August 2007

September Webinars: Donations, eNews, Low Cost DBs, Analytics, oh my!

After taking August off for a bit of summer vacation, the Idealware Online Seminars are back again (and very well rested) in September. What’s coming up?
  • On Thursday, September 6th with the always popular Getting Started with Online Donations, in which we’ll take a careful look at the strategies, features, and specific software packages that can help you take donations online.
  • On Thursday, September 13th, Eric Leland will walk you though Choosing a Low-Cost Constituent Database, with practical advice and overviews of commonly used databases such as GiftWorks, eTapestry, Salesforce, and Democracy In Action.
  • On Wednesday, September 19th, we offer Choosing eNewletter Software, with an overview of tools that are available and features you might want, by way of demos and screenshots.
  • And last but not least, on Thursday, September 27th, we have a fancy new one: Introduction to Website Analytics, which will feature a number of demos of the free website statistics packages that are available to most nonprofits, how they compare, and advice on how to make the best use of them.
Our October webinars are also posted.

Each of our seminars is only $40. If you know people or lists who might be interested in joining the webinar goodness, please pass on the word!

An Influx of Webinar Tools

Recently, there seems to be both a surge in interest and a surge in options for tools that will help you conduct online demos, seminars, and the like. These tools generally let you show your desktop applications and/or slides via the internet, so that people can see shared visuals. Many also facilitate audio conferencing, either via a separate conference call line or via VOIP (i.e. audio over the computer, so participants can hear the sound through their computer speakers, but need a computer microphone or headset to be heard).

The market is a bit unusual, and changing quickly as the technology involved becomes less costly and cutting edge. We did our own research for what tool we should use for our online seminars, and I’ve also been following people’s struggles (for instance, see posts from Deborah Finn and Michelle Murrain). We haven’t done rigorous research in this area, but here’s a bit about what I’ve learned about this market.

There’s the traditional realm of business e-Conferencing and distance learning, with sophisticated and expensive tools like WebEx, LiveMeeting, Adobe Connect, and Elluminate – these are feature-rich, but are priced outside the realm of most nonprofits getting into the field. Prices obviously vary depending on your volume, but these seem to run in the $750- $1000+ per month realm, or $0.30-$0.40+ per person per minute.

Then there’s kind of a middle market. From my research, ReadyTalk and GoToMeeting/ GoToWebinar seem like the main contenders in this space. These are fairly well established and stable (the GoTos are in fact owned by Citrix), and cost in the realm of $0.20 per person per minute or $300 or so per month.

And then there’s the quickly expanding small-but-scrappy market. Some of the ones in this market include DimDim, Yugma, Web Huddle, and BizConference.com. These tools are considerably cheaper (some are free for small conferences), but are all very new, mostly feel quite techie for all involved, and some were quite buggy. In general, for our stuff, I wasn’t comfortable depending on these lower end tools to provide a good experience for our participants, but I’m really interested to see where these go. I suspect that in a year or so some of these tools will either overtake some of the ones above, or force the whole market down in price.

The tools did vary quite a bit in pricing and features. Here’s what I found most useful to evaluate
  • What’s the cost for web conferencing? Audio conferencing? Audio rates are frequently not included in what’s called “web conferencing”, which I found confusing. Note that you can always use a free conference call service like FreeConferenceCall.com in conjunction with your web conferencing, if you don’t care about providing a toll-free number for participants or integrated recording.
  • What kind of download will participants need? How friendly is the download when the participant is behind a firewall? What browsers are supported?
  • What kind of computer is needed for desktop sharing? Many tools require those who show their desktop to be using Windows and/or a PC.
  • What interactive tools are available? Integrated chat is quite common; polling features or ability to break out into discussion groups are less so
  • Do you need to be able to record audio and visuals in a synched up package? This is hard to find. And consider what format the recording takes.
In the end, we chose ReadyTalk for our seminars. I didn’t do enough research to say this is the very best for our needs, but it’s very solid, reliable, and easy for participants, which were important for us. It also supports desktop sharing from a Mac, and integrated recording, which were additional needs. There’s no question we could find something cheaper, but both the integrated recording and the fact that we know it to be reliable and easy for participants made it worthwhile to us to pay more.

Software Satisficing

Awhile back, I read The Paradox of Choice – a business book about consumer decision making, and how “the culture of abundance robs us of satisfaction.” It was a good book, a quick read and interesting.

One of the main premises is that we make ourselves unhappy by trying to “maximize” too many decisions – finding the very best thing – rather than “satisficing” – finding something that meets our needs, deciding it’s good enough, and moving on. The book offers a lot of evidence that shows that trying to maximize everything leads to being overwhelmed with choices, stress, time wasting behaviors, and regret about the decision after the fact.

Hmmm, decision paralysis, stress, regret about choices – kind of sounds like the nonprofit software realm, doesn’t it? Which got me thinking: are nonprofits trying to maximize too many software choices? The nonprofit tech sector has a tendency to recommend extensive planning processes to end up with the very best software for your needs – but is this really the right way to go?

If you’re looking at expensive, mission critical software, you’d likely want to maximize to ensure you’re getting everything you can for your money. But nonprofits use a lot of software that isn’t mission critical – where picking something that will work without a lot of angst makes sense. And the types of software that are mission critical is likely to vary from nonprofit to nonprofit.

And truthfully, in an environment where many nonprofits can’t or won’t do the planning required to maximize, certainly satisficing is a lot better than flailing and picking something nearly at random because the planning process you’ve been told to do is so overwhelming you panic.

So I think it’s an important thing to consider: what strategies can we offer nonprofits to help them satisfice when it makes sense to do so? What would resources designed to help satisfice rather than maximize look like?

See you at the end of August!

I'm heading out for vacation - two weeks in the lovely Bar Harbor, so you won't be hearing from me for a little while.

Have a great August!

Resource Roundup 8/9

I'm running pretty behind on following the blogs, but I figured I'd at least clean out my queue before I head out for vacation next week...

Introducing Google Optimizer
(Wild Apricot Blog)
In their continuing bid to provide a tool to do anything that anyone might want to do, Google introduces Google Optimizer: a free tool to rigorously test out options for sign-ups, donations or anything else on your site. The Wild Apricot Blog explains.

The Long, Long Tail of Facebook Causes (Frogloop)
Terrific summary of Facebook's potential to directly fundraise for your cause (with actual data!), with a summary of the strengths and weaknesses of the Causes applications

An ROI Calculator for Social Network Campaigns (Frogloop)
Wow! Justin Perkins of Care2 gives us a exceedingly detailed ROI calculator for thinking through the costs and benefits of social networking campaigns using a site like Facebook or MySpace.

How Might a Nonprofit Use Google Apps? (NTEN)
A great rundown from Sonny Cloward about the practical applications (and limitations) of Google Apps for nonprofits

Modeling Engagement Strategy in Salesforce (gokubi.com)
If you're interested in Salesforce for nonprofits, you really need to be following the gokubi.com blog, written by Steve Andersen at ONE/ Northwest. He gets into the nitty gritty of how it all works, as he shows here in a screenshot walk-though of a campaign scenario.

A Tale of Three NPO Facebook Apps (Beaconfire Wire)
Great, detailed look at three nonprofit facebook applications.

Helping Nonprofits Build Databases (Certification Magazine)
An interview with Eric Leland about the differences in helping nonprofits with constituent databases compared to businesses

7 Things you should know about Twitter (EduCause)
Another in EduCause's great "7 Things" series - this one giving a rundown on Twitter with a focus on how it can be useful in educational environments



Don’t Be a Unique Snowflake

I was just talking to a friend of mine about some of the challenges that nonprofits face in software selection… as well as some of the ones they cause. We bonded over a problem that we both have all too frequently experienced: organizations that are convinced, without much research or logic, that what they do is completely unique, and can’t possibly be supported by a standardized or mass market software package.

When I started my career at a technology consulting firm, we had a term for these folks: “unique snowflakes’. So, in common usage: “Why on earth did they decide to build their own content management system?” “Yeah, well, they’re a unique snowflake.” I’ve always liked this term, but it seems that few people have heard it.

Being a unique snowflake is a bad thing. There are certainly times when in fact an organization has truly different needs than other organizations, and they need to do their own thing. But, well, this isn’t nearly as frequent as many seem to think. If you find yourself thinking that nothing out there will work for you, ask yourself why they won’t work. And then ask yourself for what reason you’re doing whatever it is that makes it not work.

That’s not to say you should plan your processes around software. You certainly shouldn’t. But you should plan your processes around best practices, and that includes doing things in ways that other people do them, unless you have a strong reason to do it differently.

Because at the end of the day, being a unique snowflake is expensive. It means you need to go out on your own and pave new ground in software development, which is unlikely to make sense except for something mission critical… and truly unique.

Blackbaud Buys eTapestry

Even in my crazed busy state I can't ignore this news coming out of the nonprofit tech world: Blackbaud, the maker of Raiser's Edge and other nonprofit software, has purchased eTapestry, a well-known online donor database with online donation and emailing support. This is an interesting purchase: Blackbaud mostly provides software to medium and large nonprofits, and has been struggling in the online realm, while eTapestry is primarily targeted at small to medium sized nonprofits, and was one of the first online constituent management tools for nonprofits.

It will be interesting to see what develops. In the short term, however, the press release says that eTapestry will continue operating as a wholly-owned subsidiary, so hopefully the purchase won't cause disruptions for current clients. eTapestry offers some strong features - they're one of our recommendations for both those looking for an inexpensive constituent database and for those looking for mid-level online donation support, so it would be a shame to see them go away.