New Online Portal: Google for Non-Profits

Google has consolidated many of its available services for nonprofit organizations at Google for Non-Profits, including products such as:

  • Gmail, which many nonprofits have found to be a good alternative to having to manage Microsoft Exchange
  • Checkout, which is offering online transactions with no processing fees through the end of 2008
  • Documents, an option to Microsoft Word which facilitates online document collaboration
  • Analytics, which offers easy to understand web statistics and I’ve found to offer most of the functionality of  products such as Webtrends
  • Grants, which provides free online advertising for nonprofits – in very generous amounts

These are wonderful products which every nonprofit, whatever its size, should be taking advantage of.  Also take a look at Google Sites, which is a recent addition to Google’s portfolio and provides a lighter version of Microsoft Sharepoint.

Using Dashboards to Measure Results

At the Nonprofit Excellence Awards I attended earlier this year, Witness was recognized for excellence in communications, including a ‘performance dashboard’ which “uses metrics to measure the organization’s results.”  Recently, I read another article on this topic, Warning Lights by Maguire Associates which discussed this topic from the viewpoint of educational institutions.

At my current organization, I generate a monthly report which summarizes key statistics for online fundraising: pledge and non-pledge based events, online donations, memberships, honor/memorial donations and ecommerce.  The greatest challenge is providing the information in a compact enough format that executives will read, but which include sall important data.

A good analogy is WebTrends & Google Analytics, which we use to monitor our web site traffic. WebTrends clearly provides more data but requires some ‘digging’ to analyze results.  Google Analytics, which redesigned its interface earlier this year, shows graphical reports which are easy to present to executives.  (For now, we are using both tools.)

At most nonprofits I’ve worked for, it’s rare that all staff members and the public knows how the organization is doing at times other than when the annual report is issued (which is usually many months after the fiscal year ends).  Using regularly updated dashboards is a powerful tool to keep employees and stakeholders fully informed.

Attention vendors: can your product integrate in a way so that statistics can be easily utilized by a dashboard type application? The tool used is not critical (I use Excel);  what’s important is that the organization provides consistent data to all.