In our weekly column, consultants with decades of nonprofit experience answer your questions about fundraising, boards, strategy and more. To ask a question and be featured (anonymously!) in the column, email your questions to info@twbfundraising.com.
This week’s question will be answered by Anne Smith.
I just ended the fiscal year and I came in way under my goal I set for new donors. While we did well closing gifts from renewing donors, we didn’t receive as many new gifts as I expected.
I set my goal for new prospects using a 4:1 ratio, figuring that I would get 1 gift for every 4 new prospects. This looked like an industry benchmark. Is there a better way to arrive at a probability ratio to use for new donors?
This can be challenge if you’re not looking at your organization’s trends in detail. Once you do this work, it’s easier to maintain moving forward.
One simple probability ratio is often too simple to base your projections upon. Affinity, cultivation and capacity are important factors to consider when determining how many of that kind of prospect you will need per gift. It is helpful to segment your list of prospects into categories indicating the level of cultivation or interaction your organization has provided, any known capacity and degree of affinity to your organization’s mission or the board. Everyone on your revenue pipeline should go through this filter to help determine how “qualified” they are.
Look at the last 5 fiscal years of your organization’s pipeline performance: Total number of prospects and total revenue by category (foundations, events, direct mail, corporate, etc.), total number of prospects and resulting donors for each fiscal year, total number of new prospects and resulting new donors for each fiscal year and the total number of lapsed from each fiscal year.
Identify and explain any outliers like an unexpected big gift or something that isn’t repeatable. Perhaps pull them out to get a more honest picture of the trends for projection purposes.
You may find that your organization has not measured some of these in previous years. In that case, apply them to the current year’s pipeline and continue tracking moving forward.
By looking at your pipeline performance through this lens, you will uncover strategies that trend in a positive direction. You will also see how affinity and cultivation effect your probability ratio and help you find a more accurate projection.
Once you put in the time to track and analyze this data, you will have a much stronger basis for projecting your success, with a clear path for continued measurement that will provide you, your executive director, and your board with more confidence in your pipeline and reports throughout the year. You’ve got this.