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Are Canadian Christian charities keeping up?

“The tragedy is that some charities do amazing work, but are struggling for donations"

VANCOUVER, BC---Are Canadian Charities keeping up when it comes to online fundraising? A research study spanning 92 charities has revealed that many Canadian Christian charities are not keeping up with online best-practices, particularly when it comes to fundraising.

The study was funded by the Seacrest Foundation, and the research was done by Frontier Marketing.

“We wanted to hold a mirror up to Canadian Christian charities and show them where their strengths and weaknesses were, then run matching campaigns at six different charities to see how powerful online fundraising could be,” says Benjamin Johnson, executive director at Frontier Marketing.

Researchers made 92 donations

The research component had researchers collecting 55 data points from each charity’s website, including making donations. Researchers recorded everything from where a charity ranked when googled, whether they had a donation button prominent on their front page, how difficult it was to make a donation, to how long it took the charity to thank or confirm the donation thereafter.

“We wanted to simulate the donor experience,” says Johnson, “to see how charities were treating their donors online.” The study research included every charity on the Canadian Council of Christian Charities online membership list.

Sample of key findings

Fifty-three of the 92 charities did not have responsive websites, meaning that they were not optimized for all sizes of devices (such as cell phones and tablets).

Twenty of the 92 charities did not list their charity registration number on the website, and had no trustmark or proven affiliation of any kind. Only 53 per cent of the charities had a privacy policy, 39 per cent had an ethical standards page, 33 per cent had financial reports and only 27 per cent had an annual report online (issued within two years).

Thirty-seven of the 92 charities had a thankful and human (non-transactional) email response to a donation made by the researcher

Matching campaign triples initial donation

The practical component involved a generous donation of $60,000 from the Bridgeway Foundation, a private foundation that collaborates with innovators to grow healthy and productive non-profit organizations and to engage in transformational projects within Canada and the developing world.

The $60,000 was split between 6 urban relief charities of various sizes and different cities, who were then guided by Frontier through a best-practice matching campaign. In a series of emails over 10 or 20 days, subscribers to these charities’ email lists were asked to donate and have their gift matched by the Bridgeway Foundation.

The results were beyond researchers’ expectations, and the project raised a total of $177,476 over and above Bridgeway Foundation’s initial $60,000 donation. Every charity was able to raise more than the $10,000 level.

“Charities can do better," says Johnson. “The tragedy is that some charities do amazing work, but are struggling for donations because they’re neglecting common-sense best practices, like putting a donate button on their front page. Others have an almost unfair advantage because they’ve made a few simple changes to their website or donation process.”

Johnson is also quick to point out the opportunities that charities have, if they embrace some simple best practices. “Twenty years ago, smaller charities weren’t on a level playing field with larger charities, because of the cost of fundraising. Now, a small charity can follow a few basic best-practices online and have nearly as strong a fundraising website as a larger charity.”

(From Frontier Marketing press release: "The State of Digital Fundraising among Canadian Christian Charities" -- September 29, 2015).

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