How can charities develop meaningful, long term engagement through their digital strategy?

Headshot of Shaun Gomm

Commercial Director

2 minute read

For many charities, developing long term relationships with the wide range of customers, supporters and stakeholders they engage with on a daily basis is critical.

Digital channels (not just the website, but social media, apps, and other digital services), properly integrated with Customer Relationship Management (CRM) technologies, and coupled with the right governance, policy and process framework, can mean the difference between success and stagnation.

In an increasingly competitive and controversial operating environment, the balance that charities need to find between meeting their fundraising goals and fulfilling their core purpose is challenging, but key to realising their long term goals. There are so many worthy causes and so many homes for our charitable giving and our time. But while there are seemingly bottomless marketing budgets available to some of the larger, international charities, the smaller, equally worthy ones face a battle everyday to make every penny count. In this environment, the design and implementation of a user-centred, carefully honed digital strategy can make all the difference.

Here at Nexer, we work with a number of third sector organisations - some large, household names, but also a number of much smaller, grassroots charities and not-for-profits. We're currently working with Mind, the mental health charity, to help them deliver elements of a digital strategy that is rooted in a comprehensive understanding of how a wide range of users, from people in crisis to corporate partners and ambassadors, want to engage digitally with the organisation.

Regardless of size and reach, consistently, these themes keep coming up in our work:

  • Helping charities manage the consumer journey: person in need > supporter > long term advocate
  • Balancing the delivery of digital content to help those people in need (seamlessly, easily, accessibly) with organisational fundraising goals (when and how they should ask for support)
  • Aligning the sometimes competing strands of their digital strategy around marketing, information provision, and advocacy or influencing policy
  • Building a culture of innovation and learning from start-ups or smaller, more responsive companies, particularly for larger charities or those with more traditional organisational cultures
  • Making every penny count - translating digital interventions into tangible, measurable results

We're working now on an initiative to bring together third sector organisations to discuss, debate, support and learn from one another in addressing some of these critical issues. We'd like to facilitate and participate in some of the conversation, and to provide an opportunity for charities to help themselves and one another in understanding the potential for their digital channels to deliver better engagement and more meaningful relationships with their customers, supporters and the wider public. But, it's early days.

This may mean a series of workshops or talks, it might result in some research or other insights, or it could be something else. So, if you're a third sector organisation that might like to join the conversation, shape the approach, or you have some insights and experiences ready to bring to the table, please do get in touch.