment efforts.
  • - Use friendly competition and incentives to encourage fund-raising campaigns. Allow individuals and teams to track and see their real-time fund-raising efforts and how they compare with other teams.

Use rich and multi-media to showcase results.

  • - Use Google Maps, Google Earth, GPS, video and other rich media to bring the project to life for supporters, showing them where their money is going and what it’s supporting.
  • - Consider using an online visual tool to enable donors to track their contributions and understand how their individual contribution goes toward the greater goal.

Leverage social media to engage your audience.

  • - Leverage social media sites like Facebook, Twitter and YouTube to engage audiences and spread awareness to their networks.
  • - Ensure that you have links on your organization’s website to your social media pages, and that those social media pages also link back to your main website.
  • - Create clear calls to action, engage your audience with discussions and questions, constantly post new content, moderate discussions, promote events and allow advocates to spread content to their networks.  And don’t forget to let your current supporters know that your organization has a social media presence and where they can find you.
  • - By regularly updating your social media pages you can help your visibility in search engines and it encourages people to keep coming back to check for updates.

Use SEO and SEM to increase awareness and visibility.

  • - Design your website to optimize Search Engine Optimization (SEO). Use titles, tags, keywords, descriptions, cross-linking and URL normalization to improve your site’s performance in SEO.
  • - Invest in Search Engine Marketing (SEM) to reach more potential supporters when they are in the mind-set of researching charitable organizations and donating online. Investigate Google Grants to see if your charitable organization is eligible to receive free AdWords advertising.
  • - Use social media to get more search engine visibility and avoid any mistakes which may incur penalties from Google.

Invest in your relationships.

  • - Invest in your relationships with supporters / donors and communicate with them on a regular basis.
  • - Keep email communications personal, timely, consistent and action-oriented. Don’t be afraid to experiment while tracking metrics to determine what is and isn’t working.
  • - Track, measure and test emails with your database to optimize results.
  • - Consider how your supporters will be accessing these emails and ensure that communications are designed with mobile devices in mind.

Integrate online and offline efforts.

  • - Integrate and support online marketing efforts with offline channels to spread the message to audiences in other channels, create multiple touch points and increase messaging frequency.
  • - Develop an Online Marketing Calendar that is part of the organization’s larger integrated marketing calendar to ensure that online and offline efforts complement and support one another.
  • - Consider running online fund-raising events in conjunction with or in lieu of other fund-raising events.  Online events can be launched quickly, with less overhead costs while leveraging peer-to-peer networks.

Set goals, metrics, measure and test.

  • - Set goals for the online marketing plan, track with appropriate metrics and continue to optimize the plan based on analysis and results.
  • - Standardize metrics for comparisons, test different tactics and measure to best leverage your email database.

Start producing top shelf online ads

Recently we had a client approach us to provide them with online advertising best practices to help guide and improve their creative process. As a result, we held a session to present and discuss online creative best practices. The feedback we received was that the session was valuable, informative and validated a lot of their thoughts.

At the end of the session we provided an online advertising checklist, best practices tip sheet and an online creative brief for their reference.  The online advertising checklist is presented below. Note that the checklist is particularly relevant to online display ads, but many of the points can be used as a general guideline for all online campaigns.

1. Conducted strategy and planning for online campaign.

Determined campaign goals, target audience and desired level of engagement.

Chose media channels to best meet the goals and reach the target audience.

Evaluated different types of online ads for the campaign and selected type of online ads with consideration to level of engagement desired.

2. Ensured online creative was adapted optimally for the channel when integrating creative across all media channels.

Integrated and enhanced the campaign message for the online channel, instead of simply duplicating ad from other channels.
Kept in mind that audiences digest advertising differently online than they do for print, TV, billboard.

Ensured best practices were considered when adapting ads for online.

3. Kicked off all campaigns with a solid online creative brief.

Reviewed the brief at the start of project with agency and internal stakeholders to ensure everyone started on the same page.

4. Highlighted the brand prominently throughout the ad.

Every frame of the ad contained the brand logo to help viewers ‘get the ad’ and promote the brand regardless of the frame they see.

5. Communicated primary ad message to audience within 1-2 seconds.

Ensured the ad supported the message at all times and throughout all frames, be it brand awareness or a call to action.

6. Kept it simple.

Used no more than 1-2 messages per ad.

7. Provided value to audiences.

Included something of value. Value is anything that is worthwhile to your audience – i.e. tools, entertainment, education, etc.
Did not annoy users with the ad and placement of it. Did not disrupt their online experience. Provided user interaction without being intrusive.

8. Tracked and analyzed success metrics for campaign.

Reviewed past metrics and results of online campaigns. Leveraged lessons from past ad campaigns and tests to optimize this campaign.

Implemented tracking metrics for this campaign.
Optimized ads/media where appropriate and feasible while campaign was still in execution.

If you think a session on online creative best practices would help your marketing team, we’d love to hear from you!

Recently I received an email newsletter for a company that I never subscribed to, and had already unsubscribed from. So what did I do? I marked the email as spam.

Instead of potentially soliciting clients, email marketing tactics that send emails to users that have not explicitly opted-in, and not cleaning up databases for unsubscribes almost guarantee the opposite effect of losing that potential customer and annoying them. Don’t be surprised if they express their frustration with your company to others as well. Moreover, when they start marking your emails as spam or complaining to their Internet Service Providers, you end up hurting your brand and ability to market online in the future.

Here’s an article that talks more on the issue of email marketing – the status quo isn’t working.

While many B2C (business-to-consumer) companies have recognized the value of investing in online marketing strategy, I’ve often found that many B2B (business-to-business) companies are slower to adapt unless pushed by competition. With this in mind we’ve put together some key online marketing best practices to help B2Bs understand steps they can take to help their businesses grow.

1. Know your audience
• Invest in gaining a better understanding of your customers’ needs and behaviours.
• Develop personas to embed your target audience as people within your organization and use them as a filter for new initiatives, products and services.

2. Create and offer real value
• Offer value added marketing and communications that will help clients run their businesses more effectively – through content, widgets, tools, exclusive access, etc.
• Develop approaches and methods to better understand what your customers really need. Create and take advantage of opportunities to ask them what they want through online and offline channels.

3. Make your website user and member friendly
• Design your website to be user friendly with easy access to resources, services and client log-in pages.
• Content is one of your key values – make it easy to navigate and access with intuitive menus, search functions and offer help through direct contact if users cannot find what they need.
• Ensure that eCommerce shopping and check-out processes are simple and quick.

4. Be mobile friendly
• More users, especially professional, are accessing information increasingly on their mobile devices so provide online content that is easily accessible to them and consider how mobile commerce affects your users.

5. Ensure transparency and authenticity
• Ensure that your organization’s vision and goals are transparent and upfront.
• The recession weeded out weak competitors and in 2010 consumers will continue to scrutinize the transparency of companies, the authenticity of brands and their claims.

6. Engage your audience
• Engage your customers in dialogues to know what they want and like. Consider using surveys, email and social media sites like LinkedIn to engage audiences in channels where they frequent and to spread awareness to their networks.
• Consider adding a social bookmarking tool to your website like AddThis to make it easy for users to share content with others. In addition, it provides analytics on the bookmarking and sharing activities.

7. Search – SEO and SEM
• Design your website with SEO (search engine optimization) in mind and use SEM (search engine marketing) to ensure prominence on Google and other search engines.
• Use social media to get more search engine visibility, optimize key phrases on your website, and avoid any mistakes which may incur penalties from Google.

8. Invest in your relationships and communicate with supporters on a regular basis
• Keep email communications personal, timely, consistent and action-oriented. Don’t be afraid to experiment with A/B testing while tracking metrics to determine what is and isn’t working.
• Consider how your customers will be accessing these emails and ensure that the communications are designed with mobiles and handheld devices in mind.

9. Set goals, metrics, measure and test
• Set goals for the online marketing plan, track with appropriate metrics and continue to optimize the plan based on analysis and results.
• Standardize metrics for comparisons, test different tactics and measure to best leverage your email database


So you have a Twitter account and a Facebook page for your brand, now what? Here’s what you should know:

Why your content needs a strategy
Stop marketing, start building communities
10 Twitter mistakes made by businesses
Don’t be afraid of negative reviews
Easing into B2B mobile marketing
Measuring online ads properly


B2B Marketing
Implementing a B2B Content Strategy

Marketing ROI
Small Businesses See Marketing ROI
Social Media ROI: Myth of the Last Click
Basics of Social Media ROI

Online Advertising
Windows 7 a Top Seller

Search
Google to Deliver New “Caffeine” Search After Holidays

Social Media
Cisco Inbox to Integrate E-Mail & Enterprise Social Networking Tools
Experts Urge Strategic Approach to Social Media
Consumers “Friend” Brands to Get Customer Service & Promotions

Trends & Best Practices
Top Digitial Trends for 2010
5 Tips for Writing Catchy Headlines


Analytics
Google adds More Features to Google Analytics

Best Practices
What’s the Best Way to Improve Conversions?

Branding
How Brands can Earn Social Media Respect: Listen & Learn

Canadians Online
Internet Access in Canada Reaches All Time High
80% of Canadians use Google for Search

Social Media
Retailers Get Ready for Social Shopping Experience
Monitor Social Media to Spot Issues Before they hit the Call Centre
Advertisers Love Facebook Tweaks; Users Not So Much


Online Advertising
Display Ad Success Beyond the Click
Display Ads – Bigger isn’t necessarily Better
How Much Time People Really Spend with Ads

Social Media Lessons
5 Social Media Lessons Learned From Whole Foods
Email Sharing via Social Networks being Overlooked

Twitter Talk
Brands Claim Twitter Campaigns Effective
Premium Twitter Accounts Expected By Year’s End
Twitter to Add Location Data to Tweets
What People are Tweeting About

Email
How to Maximize Email Conversion with Design
Why E-Mail Subscribers Unsubscribe
Email Still Top Communication Channel

Online Advertising
Study: Ad Placement More Important than Size
Looking into the Future of Digital Marketing

Mobile
Mobile Advertising Predicted to Grow to $1.5B in 2013

Search
SEM Still a High Priority for Marketers
What Canadians are Searching for Online

Social Media
10 Must-Haves for Your Social Media Policy
10 Twitter Best Practices for Brands
Majority of Online Canadians Have Social Network Profile

Word of Mouth
Whose Word-of-Mouth Matters?


Offer relevant and value-based emails

Email marketing works but as consumers are inundated with messages and opting in for less emails, your email must be relevant and offer something of value – otherwise it is perceived as spam.

Landing pages are critical

Marketers often focus on the email, but don’t pay enough attention to the landing pages they link to. Don’t create another barrier to get the audience to where you want them – direct them to the desired page with relevant content.

Create mobile friendly emails

Focus on ‘Preview Pane’ optimization and mobile friendly emails.

Employ loyalty and advocacy email marketing programs

Leverage CRM methodologies and dynamic content to build on email communications with your opt-in audience to encourage brand loyalty and advocacy.

Set goals, metrics, test and measure again

Standardize metrics for comparisons, test different tactics and measure again to best leverage your email database.