DRIVE/Cast 2021 Sessions
Prospecting Without Prospects: A Data-Driven Solution to Identify Prospects
Dell Medical School at the University of Texas at Austin was established in 2013 and accepted its first cohort of students in 2016. It has just recently begun seeing patients in earnest. Without an alumni base or patients to draw for prospecting, we had deployed an out-of-the-box solution using a two-step factor-cluster analysis to finding prospects for philanthropic support. This session will first present a problem statement, fields involved, Factor Analysis solutions and interpretations, graphs on clustering, and some examples of Python codes. At the end of the session, we will discuss challenges, pitfalls, and strategies to implement on the ground.
Siew Ang, Analyst, and Sonya Gonzales, Project Coordinator, University of Texas at Austin
Data in Annual Giving: Analyze, Segment, Personalize, Optimize, Repeat
This topic explores how to tame the annual giving fundraising fury with a more data-driven approach and better data handling. It covers four elements of the annual giving data cycle and best practices in using donor data assets: from analysis, through segmentation and personalization, to better data leverage and automation. It provides the most impactful highlights of data usage in Annual Giving at McGill University Advancement, applied to various cohorts, throughout different solicitation channels and programs.
Alesia Rudnitskaya, Senior Annual Giving Officer, McGill University
Know Your Audience: Building Data-Driven Personas for Marketing, Fundraising, and Prospect Discovery
This is the era of the customer. Every experience is designed around our needs: from Netflix queues and Spotify playlists dictating what we consume, Amazon and StitchFix suggestions guiding our purchases, or Carvana, Zillow, and RedFin making buying autos and homes easy, sight unseen.
These businesses deliver tailored experiences to millions of users by capturing data and putting it into action. Advancement must do the same. In order to confront donor decline and build the future major gift pipeline, we must go beyond traditional segmentation like class year or degree. We have to speak to donors’ interests and deliver the same personalized, high-impact experience they see in the rest of their lives.
The University of Iowa is doing this by introducing a new persona-driven approach to communicating with alumni, donors, and friends. By monitoring more than 400 ever-changing data points, including a newly refined machine-learning-driven engagement score, the team has defined new audience segments. Each of these personas reflects how those people interact with the University, its sports teams, or its medical center.
With these personas built and evolving as donors demonstrate new interests or engage with the university, Iowa is delivering custom digital experiences, programming, and appeals that create better experiences for every donor.
In this session, learn how they built their personas and engagement score, early returns as they roll out a new communication strategy, and how this approach fuels giving and prospect discovery. You’ll learn best practices for every shop, regardless of size, as we all seek to create more personal experiences at scale.
Regan Holt, Senior Director of Product, EverTrue, Sara O'Leary, Editorial Manager, University of Iowa Center for Advancement and Nicholas Teff, Senior Data Scientist for Products & Innovation, The University of Iowa Center for Advancement
Your Donors Are Speaking, Are You Listening? How to Embrace a donor-centered fundraising strategy by better understanding your donors’ giving behavior
With the development of advanced CRM’s and the increase in availability of alumni and donor data, we have the opportunity to become smarter marketers if we learn to listen to what the data is telling us. The University of Connecticut Foundation is using advanced analytics to better understand their constituents’ giving behavior, improve segmentation and shift annual giving strategy to a more donor-centered approach. This session will look at how to create and analyze metrics with the use of dashboards, and how to use these to produce actionable insights for both short-term and long-term success.
Theresa Condict, Decision Scientist, UConn Foundation, and Christine Masztal, Director of Business Intelligence and Analytics, University of Connecticut Foundation, Inc
DRIVING Data Driven Decisions
AMAtlas, CASE’s resource for data, metrics, and analytics has laid the foundations for a global set of benchmarking data on educational philanthropy, alumni engagement, and educational fundraising campaigns. This session will bring together a panel of advancement visionaries to discuss the ways they are putting CASE data to work in their development and alumni relations programs and explore ways they might leverage the Alumni Engagement Metrics (AEM) and new Core Metrics going forward. The session will also provide quick overviews of AEM and Core Metrics and discuss how institutions are adapting their processes to capture the data needed to put metrics to work.
Facilitator: David Bass, Senior Director of Research, CASE
Panelists: Jenny Cooke Smith, Sr. Strategic Consultant, AMAtlas, CASE, Mohammed Dasser, Associate Vice President, Strategic Planning and Analytics, New York University, Sharon Marine, Vice President, Alumni Relations and Development, The University of Chicago, Maureen Procopio, Senior Director of Campaign Strategy and Institutional Benchmarking, University of Oregon, and Nicholas Teff, Senior Data Scientist, Iowa Center for Advancement, University of Iowa
Key Session: Accelerate Change: Driving Your Data Initiatives Forward with Translation
Many advancement executives are excited by the potential of AI, big data, and data analytics. While data can improve decision support, there can be significant challenges in shifting from ideas to working reality. How can you—the data leaders and experts in your organizations—bridge the gap between exciting new capabilities and the complex realities of working with data? How can you effectively surface the infrastructure needs, governance quandaries, literacy gaps, data integrity challenges, and resource limitations that block these aspirations? Whether you are communicating to senior leaders, peers, or your team members, data projects often need some degree of audience translation. Join us for an engaging and interactive conversation on how to effectively communicate your needs to executives and decision makers in order to drive your data initiatives forward.
Rodger Devine, Associate Dean of External Affairs for Strategy and Innovation, University of Southern California, Cara Giacomini, Chief Research and Data Officer Operations, CASE, and Camden Morse, Assistant Vice President of Advancement Services, Johns Hopkins University and Medicine
Facilitator: Chris Cannon, President of Strategic Services, Zuri Group
Gift Officer Performance Scoring
The ability to measure activity and understand the relationship between that activity and fundraising productivity are critical to the strategic deployment and maximization of fundraising resources. Furthermore, the capability to identify early intervention points for coaching new gift officers and the continued measurement of seasoned gift officer performance are key in ensuring gift officer success. But what should we be measuring? How should we be measuring it? Who should have access to the metrics? Can predictive solutions be deployed to assist in early intervention? And finally, how can these gift officer metrics be used effectively to inform decision making? The University of Texas at Austin has just completed an 18 month exploratory exercise aimed at building a predictive model to better quantify gift officer performance, establish baseline expectations, and identify early intervention points for coaching new gift officers. Multiple algorithms were explored in partnership with graduate students from UT Austin’s School of Information and members of the university development office’s analytics team. This presentation will detail the process undertaken to arrive at a solution, discuss the insights acquired along the way, and walk attendees through the mechanism produced to distribute scores. Considerations for generating equitable metrics based on role, unit assignment, officer type, and the impact of COVID-19 will be discussed along with an exposition of the final results.
John Gough, Senior Executive Director for Advancement Data Operations and Strategy, University of Texas at Austin
On Your Mark, Get Set, Bake: Recipes for Reproducible Reporting with RMarkdown: Part One
Ever find yourself running the same report for multiple departments or prospect pools? Wanting to re-run an analysis, but forgetting how you undertook it several weeks, months, or years back? Frustrated over how best to combine multiple data sources? Rmarkdown may be a solution for you. This open source solution provides users with a format to combine analytical processes with documentation. It's flexible enough to run workflows in a multitude of languages (R, Python, and SQL, among others), produce various output media, and automate reporting.
This session will be followed by a Part Two Workshop at 4:00 PM.
James Rogol, Assistant Director, Advancement Business Intelligence, University of Virginia
Building an Evidence-Based Case for Big Data
One need not look very hard to find evidence of the value of big data in the for-profit sector. This being said, building a case for big data analytics investment is much more challenging in the nonprofit space, where clear big data victories are not yet widespread and our small teams are strapped and wary of investing resources in anything but the lowest-hanging fruit: major gift fundraising.
With a leap of faith as well as a strong belief in the value of big data, over the past two years, the University of Michigan Analytics Team has transformed into Data Science & Decision Support. This is not merely a rebranding but instead reflects a break from our traditional focus on major gift analytics. In particular, we intentionally reallocated attention away from major gift prospecting and toward big data initiatives that benefit historically neglected teams including events, annual giving, and marketing.
The purpose of this presentation is to explain the rationale behind this decision and to share our early evidence that the investment will ultimately benefit the entire pyramid—including the major giving pool. We'll explain what we mean by "big data" and "decision support" and how we made such structural changes despite a budget frozen by the pandemic. We'll also highlight case studies across events, annual giving, and marketing that have benefitted from our shift in focus. These anecdotes will include quantitative impact metrics that can be shared with leadership and perhaps help to build a case for greater analytics investment in the future.
Brett Lantz, Director of Data Science & Decision Support, University of Michigan
On Your Mark, Get Set, Bake: Recipes for Reproducible Reporting with RMarkdown: Part Two Workshop
This will be an interactive workshop based on the Part One Session at 2:45 PM.
James Rogol, Assistant Director, Advancement Business Intelligence, University of Virginia