What Your Board Should Learn from Starbucks

May 1, 2018      Roger Craver

There’s no question in my mind that a great deal of the furor over the ‘high cost of fundraising’ on the part boards, CEOs, watchdog groups, the press, regulators and many fundraisers themselves stems mostly from ignorance.

Ignorance about what “acquisition” is, how it should be measured, and when or whether its costs should be considered acceptable.

Because the acquisition of new donors is essential to maintaining and growing virtually every organization, we all need to get much better at both understanding and explaining this essential process to the leadership and financial decision-makers in our organizations. The alternative is continued finger pointing in the boardroom, frustrated fundraisers, and an organization deprived of a more robust future.

First, let’s take a coffee break.

What if I told you Starbucks spends $1,400 to acquire a customer who starts off by spending $4.25 for a Caramel Frappacino®.

Most boards, CEOs and even a lot of fundraisers would say Starbucks is foolish — until they learned that the 20 year Lifetime Value of a Starbucks customer is $14,099.

That’s why, for the same reason, Amazon spends $240 to acquire a customer for its $79 Kindle … why insurance companies pay more than 100% of the first year’s premium to acquire a policy holder … and on and on. If consumer companies didn’t invest this way — plus make the additional investment required to hold on to these new customers and convert them to long-term, committed customers — they’d be out of business.

The same holds true for virtually all charitable and advocacy organizations. Failure to invest substantially in the acquisition of new donors and new members required to replace attrition and/or insure growth is a certain prescription for decline or extinction.

After all, donor acquisition is the well-spring, the feeder track, the seed corn (call it what you will) of a long-term financial development process that, if properly measured and executed, leads to highly profitable monthly giving (somewhat akin to 5 Frappacinos® a week?) … mid-level giving … upgrading to major gifts … and eventually sizeable bequests and other planned gifts.

Each of these programs adds to the Lifetime Value of a donor base. In short, it is the profitable returns from these post-acquisition programs that provide the funds needed to move the mission forward.

Put another way, an organization might ‘lose’ $50 over and above the amount of a newly acquired donor’s first gift, but in subsequent years that $50 investment produces a mighty substantial return. In most cases a return far, far greater than any returns produced by the organization’s certificates of deposit or endowment. (See Agitator’s The Investment Paradox)

Of course, most organizations for reasons of cost-cutting, compartmentalization in siloes, inexperience, you name it, pretty much consider the “acquisition phase” finished when that initial check or bank transfer hits their account.  And that’s exactly where the disease of attrition/donor loss begins.

A truly effective acquisition program is built on an understanding that the cost of getting that first transaction from the new donor is only a down payment, a partial investment that needs to be followed by additional investment of $10, $15 or $20 in onboarding and determining the donor’s identity and preferences.  Failure to complete a multi-step acquisition process by simply depositing the check and sending out a thank you is a sure prescription for mediocre future performance.

I believe most experienced fundraisers understand this. Yet, when I look at acquisition budgets I seldom (and I mean “almost never”) see additional costs/investment allocated for steps that should follow the initial transaction.  Imagine if Starbucks were content with hustling only that first Caramel Frappacino®: no wi fi, no seating, no restrooms, no loyalty programs.  You get my drift.

Frankly, I suspect the reason many fundraisers –particularly direct response fundraisers—aren’t diligently dealing with this problem is that they know that conventional, business-as-usual acquisition is a lot easier than what taking all the up-front steps that lead to greater donor commitment and retention.

In short, they don’t buy the adage that it’s easier to keep a donor than to find a new one.  And, in truth, the kind of donor acquisition as generally practiced is easier.  Not less expensive, not more valuable, but easier.

An acquisition program that focuses on building in the essential first steps that should immediately follow the new donor’s first check will indeed boost long-term retention and value.  BUT…doing this requires time to analyze and measure.  Time to improve donor experiences.  Time to test and evaluate improvements.  A lot more time compared to the very short-term tactics and measurements involved in most of today’s acquisition efforts.  And yes, a bit more money.

Of course, persuading a CEO and board to add more cost to the acquisition budget may be difficult.  But I’ve found the difficulty diminishes when they’re shown the Lifetime Value of an organization’s donors and how just a 1% or 2% change in retention can dramatically increase that value.  When those figures are presented and explained only a dolt or the self-destructive would deny the small additional investment.

Perhaps your own organization’s illustration of Lifetime Value isn’t as pronounced as Starbuck’s, but when you do the numbers I’ll bet you they’re pretty dramatic.  Tomorrow, in his post What to Do When Cost-to-Acquire Lies to You, Nick will take you the next step in thinking more about the true costs and value in your acquisition program.

What will lead us to a brighter and more productive future with our acquisition efforts and with our new donors is not repetition of the same tactics or recycling the same thinking again and again. We need to get beyond emotion and hunch and become far more grounded in both the theory and math of donor acquisition.

Roger

P.S.  The issue of “value”, especially long-term value, in fundraising is grossly neglected. In my experience, many bad decisions and missed opportunities could be avoided if only fundraisers would explain and regularly review basic metrics like Lifetime Value and Retention Rates to the leaders of their organizations.     (See Forget Success. Focus on Value.)

 

3 responses to “What Your Board Should Learn from Starbucks”

  1. A key responsibility (probably THE KEY RESPONSIBILITY) of a fundraiser (not a fundraising technician) is to know, explain, enable, facilitate, build understanding of and support for … the body of knowledge.

    You can be a great marvelous and swell fundraising technician. But if you aspire to greaterness… then you have to understand and implement group process, facilitation, individual and group behavior, governance, systems thinking, conversation as a core business practice, learning organization business theory, organizational culture and organizational development, conflict management, etc. etc. PLUS the body of knowledge in fundraising.

    Then the boss and board won’t question the value of investment. They’ll just push you to explain well and document … which you should do without being asked to do.

  2. Now if you can just explain this to state legislators and those who register charities and fundraising counsel and solicitors.

  3. This is the point of acquisition in a nutshell. It’s a starting point, not an end point. It’s worth investing even a bit more for the long-term yield. It’s usually not worth investing at all just for the short-term, one-time transaction. Thanks for shining a light on this very important concept.