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Data Health Best Practices in eTapestry PRESENTED BY PAM DECHERT CFRE AND SENIOR CONSULTANT MIKE RUSCHE PRODUCT MANAGER - ETAPESTRY

Keeping Good Health: Best Practices for Data Health in eTapestry

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Page 1: Keeping Good Health: Best Practices for Data Health in eTapestry

Data Health Best Practices in eTapestryPRESENTED BY

PAM DECHERT CFRE AND SENIOR CONSULTANT

MIKE RUSCHE PRODUCT MANAGER - ETAPESTRY

Page 2: Keeping Good Health: Best Practices for Data Health in eTapestry

Data Health = More more money for

my mission and Blackbaud can

help! #bbcon

2 #bbcon

Tweet this now

Page 3: Keeping Good Health: Best Practices for Data Health in eTapestry

What is Data Health?

3 #bbcon

Page 4: Keeping Good Health: Best Practices for Data Health in eTapestry

What is Data Health?

4 #bbcon

• Address Clean-up

• Social

• Deceased

• Age

• Phone Numbers

• Email

• Employment

Page 5: Keeping Good Health: Best Practices for Data Health in eTapestry

What is Data Health?

5 #bbcon

• Address Clean-up

• Social (Scheduled for 2015)

• Deceased

• Age

• Phone Numbers

• Email

• Employment

Page 6: Keeping Good Health: Best Practices for Data Health in eTapestry

Survey Time!

• How many of you have a Data Health Plan?

6 #bbcon

*

*Based on a 3rd Sector Labs Survey

10%*

Page 7: Keeping Good Health: Best Practices for Data Health in eTapestry

Survey Time!

• When was the last time your organization did

any type of data cleanup?

• Less than 3 months ago

• More than 6 months ago

• Never or can not remember

7 #bbcon

Page 8: Keeping Good Health: Best Practices for Data Health in eTapestry

Survey Time!

• When was the last time your organization did

any type of data cleanup?

• Less than 3 months ago

8 #bbcon

*Based on a 3rd Sector Labs Survey

30%*

Page 9: Keeping Good Health: Best Practices for Data Health in eTapestry

Survey Time!

• When was the last time your organization did

any type of data cleanup?

• More than 6 months ago

9 #bbcon

*Based on a 3rd Sector Labs Survey

40%*

Page 10: Keeping Good Health: Best Practices for Data Health in eTapestry

Survey Time!

• When was the last time your organization did

any type of data cleanup?

• Never or can not remember

10 #bbcon

*Based on a 3rd Sector Labs Survey

30%*

Page 11: Keeping Good Health: Best Practices for Data Health in eTapestry

Survey Time!

• How many of you have someone responsible

for data quality?

11 #bbcon

*Based on a 3rd Sector Labs Survey

67%*

Page 12: Keeping Good Health: Best Practices for Data Health in eTapestry

Why is it Important?

12 #bbcon

Page 13: Keeping Good Health: Best Practices for Data Health in eTapestry

Why is Clean Data Important?

• Relationships

• If you don’t even know they moved, what does that

say about you wanting to build a long term

relationship with them.

• Retention

• If you don’t know they have have a new email

address, how do they get your communications?

• They will forget about you.

• Donations

• You will SAVE costs and RAISE more money.

13 #bbcon

Page 14: Keeping Good Health: Best Practices for Data Health in eTapestry

Quiz Time!

• What percent of people in the US move each

year?

14 #bbcon

*Based on Non Profit Quarterly Data

11.6%* 15%**Based on US Census Data

• That means on average 1,100 to 1,500 people per year need their addresses updated in a 10,000 name database!

Page 15: Keeping Good Health: Best Practices for Data Health in eTapestry

Quiz Time!

• What percent of people will you have to mark

as deceased each year?

15 #bbcon

*Based US Census Data

8%*• That means on average 800 people per year in

a 10,000 name database need to be updated as deceased!

Page 16: Keeping Good Health: Best Practices for Data Health in eTapestry

Quiz Time!

• What percent of people in the US create a new

email every 6 months?

16 #bbcon

*Based 2014 M+R Benchmark Study

17%*• That means on average 1,700 people per year

in a 10,000 name database have a new email address every six months!

Page 17: Keeping Good Health: Best Practices for Data Health in eTapestry

Quiz Time!

• What percent of people actually change their

email annually?

17 #bbcon

*Based 2014 M+R Benchmark Study

30%*• That means on average you have outdated

email addresses for 3,000 people per year in a 10,000 name database.

Page 18: Keeping Good Health: Best Practices for Data Health in eTapestry

Quiz Time!

• What percent of the world joined an online

Social Network in the past two years?

18 #bbcon

*Based on a 2014 eMarket Report

18%*• Numbers now show approximately 1 in 4

people around the world are on Social Media.

Page 19: Keeping Good Health: Best Practices for Data Health in eTapestry

Clean data = $

• Example using Bad Addresses and Deceased:

• Sending a mailing to 10,000 names.

• Cost assumed at $1/per piece sent.

• Response rate 10%

• Average gift is $30

19 #bbcon

Page 20: Keeping Good Health: Best Practices for Data Health in eTapestry

Clean data = $

20 #bbcon

• If you don’t clean your data:

• Mail sent to potential bad data = 1,800

• Responses you won’t get from bad data = 180

• Potential donations you won’t receive from bad data =

$5,400

• Extra costs because of bad data = $1,800

Total: $7,200

Page 21: Keeping Good Health: Best Practices for Data Health in eTapestry

Clean data = $

• Example using eMail directing people to take

action on your eCommerce page:

• Sending an email to 10,000 names.

• Cost assumed at $.10 per email

• Response rate 7%

• Average gift is $163

21 #bbcon

Page 22: Keeping Good Health: Best Practices for Data Health in eTapestry

Clean data = $

22 #bbcon

• If you don’t clean your data:

• People who won’t see your email = 1,700

• Responses you won’t get from bad data = 119

• Potential donations you won’t receive from bad data =

$19,397

• Extra costs because of bad data = $170

Total: $19,567

Page 23: Keeping Good Health: Best Practices for Data Health in eTapestry

Clean data = $

• Example using Social Media:

• 10,000 Name Database.

• Cost: Minimal

• Response rate 18%

• Average gift is $59 (Source NPTech for Good)

23 #bbcon

Page 24: Keeping Good Health: Best Practices for Data Health in eTapestry

Clean data = $

24 #bbcon

• If you don’t clean your data:

• People who won’t connect with = 1,800

• Responses you won’t get from bad data = 324

• Potential donations you won’t receive from bad data =

$19,116

Total: $19,116

Page 25: Keeping Good Health: Best Practices for Data Health in eTapestry
Page 26: Keeping Good Health: Best Practices for Data Health in eTapestry

Insanity is doing the same thing over

and over again….• Stop “cleaning up” data only at the mail house or in excel, but not

in your database

• Stop keeping JUNK in the database

• Get buy in from the top down:

• CEO, ED

• Board, Development Committee

• Staff, Volunteers

• Donors

Page 27: Keeping Good Health: Best Practices for Data Health in eTapestry

Data Health Plan

• Organizational Buy-in

• Data Health Scorecard and NCOA update

• Data Health Audit

• Data Cleanup Plan and ongoing Data Health calendar

Page 28: Keeping Good Health: Best Practices for Data Health in eTapestry

Your Data Health Plan – Start with the

Data Health Scorecard

• The health of your database is determined by comparing the addresses

of your constituents with Target Analytics information. If most of the

addresses in your database are complete and current, your database

receives a good score. The highest possible score is an A. The more

addresses are incomplete or incorrect, the lower the score will be. The

lowest possible score is an E.

• The score card also indicates whether it has been more than 90 days

since you ran AddressFinder™ (NCOA®). We recommend you run

AddressFinder™ (NCOA®) regularly so that you quality for postal

discounts. AddressFinder™ (NCOA®) helps you keep constituent

addresses up to date, so you don't waste money sending mail to

outdated addresses. For more information, refer to AddressFinder™

(National Change of Address®).

Page 29: Keeping Good Health: Best Practices for Data Health in eTapestry

What’s your Score? A or ???

Page 30: Keeping Good Health: Best Practices for Data Health in eTapestry

The Good News about NCOA

After the results are downloaded, the Address, City, State, and Postal

Code fields for relevant constituents are updated.

User-defined fields on each persona are also updated to reflect the date

and details of the update.

A journal entry is also added to your organization's account; it includes

an attachment that you can provide to the United States Postal Service

to help qualify for discounts on your bulk postage

Page 31: Keeping Good Health: Best Practices for Data Health in eTapestry

The ‘Bad News’ – not really!

You’ll have a category in eTapestry AddressFinder™ (NCOA®) Codes that

will allow you to mark accounts using Mass Update:

• Invalid Address

• Move Identified, Address Cannot Be Updated (Not Corrected)

Use these queries to Mass Update the Account Values for Bad Address

Page 32: Keeping Good Health: Best Practices for Data Health in eTapestry

But that’s only step 1 of the plan

Data Health Audit

What else should we take a look at in eTapestry?

• Salutations

• Account Type

• Important User Defined Fields

• Address Clean-up

• Social

• Deceased

• Age

• Phone Numbers

• Email

• Employment

• Missing gift information: Campaigns, Approaches

Page 33: Keeping Good Health: Best Practices for Data Health in eTapestry

5 Great Ways to Clean up Data:

• By hand (ok, maybe not great, but works! Think

INTERN!)

• Mass Update

• Import

• Integrated NCOA and coming soon Social!

• Data Enrichment Services and Target Analytics

• Email Append

• Deceased, Age Append

• Employment

• Prospect Research

Page 34: Keeping Good Health: Best Practices for Data Health in eTapestry

Query on what’s missing:

• Create a Data Health Query Category and put your common cleanup

queries in it.

• Create easy ‘no value’ ‘any’ queries on fields with high potential for

missing data

• Use Campaign and Approach summary to look for missing transaction

information

• Query on segments and create report of all values you are looking for

(great if the information is in there, but wrong!)

• Create a general report and then auto-schedule these to run every 90

days and be delivered to your inbox.

Page 35: Keeping Good Health: Best Practices for Data Health in eTapestry

Query your database to look for missing

data:

Page 36: Keeping Good Health: Best Practices for Data Health in eTapestry

If the data in the records:

• All need to be updated with the SAME data – MASS UPDATE

• Example: You queried on all accounts with no Account Type and 400 come back

empty. You realize they are all or 95% Individuals. You use the query with those

records to Mass Update the Account Value of Account Type to Individuals. Even if

a handful are businesses, do the mass update and hand correct those.

• All need to have different values – REIMPORT

• Example: You queried on accounts with missing salutations. Every donor’s

salutations are different. Pull the data into an excel spreadsheet, include account

number. Correct it in excel, then reimport the salutations using the account

number.

Page 37: Keeping Good Health: Best Practices for Data Health in eTapestry

Query your database to look for missing

data:

Page 38: Keeping Good Health: Best Practices for Data Health in eTapestry

Pull it out into Excel – include Account

Number

Page 39: Keeping Good Health: Best Practices for Data Health in eTapestry

Import changes back in:

Page 40: Keeping Good Health: Best Practices for Data Health in eTapestry

Query on missing data:

Page 41: Keeping Good Health: Best Practices for Data Health in eTapestry

Put it on a simple report:

Page 42: Keeping Good Health: Best Practices for Data Health in eTapestry

Use Mass Update to Correct:

Page 43: Keeping Good Health: Best Practices for Data Health in eTapestry

If the data is more complex or is missing and you

can’t find it:

• Data Service with eTapestry: we can do it programmatically on a test

database and then push it live.

• We can Mass Delete data.

• Target Analytics and Data Enrichment Services – this can be imported

back in!

Page 44: Keeping Good Health: Best Practices for Data Health in eTapestry

Adding required fields:

Page 45: Keeping Good Health: Best Practices for Data Health in eTapestry

User Rights & Activity:

Page 46: Keeping Good Health: Best Practices for Data Health in eTapestry

Ongoing Data Health Plan:

• Quarterly NCOA update

• Data Health Audit

• Monthly or quarterly data health reports sent to you.

• Set required fields for Data Entry in the system. For both accounts and gifts.

• Limit user access to create Funds, Campaigns, Approaches, User Defined Fields.

• Data Entry Quality Check using User Activity Report and Created, Modified by.

• Take Screen Shots (or videos) of proper data entry for your organization. Create a user manual or a ‘how to’ for data and gift entry.

• Report on data health as part of your ongoing development plan. Assign data health tasks to the team. Create data health calendar with assignments.

Page 47: Keeping Good Health: Best Practices for Data Health in eTapestry

Clean Data Directly impacts:

• Relationships

• Retention

• Donations

47 #bbcon

Implement a data health plan

today!

Page 48: Keeping Good Health: Best Practices for Data Health in eTapestry

Resources:

• HELP in eTapestry: Mass Update and Import

• Training Central: LIVE import class or video on import

• https://www.blackbaud.com/analytics/

[email protected]

[email protected]

Page 49: Keeping Good Health: Best Practices for Data Health in eTapestry

50 #bbcon

Don’t forget to complete

a session survey! Each completed survey enters you into a drawing to win a

complimentary registration to bbcon 2015 in Austin, Texas*.

*Blackbaud reserves the right to change or withdraw this promotion at any time, without advance notice. Promotion has no cash value and may not be

exchanged, applied to, or combined with any other offer.

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