This document discusses measurement best practices for social media. It introduces a maturity framework for measurement from "crawl" to "fly" and suggests focusing measurement on key goals like engagement, awareness, or dollars. The document outlines steps for measurement including defining success metrics, choosing appropriate tools, analyzing results, and using data for decision making. It emphasizes starting small with measurement pilots and iterating to build a data-informed culture from the top down. Regular reflection and using data to improve is key to advancing along the maturity scale.
3. Meet Keo Savon
I’m donating my author royalties to the Sharing Foundation’s Education Program
to send her to college!
4. Raise Your Hand If Your Goal For Using Social Media Is ….
Improve relationships
Change behavior
Increase awareness
Increase engagement
Increase dollars
Increase action
9. Maturity of Practice Framework: Measure Progress
If you can’t fly then run, if you can’t run then walk, if
you can’t walk then crawl, but whatever you do you
have to keep moving forward.”
10. Where to focus …
CRAWL WALK RUN FLY
Linking Social with Ladder of Network Building
Communications Results and Engagement
Strategy Networks Many Free Agents work for
Development Content Strategy you
Pilot: Focus one
Culture Change program or channel Best Practices Multi-Channel Engagement,
with measurement Content, and Measurement
Measurement and
Incremental Capacity learning in all above Reflection and Continuous
Improvement
11. Share Pair: Where Is Your Organization?
Where is your nonprofit now? What does that look like?
What do you need to get to the next level?
12. CWRF: Becoming Data Informed: What Does It look like?
Crawl Walk Run Fly
Lacks consistent data Data collection Data from multiple Org Wide KPIs
collection consistent but not sources
shared
No reporting or Data not linked to System and structure for Organizational
synthesis results, could be wrong data collection Dashboard with
data different views, sharing
Decisions based on gut Rarely makes decisions Discussed at staff Data visualization, real-
to improve meetings, decisions time reporting, formal
made using it reflection process
Analysis
Tools
Sense-Making
13. Measurement Practice: Analysis
Crawl Walk Run Fly
Lacks Data collection Data from multiple Org Wide KPIs
consistent data consistent but not sources
collection shared
53%
29%
12%
6%
14. Measurement Practice: Tools
Crawl Walk Run Fly
Not using data Free or low cost Uses social media Uses professional
collection or analytics tools and management/metrics measurement and
survey tools analyzes further in professional tool to analytics tools.
spreadsheets. collect data. Provides training or
uses expert
consultants to assist in
data/analysis.
55%
35%
10%
15. Measurement Practice: Sense-Making
Crawl Walk Run Fly
No reporting or Data not linked to System and structure for Organizational
synthesis, decisions results, could be data collection. Dashboard with
based on gut wrong data, rarely Discussed at staff different views,
makes decisions based meetings, makes sharing. Data
on data decisions visualization, real time
data, formal reflection
70%
18%
12%
29. Why did it fail?
What did we learn?
What insights can
use next time
around?
DoSomething.Org’s Fail Fest
30. CWRF: Becoming Data Informed: What Does It look like?
Crawl Walk Run Fly
Lacks consistent data Data collection Data from multiple Org Wide KPIs
collection consistent but not sources
shared
No reporting or Data not linked to System and structure for Organizational
synthesis results, could be wrong data collection Dashboard with
data different views, sharing
Decisions based on gut Rarely makes decisions Discussed at staff Data visualization, real-
to improve meetings, decisions time reporting, formal
made using it reflection process
Analysis
Tools
Sense-Making
31. How To Improve Measurement Practice
• Use the 7 Steps of
Measurement
• Identify small
pilots and iterate
32. The 7 Simple Steps of Measurement
Goal
Insight Audience
Tool Cost
KPI Benchmark
33. Measurement Pilots: Small Steps
Audience: Artists and people in their community
Show the human face of artists, remove the mystique, get
audience to share their favorites, connect with other
organizations.
Focused on one channel (Facebook) to use best practices to:
Increase engagement by comments per post
Conversations that made the organization more accessible
Increase enrollment in classes and attendance at events
10% new students /attenders say they heard about us through
Facebook
36. Results Metric
Increase donations % reduction in cost per dollar raised
Increase donor base % increase in new donors
Increase number of volunteers % increase in volunteers
Increase awareness % increase in awareness,
% increase in visibility/prominence,
Positive correlation between
increase in donors vs. visibility
Improve relationships with existing % improvement in relationship
donors/volunteers scores,
% increase in donation from existing
donors
Improve engagement with % increase in engagement
stakeholders (comments on YouTube, shares on
Facebook, comments on blog, etc.
Change in behavior % decrease in bad behavior,
% increase in good behavior
Change in attitude about your % increase in trust score or
organization relationship score
Increase in skills and knowledge of Increase in revenue per employee,
staff Learning % employees understanding their
roles and organizational mission
38. Measuring Your Content: Flying
Goal: Grow the Movement
MomsRising is building a strong multicultural movement of people who
care about family economic security and well-being.
Need To Know KPI
Are we adding new members? Increased New Members
Are we losing members? Decreased Lapsed Members
Are we diversifying Number of Collaborations
membership? with multicultural orgs
39. Growing the Movement: Conversions/Traffic Referral
Website Metrics
• What is quantity of referral traffic from social media
sources?
• What is quality of referral traffic from social media
sources?
• What percentage or number converted or completed an
action on our web site?
• What message/content encourages conversion?
42. Specific Time for Reflection and Improvement
Step 7 – Analyze Results
Joyful Funerals Metrics Mondays
43. How much did it cost?
Be honest – Social
Media is not “free”
Be transparent
Given your
investment, are
your expected
results reasonable?
Compare alternate
ways to achieve
goals
44. Improving Your Measurement Practice!
1. You identify success and failure first
2. Spend more time identifying what you want to
measure, not how to measure it
3. Measure in context – don’t ever collect data
unless you can connect it to your goals
4. Don’t wait until the end to collect or analyze data
5. Less is more
6. Uses measurement pilots to create a habit of
collecting and apply data
7. Do the is it worth it math!
Worked in the nonprofit sector for over 33 years. Had a front row seat at the creation of a field – nonprofit technology – use of technology for mission-driven work. I’m a master trainer so I get to travel around the work and work with changemakers on how to use the tools for social change or mission driven work. Most recently, have designed and delivered curriculum for nonprofits to become networked nonprofit – Middle East, Africa, India, etc. There are wicked problems in the world -- I’m passionate about social change and strongly believe that two of the skills that nonprofits need to embrace to solve them. Also a share of the royalities are going
Meet KeoSavon. It is important to me that the book has a social change mission so I am donating my royalities to send her to college in Cambodia through supporting the Sharing Foundation program for education. It will make difference in her life.She is a civil engineering major and is 2nd in her class. I met her this summer when I visited Cambodia. She lives in the orphanage that my daughter came from in Cambodia – and KeoSavon also calls me “mom.” She told me she wants to go to graduate school in the US – MIT or Stanford. I told her that I would have to sell a lot of books!
The “Crawl, Walk, Run, Fly” Maturity of Social Media practice framework is in Beth’s next book, Measuring the Networked Nonprofit. We used to help us design the program, determine process outcomes, and help us evaluate our progress.Explain modelPhotos: Runhttp://www.flickr.com/photos/clover_1/2647983567/Flyhttp://www.flickr.com/photos/micahtaylor/5018789937/
The “Crawl, Walk, Run, Fly” Maturity of Social Media practice framework is in Beth’s next book, Measuring the Networked Nonprofit. We used to help us design the program, determine process outcomes, and help us evaluate our progress.Explain modelPhotos: Runhttp://www.flickr.com/photos/clover_1/2647983567/Flyhttp://www.flickr.com/photos/micahtaylor/5018789937/
The “Crawl, Walk, Run, Fly” Maturity of Social Media practice framework is in Beth’s next book, Measuring the Networked Nonprofit. We used to help us design the program, determine process outcomes, and help us evaluate our progress.Explain modelPhotos: Runhttp://www.flickr.com/photos/clover_1/2647983567/Flyhttp://www.flickr.com/photos/micahtaylor/5018789937/
The “Crawl, Walk, Run, Fly” Maturity of Social Media practice framework is in Beth’s next book, Measuring the Networked Nonprofit. We used to help us design the program, determine process outcomes, and help us evaluate our progress.Explain modelPhotos: Runhttp://www.flickr.com/photos/clover_1/2647983567/Flyhttp://www.flickr.com/photos/micahtaylor/5018789937/
There’s another important organizational skill - data-informed this describes agile, responsive, and intelligent nonprofitsthat are better able to succeed in a rapidly changing environment and can fuel networks of networks. DoSomething.org has a big hairy social change goal: To harnesses teenage energy and unleash it on causes teens care about by launching a national campaign per week. The call to action is always something that has a real impact and does not require money, an adult, or a car. Their measurable goal is to get 5 million active teen members engaged in social change campaigns by 2015. Their use of social media, mobile, and data all strategically selected and use to reach that goal.They are a networked nonprofit with a data informed culture – and it started at the top with their board and advisors ..Reid Hoffman and DjPatil – “A Data Scientist” – have advised the CEO – Nancy Lublin – not only what infrastructure is needed to collect and make sense of data, but how she as the leader can’t rely on hunches – decisions – have to be informed by data.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/mkrigsman/3428179614/DoSomething has two data analyst positions on staff .. And they aren’t sitting in the corner playing with their spreadsheetsWhile a big part of their job is to become the stewards of the dashboard, they work with staff – so that making sense of data Is not an adhoc process, but one of continous improvement of the programs. The data analysts work collaboratively with staff to help them apply and understand their data.
One of their organizational mantra is “Spend More Time Thinking About The Data, Less On Collecting ItPregnancy Text” Campaign featured on their quarterly dashboard. This clever sex education campaign is an updated version of the teen pregnancy education program where young people carried eggs around and pretend they are babies. It was a text campaign where teens opted in to receive texts on their mobile phones from the “baby.” Once they joined (and they could share it with their friends). they received regular annoying text messages at all hours from the “baby” that poops, cries, and needs their immediate attention.The team at DoSomething.org uses data to base the program design, key performance indicators and a hypothesis to be tested. They looked at survey data from the National Campaign: nearly 9 in 10 (87%) young people surveyed also say that it would be much easier for teens to delay sexual activity and avoid teen pregnancy if they were able to have more open, honest conversations about these topics with their parents and/or friends. So, success of this campaign would be mean that participants talk with their family or friends about the issue and delay sexual activity.The basic design had those who signed up challenge their friends to take care of a text baby either by (1) going to DoSomething website and selecting 5 friends to challenge or (2) after receiving a text from DoSomething (sent to DoSomething’s 300k mobile subscribers) would opt to challenge friends after reading a quick stat on US teen pregnancy. Participants that accepted the challenge would then start receiving texts the following morning from the text-baby. After completing the challenge user were prompted to send it to their own friends.DoSomething.org also followed up with 5k of the users with a text-based survey to measure impact.Once defining success and identifying the right data collect, here’s some of the insights they gleaned according to Nancy Lublin, CEO of DoSomething and Jeffrey Bladt:SMS as a platform: They are monitoring engagement per communication channel and it has revealed SMS to be 30xs more powerful for getting their users to take action as compared to emailChallenging 5 friends: we’ve tested various group sizes for SMS experience and have found the a group of 6 (1 alpha inviting friends) leads to the highest overall engagementResearch Based Messaging: The general messaging for the campaign was based on survey findings that found (1) big scare tactics (e.g. getting pregnant = not going to college) we not as effective as highlighting who being a teen parent changes daily life (e.g can’t go to the movies because baby sitter cancelled); (2) a CDC report that found: “The impact of strong pregnancy prevention messages directed to teenagers has been credited with the [recent] teen birth rates decline.A/B Testing: They pre-tested different messages and frequency of sending the messages to smaller test groups of teens to optimize the number of messages the baby would send during the day, as well as the content. They ended up doubling the frequency and rewording several interactions as well as building in a response system (so the baby would respond if teen texted an unsolicited response). The insights from these tests pushed up engagement and likelihood of forwarding at the end.Impact: They did a survey to measure this. 1 in 2 teens said that taking the Pregnancy Text made it more likely that they would talk about the issue of teen pregnancy with their family and friends.As you can see from the above insights, DoSomething just not gather and analyze topline data:101,444 people took part in the campaign with 100,000 text-babies delivered171,000 unsolicited incoming messages, or 1 every 20 seconds for the duration of the campaign. During the initial launch period (first 2 weeks), a new text message was received every 10 seconds.For every 1 direct sign-up, DoSomething gained 2.3 additional sign-ups from forward to a friend functionality. The viral coefficient was between 0.60 and 0.70 for the campaign.1 in 4 (24%) of teens could not finish a day with their text-baby (texted a stop word to the baby)DoSomething.org uses its data to continuously improve programs, develop content, and shape campaign strategies. So DoSomething.org wants its staff to spend more of its brainpower thinking about the data, rather than collecting it. To ensure that this happens, DoSomething.org’s Data Analyst Bob Filbin’s job is more than programming formulas in Excel spreadsheets. Says Filbin, “One of the biggest barriers in nonprofits is finding the time to collect data, the time to analyze, and the time to act on it. Unless someone is put in charge of data, and it’s a key part of their job description, accelerating along the path towards empowered data-informed culture is going to be hard, if not impossible.”
No addhttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QhgsJjNVbu0http://gawker.com/5950941/kathie-lee-dropped-a-puppy-on-his-head-on-live-tv-todayhttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sQzo_3yIc8M
Back in the office, the data scientists were looking at the data in real time to figure out what was driving people to their landing page and getting them to sign up.
Fail Fest And Pink Boas: Don’t Be Afraid To FailDoSomething.org doesn’t use its data to pat itself on the back or make the staff feel good. Lublin notes that they’re not afraid of failure. They hold regular “Fail Fest” meetings, where each person on staff has to present a campaign or program failure. They share three things they learned about themselves and three things the organization learned. To remove the stigma from failure, Lublin says, “We have to wear pink boas when we present.” http://www.flickr.com/photos/ruminatrix/2734602916/in/faves-cambodia4kidsorg/
The “Crawl, Walk, Run, Fly” Maturity of Social Media practice framework is in Beth’s next book, Measuring the Networked Nonprofit. We used to help us design the program, determine process outcomes, and help us evaluate our progress.Explain modelPhotos: Runhttp://www.flickr.com/photos/clover_1/2647983567/Flyhttp://www.flickr.com/photos/micahtaylor/5018789937/