Advertiser ■ Salvation Army, UK
Industry ■ Fundraising
Media used ■ Direct mail, TV

The original campaign

From 1987 to 2007 the charity relied on a six-week burst of activity running up to Christmas to recruit its new donors. They used only print media: mail, door drops, press and inserts. In 2007, The Salvation Army had market-leading but declining returns on their control mix of mail, door drops, press and inserts.

The first changes

In 2008 and 2009 they started to test a different model, adding both broadcast and digital media to their media mix. Broadcast was designed to increase the reach of the total campaign, and digital media to provide an additional response channel for donors. In both years they saw successful increases in numbers of donors recruited. In 2009 they also noticed that response from mail and door drops, which had been in decline for years, had increased.

Structured insight

By 2010, Salvation Army saw a step change in online income, it had quadrupled in just four years. With just a few thousand pounds invested in search it was clear that online activity was not driving this income. To enable these digital donations to be attributed to the correct offline channels, and to understand the relationships between the channels used, they turned to econometrics. Once the understanding of this model had been achieved, working with Mike Colling & Company (MC&C), Salvation Army turned to the challenge of exploiting its profitability. A planning tool was built, powered by the econometric equations; enabling The Salvation Army to forecast income and donor numbers from different investment scenarios. This tool showed mail and TV driving online response, with strong positive interactions between the two. The Salvation Army’s findings not only matched Royal Mail MarketReach research but also reinforced the learnings from the IPA Databank. The 2014 IPA Effectiveness Award case study highlights:

  1. The effectiveness of combining acquisition of new customers with activation of existing customers.
  2. The benefit of significantly increasing advertising investment, along with the continued effectiveness of TV.
  3. The dangers of focusing too strongly on ROI as the key metric, rather than targeting to maximise the absolute net income generated from marketing.

The paper also created surprising new learnings, specifically around the role of mail in a digital age:

  • That mail can be the most effective channel in an integrated multi-channel schedule.
  • That integrating mail with both broadcast and digital media enables incremental value to be realised from both new and existing customers.

Results

In the years from 2005 to 2007, the cost of donors recruited via mail rose by 20%. Between 2008 and 2012, cost per new donor fell by 16%, whilst the number of new donors recruited grew from 50,000 to more than 136,000. MC&C attribute this extraordinary improvement in results to the six key learnings below, the most important of which is the integration between mail, broadcast media and search.

Key learnings from this campaign included:

  • Plan channels together, with recognition of the role each plays in the mix
  • Accurate and effective measurement is required to understand the value of mail
  • Choose measurement KPIs carefully
  • Tailor the creative to the individual
  • Don’t say the same thing over and over again. If you repeat mail then continue the story
  • Understand how consumers behave with mail

The Salvation Army increased volume in both addressed mail (2.7x) and door drops (1.6x) over five years. By integrating mail with digital and broadcast media, and by accurately attributing results and understanding the roles each channel plays in the media mix, MC&C increased their clients net income and profitability. MC&C were awarded at the IPA Effectiveness Awards (Silver, 2014), to follow their DMA Award for Media Strategy (Gold, 2011). 

Access the detailed case study here

Media

 salvation

Source:

Royal Mail