Data Strategy Archives - Association Analytics https://associationanalytics.com/topic/data-strategy/ Leader in BI for Associations Fri, 10 Jan 2025 20:14:12 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.3 https://associationanalytics.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/06/cropped-android-chrome-512x512-1-1-32x32.png Data Strategy Archives - Association Analytics https://associationanalytics.com/topic/data-strategy/ 32 32 Why Data SHOULD Drive Your Strategy https://associationanalytics.com/blog/why-data-should-drive-your-strategy/ Tue, 07 Jan 2025 17:10:56 +0000 https://associationanalytics.com/?p=5322 It remains all too common for associations to ignore vital data points as they strategize for the future. The inertia of decades of existence often precludes a data-informed state, instead relying on anecdote, trusting in the gut feeling of longtime employees or volunteers, and “the way things have always been done”. This flies in

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It remains all too common for associations to ignore vital data points as they strategize for the future. The inertia of decades of existence often precludes a data-informed state, instead relying on anecdote, trusting in the gut feeling of longtime employees or volunteers, and “the way things have always been done”. This flies in the face of modern organizational thinking, and associations looking to be proactive – or facing the modern challenges of the industry – would be advised to get on board with data as a vital resource.

The Past Is Not Always Prologue

On its face, it can make a lot of sense to look at what has worked, and continue doing that. And that can be true! Despite what some in the AI or crypto industries might tell you, most industries don’t change that quickly. What worked last year will likely be relevant to the interests of your members next year. But even in the comparatively geological timescale that the association industry works in compared to the corporate world, focusing on what’s next is vital to the future health of any non-profit. Whether it’s membership demographic shifts, fading enthusiasm for even joining a membership association, ever-shifting economic headwinds, knowing what’s happening now, and being able to be judicious in cutting products or services that don’t work anymore (like the NCACPA was able to do in this case study) allows associations to re-shape themselves based on their members’ needs. Data can tell you what works much more than just the whims and musings of a longtime executive or board member.

Even in the comparatively geological timescale that the association industry works in compared to the corporate world, focusing on what’s next is vital to the future health of any non-profit.

Actions Speak Loudest…

I have talked with many membership professionals who have all but eliminated surveys from their efforts to track member sentiment. Their reasoning? People who answer the surveys are merely the people who like taking surveys, or else have some kind of axe to grind. It’s the same idea as taking to heart reviews for, say, a highway rest stop. The only people who are going to review it are those with a problem. If things are working, people aren’t going to grind a gear. But just because people aren’t writing angry emails or calling to congratulate you on a successful conference, doesn’t mean they aren’t telling you something – that silent majority is present and powerful. Which way are enrollments that certification you offer trending? What about membership, how has it grown or changed or shifted demographically (or even geographically) in the last five years, and what could that mean? Where should you have your next conference, how far are people willing to travel? A member might love the idea of going to an event in Hawaii – especially if their job pays the bill typically – but will it really lead to a great conference and great networking, or will it be a flop? Seeing which way people’s actions are trending, seeing what younger members want versus older members and how they engage, this is where analytics can be the dowsing rod for your organization.

…But Don’t Forget To Listen!

This doesn’t mean you should just plug up your ears! While some have gone to the extreme and dumped survey tools altogether, there’s still value in simply asking people what they think. But doing it correctly is important. Rather than asking specific questions about a conference or class or other offering, doing standardized surveys – asking the same questions – on a regular interval can actually be valuable. Don’t just ask the question, look at the responses, and file it away somewhere. Create a trail you can examine, and see how sentiment and opinions of those loud few have shifted over time. On top of that, tracking the answers, particularly if you layer on anonymized demographic data – gender, job role or title, location, things of that nature – lets you know who is actually responding, and how that is influencing those responses. This allows the surveyor to see where the gaps in responders are, and start targeting them in novel ways. Actions may be loud, but people do have something to say.

Leaders (Should) Want Metrics

When you talk with any executive, often it’s results they want, not information on how the sausage is made. Running an association means you have to make sure your employees are happy and productive, and the board is getting what it wants or demands. Leaders want to know things now, and know where the organization is headed. That’s hard – if not impossible – when all that’s fed to them is anecdote and qualitative judgement. And if a new CEO comes on, they don’t want to have to “get the feel” of the organization for a few months, that’s what a dashboard and a few trend charts are for. Plus, when the board decides it’s time for a new strategic plan, having a proper data-informed organization means the goals are achievable, targets are trackable, and successes are obvious. Instead of “vibes based” goals like “Expand the Impact of the Industry”, or “Engage the Members”, positive ideas with no real traceable metric, having real goals makes everyone happier, and success more obvious (and realistic). So when you have to increase retention by 3 points, you can plan for that. Metrics make leaders more effective, and their organization more successful.

The Staff Are No Different

It’s not just the people in the big chair that want data to help their job. My colleague Rachel Mace is fond of saying “give me the numbers” to her direct reports. If you don’t want to share a metric, or if you aren’t tracking something, that can be more damning than if you haven’t hit a goal. Fear of data is simply fear of your own ability at the job, and that’s a feeling no staff member should have. As long as the metrics they’re tasked with achieving are just that, achievable and realistic, there should be no problem with having a personalized dashboard or a centralized database that allows them to share the key points with their team and their boss. On top of that, sometimes it’s important for the membership director to know who is coming to a conference, and they shouldn’t have to bug the events coordinator relentlessly to do that. Data allows the staff to see where the association stands, and enables them to see how their own personal effort is helping move the needle organizationally.

As long as the metrics they’re tasked with achieving are just that, achievable and realistic, there should be no problem with having a personalized dashboard or a centralized database that allows them to share the key points with their team and their boss.

The Future Should Make Sense

This brings together the need for data for leadership as well as staff. If you don’t have the data telling you where you’ve been and where you are, you can’t know where the organization is headed. More advanced tools like predictive analytics and even generative AI tools that are all the rage these days demand one thing – data. Hoping for the best is the best way to dig yourself a hole, and relying on what your various systems and interactions with membership are saying, that’s where you can start to see the future. We’ve seen unexpected upheaval throw the entire association world into flux over the last several years, and the organizations that had already made the move to being data-driven (or even better, data-informed, a specific differentiation) are the ones that pivoted most effectively and quickest. It feels hackneyed to say, but data is the future of associations and of the world. We’ve seen what every other industry has done to leverage the vast troves of information they gather, from professional sports with Sabermetrics to Netflix with its mind-reading algorithm. They know what they can expect (with a bit of margin for error) in the coming years, so why shouldn’t associations?

Data is the ultimate tool, the ultimate resource for associations in the 21st century. It sounds like pablum, like something we’ve heard time and again, but it remains true. Those that refuse to fully take advantage of it are the organizations that will fall to the back of the pack, and continue to wonder what is going to happen next. The most successful ones are the organizations that will see what matters to their members, that track how younger generations or new demographics take advantage of a proactive and forward-thinking portfolio of benefits, those are the ones that will see themselves grow and flourish in the coming decades. Doesn’t that sound nice?

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10 Tips to Get Analytically Ready for 2025 https://associationanalytics.com/blog/10-tips-to-get-analytically-ready-for-2025/ Mon, 09 Dec 2024 14:20:14 +0000 https://associationanalytics.com/?p=5317 As associations prepare for 2025, leveraging data effectively becomes increasingly crucial for success. There's a consistent desire across the industry to tap more deeply into the data that's been gathered in the myriad systems at hand, but it's taking the leap that's long been teh hardest part. To make it easier, the experts at A2

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As associations prepare for 2025, leveraging data effectively becomes increasingly crucial for success. There’s a consistent desire across the industry to tap more deeply into the data that’s been gathered in the myriad systems at hand, but it’s taking the leap that’s long been teh hardest part. To make it easier, the experts at A2 came up with 10 practical tips to help your organization become more analytically driven, while maintaining focus on your mission and members.

1. Tone Your Gut

Due to their breadth of institutional knowledge, the traditional approach for associations is to trust in what “seems” right. This isn’t wrong, but there’s nuance to be added, and tools to enhance how leaders plan and execute strategies. Rather than going full bore into the world of data and dismissing gut instincts or relying on them exclusively, use that data to validate or challenge your intuitions. The goal isn’t to find data that confirms your beliefs but to test assumptions systematically. Let your experience guide which questions to ask, then use data to find answers. As Albert Einstein noted, you can prove yourself right over and over with experiments, but being proved wrong only takes one.

2. Sharing is Caring

A key element for building a data-informed association is common access to data, and a common language. It behooves any forward-thinking organization to implement high level KPI dashboards that speak to everyone’s needs. Each staff member – and perhaps even volunteers – should understand how their role contributes to key metrics, and how they influence the success of the association. The strategic goals that are the base of all these efforts are influenced by efforts large and small, so making sure people can see how each little nudge moves the needle can be huge. Consider assigning relevant numbers to each position to connect individual work to organizational goals. Ensure leadership bases decisions on clear metrics rather than anecdotal evidence.

The strategic goals that are the base of all these efforts are influenced by efforts large and small, so making sure people can see how each little nudge moves the needle can be huge.

3. Declutter Your Demographics

What actually matters to your mission? How does the data you collect inform on that, and allow you to reach members in how they need to be reached and influenced? Review and streamline the member data you collect, pay attention to what actually matters. Focus on demographics that serve your mission, industry, or broader societal goals. Question whether each data point drives actionable insights, or if it’s just a random non sequitur or artefact from a previous time. For example, birth year is more valuable than age, and job function may be more useful than exact titles. Knowing whether someone likes to play golf is probably useless. Remove data fields that don’t support strategic decision-making, and start learing about what matters from your members. And make it easy on them to give you the data too, make it make sense.

4. Form a Data Task Force

Climbing the ladder to data-informed success is a team effort, and everyone should have a hand in it. Get everyone involved, create a cross-functional team focused on data innovation. Frame the mandate around improving mission fulfillment through data insights rather than administrative tasks. Leverage current interest in AI and analytics to attract volunteers, ride that wave of hype to see what people actually want to know. Align the team’s work with organizational goals and consider requesting budget for small proof-of-concept projects.

5. Stop Chaos Campaigning

Too many associations just kind of blast out communications, and haven’t taken the time to tap fully into what their various outreach tools can do. Whether it’s segmenting in novel ways beyond just member type or generation, creating automated campaigns or complex workflows, implement structured approaches to marketing campaigns. Use consistent UTM parameters, establish approval processes – or at least a check or balance now and again – and standardize naming conventions for campaigns, tags, and more. This can help you create a unified voice, and not have people potentially over-emailing or going rogue with their own outreach. And let the marketers play a bit – try new things with A/B testing, leveraging of behavior, or other creative outreaches to get the message through.

6. Center the Member Voice

Implement systematic feedback collection through CSAT surveys, Net Promoter Scores, and community monitoring. People want to tell you waht they want, and their actions speak louder than their words. If there’s a community in your tech stack, taht can be a gold mine, but even beyond that just see how people take advantage of the benefits. The voice isn’t just words and surveys, but take it all into account.

7. Leverage Existing Tools

Make full use of current marketing automation platforms, analytics tools, and AMS capabilities before seeking new solutions. Many organizations only scratch the surface of their existing technology. Invest time in platform training and explore advanced features you’re already paying for.

8. Think Smaller

Rather than planning massive data initiatives, focus on quick wins that demonstrate value. For example, analyze three years of event data to optimize registration timing and pricing, or study engagement patterns in specific member segments. Small, focused projects often yield actionable insights faster than comprehensive overhauls. These small successes can help to convince even the most resistant stakeholders that more data can be good, and help you demonstrate what’s possible if everyone got on board and data was the backbone of any strategy.

9. Consider Your Sacred Cows

SO often, associations hold on to offerings long past their due date. It’s important to refresh periodically and move with the times, so use data to evaluate long-running programs objectively. Don’t maintain initiatives solely because they’re traditional or have strong internal advocates, and in fact use that data to prove to those internal champions what the reality is. Assess actual member value and resource costs, then redirect efforts to more impactful activities.

Don’t maintain initiatives solely because they’re traditional or have strong internal advocates, and in fact use that data to prove to those internal champions what the reality is.

10. Stop Chasing Dragons

Don’t get lost in grand ideas that lead to inevitable failure. Avoid pursuing overly complex projects before mastering basics. Focus on fundamental metrics that drive decisions rather than elaborate tracking systems. For instance, comparing registration button clicks to completed transactions may provide more actionable insights than detailed user journey mapping. Associations do great stuff, they have a lot of wonderful offerings in their core business, so take advantage of it. Do what you’re best at, and don’t worry about the latest shiny thing.

Success in 2025 won’t require expensive new tools or massive organizational changes. Instead, focus on using existing resources more effectively, including data-informed discussions in decision-making, and maintaining clear connections to your mission. Start with these practical steps to build momentum toward a more analytical culture.

Keep initiatives focused on driving member value and supporting organizational goals. Remember that successful analytics work happens at the margins – improving from 2% to 3% growth can be more realistic and valuable than pursuing dramatic transformations. IN this case, as with so many new years resolutions, don’t shoot for the moon, just take methodical steps and the results will be obvious.

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