March 2012

NTC 2012 Preview

Next week is the 2012 Nonprofit Technology Conference, or NTC, when members of the nonprofit community from all over the country converge in San Francisco to meet, greet, learn and share. Will you be there? Idealware will, and we’ve got a few things we’d like to tell you about.

For starters, we’ll be maintaining a table at the Cyber Café throughout the duration of the conference rather than at the Science Fair, where we’ve been in past years. We'll be selling our 2012 Field Guide to Software for Nonprofits, and we'll have copies of many of our other publications available. Stop by and say hello—all of us on staff will be taking turns there, and we’ll be joined by board members. 

 

In addition, we’re presenting five sessions this year as follows:

 

Money (It’s What We Want)

Tuesday, April 3, 10:30 AM to 12 PM 

Presented by Cindy Bailie from The Foundation Center, Ruth Williams from ZeroDivide, and Andrea Berry in the Franciscan D room.

 

More Than Apps: Affordable Program Delivery Through Mobile Phones

Tuesday, April 3, 1:30 PM to 3 PM

Presented by Laura Quinn in the Franciscan D room.

 

Doing More With Less: Innovation in Service Delivery

Wednesday, April 4, 10:30 AM to 12 PM

Presented by Rick Birmingham from MAP for Nonprofits and Laura Quinn in the Yosemite B room.

 

The Cloud Beckons, But is it Safe?

Thursday, April 5, 1:30 PM to 3 PM

Presented by Laura Quinn in the Franciscan A room.

 

Maturing Your Organization’s Social Culture… by Creating a Policy?

Thursday, April 5, 3:30 PM to 5 PM

Presented by Lisa Colton from Darim Online and Andrea Berry in the Yosemite A room.

 

Throughout the week, we’ll be live-tweeting from sessions at @Idealware, posting photos on our Facebook page, and blogging regularly, so even if you won’t be in attendance, you can experience NTC 2012 vicariously through us. And if you will be there in person, we’d love to hear from you. Have a question for us? Stop by the table and ask it to be part of our AskIdealware video series, or just drop by and say hello.

 

Thanks again for all you do to support Idealware and nonprofits in general. Looking forward to meeting many of you in person next week.

 

cb

 

Chris Bernard

Editorial and Communications Director

 

 

 

 

How to Make a Forecast When You Feel Like You're Being Asked to Take a Guess: Sensitivity Analysis

This is the latest in an occasional series of posts by Henry Quinn, whose insight is the reason we invite him to blog for us--not the fact that he's our executive director's husband.

Here's a thing that no one should ever say, but that people sometimes do:
 
"I'd like to make a forecast about how some effort is going to impact donations, but there's something important that I'd just be guessing at. Oh well—I'll just guess."
 
The reason you shouldn't say this is what those of us in the business call a ‘sensitivity analysis.’ It's a method for making maximum use of the things you do know, while still allowing for one or more degrees of uncertainty—all without forcing you to commit to an unfounded guess about any of them. Want a simple, single-unknown example?
 
You're planning on-site changes to increase the visibility of your membership renewal page. You know the following:
 
  • In 2011, you had 1M visitors.
  • 4 percent of those saw the membership renewal page.
  • Of those who saw the old page, 46 percent renewed successfully.
  • The average renewal membership is worth $45.
  • Finally, you're going to be implementing these changes in July, and 78 percent of your visits come in the second half of the year.
 
Notice that all these things are pretty easy to measure or find out about 2011, and you actually know a LOT. In fact, there's only one thing, a small, isolated thing, that you don't know. This is key to a sensitivity analysis—you need to isolate the thing that you don't know, and define it very, very precisely. If you throw up your hands at “Well, these efforts are going to do SOMETHING,” you can't use this method. You're also not trying very hard, and quitters never win. The changes in this example aren't going to do SOMETHING, they're going to do something quite SPECIFIC: increase the rate at which visitors to your site visit the renewal page. That is the one and only figure you don't know.
 
And with that in mind, I can tell you EXACTLY how the changes will impact your revenues in 2012*: the revenue impact is going to be equal to the number of visitors times the percentage that see the renewal page times the percentage of those who renew times the value of a renewal times the percentage of potential renewals that will be affected by the changes given when they'll be implemented times some factor representing the increase in the rate at which visitors look at the renewal page. To put a point on it, that's 1M X .04 X .46 X $45 X .78 X a factor, or $645,840 times that factor.
 
What we've done is box in your uncertainty, and determine precisely what impact the unknown is going to have on your eventual estimate—you've determined the SENSITIVITY of your forecast to a single, understandable unknown. The only thing we have to do now is figure out what a reasonable range of guesses for that factor is, and then apply the $646,000 figure to get a range of reasonable impacts. Rather than making a single guess for a large and complex unknown, you can describe a relationship, within a limited range, based on a very specific unknown. That analysis looks like this:
 
If the increase in renewal form view rate is this...
Then the increased revenue will be this.
1 percent
$6,458
2 percent
$12,917
5 percent
$32,292
10 percent
$64,584
20 percent
$129,168
 
Now THAT'S a useful table. How much is it going to cost you to make these changes? If the answer is $10K, I'd go ahead and make them—if they provide even a 2 percent lift in renewal form view rate, they'll pay for themselves in the first year. If the answer is $75K, I might skip them—you'd need a view rate increase between 10 percent and 20 percent, which feels pretty aggressive, to make them worthwhile.
 
At a higher level, I'd make two other points about how this table can help you make better decisions. First, it's easy to communicate, upwards and outwards. It describes a very straightforward relationship, with exactly one moving part, and so discussions about it can be very focused.
 
“Ah,” says your Executive Director. “So you're recommending we go forward with these changes because they'll bring in an extra $32,292? Well, 5 percent sounds like a reasonable level of lift. Let's do it.” It's not that $32K feels high or low—there's too many ingredients in that stew for it to be a simple call. It's the 5 percent lift that's up for discussion, and that's a much simpler consideration. Everything else follows automatically from that.
 
Second, when your forecast eventually breaks, this table makes it easy to diagnose where it broke. Did you see a 5 percent lift in view rate, but miss that $32K? Then something about your assumptions was wrong, but the changes themselves had the desired impact, which was to increase a very specific metric. Did the relationship hold, but the lift in view rate not come in? Then your prediction about the impact of the changes was off on the high side. This is so much more instructive than simply saying, well, we thought it would come in at $32K, and it didn't.
 
(Which really illustrates a third sense in which this is good practice: it establishes, precisely, how you're going to measure the impact of the change, months in advance of its implementation. Think about that—knowing, a year before you'll be asked, what you're going to do when someone asks you, “Did that work?”)
 
So, uncertainty exists. If you believe it's lurking all around you, spread across everything equally, it becomes really hard to predict anything. But if you believe that you know most things pretty well, and that the things that you don't know can be narrowly defined, a sensitivity analysis can be a really helpful method for wrangling it.
 
 
* Yes, yes—you're expecting other changes in 2012, related to other changes in what you do, how you do it, or external circumstances. These changes, they aren't true knowns, but you've probably had to think about, and budget them, as part of some larger planning process. You've already decided what they're going to be, and so they can be applied here as though they were knowns. We're also (secretly) assuming that the mentioned rates are constant throughout the year. If you wanted to, you could easily eliminate this assumption by actually measuring those rates from July to December, or measuring them relative to the first half of 2011 and extrapolating from current measurements in the first half of 2012.

  

Ask Idealware: What is "Mobile Phone Virtualization?"

In this Ask Idealware video, Jay Leslie answers a question about mobile phone virtualization, which offers a means for a nonprofit's IT staff to provide employees with secure access to organizational resources from their personalized smartphones without compromising either data integrity or the user experience.

 

Got a question to ask Idealware? Send us an email...

Launch Day!

Can nonprofits take better advantage of available technologies to improve the services they deliver, and the ways in which they deliver them?

To find out, MAP for Nonprofits and Idealware surveyed 180 Minnesota human service organizations about how they were using technology, and then interviewed more than two dozen staff members from organizations that were using it in effective or interesting ways. We began our research nearly a year ago. Today we're proud to release the result of our collective efforts, Unleashing Innovation: Using Everyday Technology to Improve Nonprofit Services.

The research reveals a number of innovative approaches to service delivery that make the most of new and existing technology. From the simple and remarkable to the complex and expensive, these implementations serve as examples of opportunities for everyday innovation that can transform how, and how effectively, organizations meet their missions.

At Idealware, we're excited about our partnership with our new friends at MAP for Nonprofits, and about the report, which includes a detailed analysis of the study, plus case studies of nine Minnesota nonprofits using technology successfully. We've got some upcoming training around what we learned, and we'll be presenting about the report with MAP for Nonprofits at NTC next month.
 
Look for us there--and, in the meantime, download the report  for free at http://www.mapfornonprofits.org/innovation.
 
Or sign up for our free March 29 session that will highlight key findings and best practices along with real-world examples that share some of these innovations to help inspire your own organization. Register at http://salsa.democracyinaction.org/o/957/p/salsa/event/common/public/?event_KEY=72486.
 
 
 
 

 

New Article... And Then Some

 We have a new article up today researched and written in partnership with our friends at the Minnesota-based MAP for Nonprofits. The article was published in the March edition of the NTEN:Change journal, a free resource to which you should already be subscribed, but the bigger news is that it is a summary of a detailed report we'll be releasing later this week. Here's a little more about the report, which is the culmination of nearly a year's worth of work from both our organizations:

"Can nonprofits take better advantage of available technologies to improve the services they deliver, and the ways in which they deliver them? To find out, MAP for Nonprofits and Idealware surveyed 180 Minnesota human service organizations about how they were using technology, and then interviewed more than two dozen staff members from organizations that were using it in effective or interesting ways. The research reveals a number ofinnovative approaches to service delivery that make the most of new and existing technology. From the simple and remarkable to the complex and expensive, these implementations serve as examples of opportunities for everyday innovation that can transform how, and how effectively, organizations meet their missions."

The full report, Unleashing Innovation: Using Everyday Technology to Improve Nonprofit Services, includes detailed research analysis and case studies of nine organizations doing interesting things with technology. Watch this blog for information about how to get a copy of the report. 

In the meantime, you can read the summary article here, or read the entire issue of the NTEN:Change journal here.

New Release: State of the Nonprofit Cloud

 

This week, our friends at NTEN (the Nonprofit Technology Network) released a new report researched and written by Idealware, The State of the Nonprofit Cloud: The Results of a Study of Nonprofit Use of Cloud Software. Here's a little bit about what you'll find in its pages:

"In the second half of 2011, when we set out to look at the state of the nonprofit cloud, we weren’t sure what to expect—and what we found after surveying U.S. nonprofits and conducting follow-up interviews was that it’s somewhat... foggy. The vast majority of nonprofits we surveyed were using hosted software, but our interviews with staff members revealed that many didn’t even realize those systems could be considered hosted, or 'cloud,' solutions. In addition, many respondents said they were concerned about security for some hosted systems—especially constituent databases—but were comfortably using other hosted systems for equally sensitive information, such as business email."

The 35-page report includes a data-rich look at perceptions of the cloud and how they differ from reality, and addresses everything from security and Return on Investment to adoption. It also offers a look at cloud usage in the real world through case studies of a number of nonprofits. 

The entire report is free over at NTEN. Download it now.