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Using CiviCRM
Using CiviCRM

Using CiviCRM: Develop and implement a fully functional, systematic CRM plan for your organization Using CiviCRM

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Using CiviCRM

Chapter 2. Planning Your CRM Implementation

So now, you think that your organization will better accomplish its mission with CiviCRM. This chapter will help you plan your implementation of CiviCRM, so that your CRM initiative has the best chance to enable greater organization success.

In this chapter, we will do the following:

  • Identify potential barriers to success and learn how to overcome them

  • Select an appropriate development methodology

  • Build a balanced team

  • Get started by measuring baseline metrics, creating a vision, and creating a plan

  • Focus your CRM strategy first on your constituents and mission, and then on operational efficiency

  • Review effective ways to gather requirements

  • Identify specific types of requirements to be examined in each of the major areas of CiviCRM functionality

  • Itemize elements of a good implementation plan

  • Review how to calculate the total cost of ownership of CRM systems and their alternatives

  • Plan for success

This chapter speaks to people who have the responsibility for...

Barriers to success


Constituent Relationship Management initiatives can be difficult. At their best, they involve changing external relationships and internal processes and tools. Externally, the experiences that the constituents have of your organization need to change, so that they provide more value and fewer barriers to involvement. Internally, business processes and supporting technological systems need to change in order to break down departmental operations' silos, increase efficiencies, and enable more effective targeting, improved responsiveness, and new initiatives. The success of the CRM projects often depends on changing the behavior and attitudes of individuals across the organization, and replacing, changing, and/or integrating many IT systems used across the organization.

Succeeding with the management of organizational culture change may involve getting staff members to take on tasks and responsibilities that may not directly benefit them or the department managed by their...

Perfection is the enemy of the good


CRM systems and their functional components such as fundraising, ticket sales, communication with subscribers and other stakeholders, membership management, and case management are essential for the core operations of most non-profits. This can lead to a legitimate fear of project failure when changing them. However, this fear can easily create a perfectionist mentality, where the project team attempts to overcompensate by creating too much oversight, too much contingency planning, and too much project discovery time in an effort to avoid missing any potentially useful feature that could be integrated into the project. While planning is good, perfection may not be good, since perfection is often the enemy of the good.

CRM implementations risk erring on the side of what is known, somewhat tongue-in-cheek, as the MIT Approach. The MIT approach believes in, and attempts to design, construct, and deploy, the "Right Thing" right from the start. Its big-brain...

Development methodologies


Whatever approach your organization decides to take for developing and implementing its CRM strategy, it's usually good to have an agreed upon process and methodology. Your processes define the steps to be taken as you implement the project. Your methodology defines the rules for the process, that is, the methods to be used throughout the course of the project. The spirit of the problem solving approaches just reviewed can be seen in the Traditional Waterfall Development model and in the contrasting Iterative and Incremental Development model.

Note

Projects naturally change and evolve over time. You may find that you embrace one of these methodologies for initial implementation, and then migrate to a different method or mixed-method for maintenance and future development work. By no means should you feel restricted by the definitions provided, but rather adjust the principles to meet your changing needs throughout the course of the project. That being said, it's important...

Right-sizing the process


It's important to ensure that the process and methodology you adopt for your CRM initiative is appropriate to your organization's culture and size, the complexity of its existing systems, and the scale of your CRM effort. This goal of "right-sizing" the process to fit your needs is essential, both for you as the project manager/decision maker, and for any consultants you engage in the process. Besides having familiarity with your methodology of choice, the project team (organization leaders, staff, and consultants) should understand and appreciate how you have right-sized the project. For example, if you represent a small organization with two to five staff members, a volunteer board and committee structure, and 3,000 contact records, building too much structure and process into your project will impede efficient progress rather than helping it. You need enough structure to make sure that the project is well-defined, well-managed, effectively tested, and implemented...

Building the team


A critical factor in the success of your CRM initiative will be deciding who is on your strategy and implementation team. The size of the team will obviously vary between organizations; those with three staff members will have to do things differently than those with 300. While this section is oriented towards larger organizations, the principles apply to any size.

The implementation team includes the people who will play a direct role in the ongoing project development. Not everyone affected by the CRM initiative needs to be on this core team tasked with driving the strategy and implementation. A good working group seldom is larger than six to eight people, and very often, a smaller group can be more effective. What is most important is that this team should be representative of the different voices of the project—organization, leadership, end users, developers/implementers, important stakeholders, and so on.

Usually, it is immediately clear that the involvement and cooperation...

Getting started


At the beginning of a CRM project you'll need to do some planning, whether this means creating a feature backlog for the discovery phase of an Agile process, pre-planning for an iterative process, or the initial work in the planning phase for a Waterfall process. What planning you should do and when you do it will vary depending on the process adopted for your CRM project, the general management practices for approving and analyzing projects in your organization, and possibly the requirements of external funders such as foundations and other grant-giving organizations.

The following outline of preliminary activities includes some items that may not be required by less formal and less structured organizations. Even if, despite our advice to the contrary, you're treating your CRM project as limited exclusively to the technical implementation of one or more CiviCRM components like online donation processing, we'd encourage you to review this section for ways to make it a success...

Focusing on constituents and mission


Many non-profits have processes and activities with certain types of constituents that are analogous to those in the marketing and sales areas of for-profit business. Two metaphors that are common in the for-profit arena have crossover value for non-profits. The first one is a sales funnel, with a larger number of unqualified prospects needing to enter at the top, in order to have a smaller number of sales fallout at the bottom. The second one is the notion of a ladder of engagement, with contacts being classified according to how many steps they have taken, such as revealing more information about themselves, or increasing involvement on the path toward becoming a client, donor, or volunteer.

In both these metaphors, the overarching goal is to increase commitment and involvement. You want the casual newsletter recipient to eventually become a donor, the first-time event attendee to eventually become a member. Pushing deeper, or rather climbing higher...

Determining your needs


Depending on your process—Agile, or more traditional—you will determine your needs in a less or more formal way. Whatever your process, some approaches are always appropriate.

First of all, it's useful to review the functionality, data structures, and data in your existing systems. Functionality is the easiest to discuss. It provides a sense of the sets of fields—custom data and profiles in CiviCRM's terminology—that may be needed in the new system. When analyzing existing systems, don't be limited to your primary contact database alone. For example, if you use paper sign-up sheets at events or have other paper, e-mail, or web-based data collection forms that are not part of your primary system, be sure to include them in the discovery analysis. With data structures, you'll be able to start mapping out how to migrate data from the existing to the new system. As part of this, you'll be able to identify the custom fields that may be needed, and others that are no longer...

Functional requirements


In this section, we're going to delve more deeply into the functional areas supported by CiviCRM. We'll be reviewing the kinds of questions to ask, often of a more technical nature, that will help in planning your implementation.

Contact record management

CiviCRM has three basic types of contacts: Individuals, Households, and Organizations. The fields and kinds of relationships that can be created may vary by the type of contact. For example, individuals have first and last names, current employer and job title, while organizations have an organization name, a legal name, and current employees. CiviCRM's rich model for storing address, phone, and e-mail information is shared by all three types of contacts.

Contact subtypes

In some cases, it is possible to identify unique constituent subtypes that do not overlap with other types. Contact subtypes in CiviCRM extend the three basic contact types, allowing you to further segment your constituent records. A contact may only...

Implementation plan


After conducting interviews and soliciting input through surveys and other means with key users and stakeholders you should be in a good position to develop a phased implementation plan that schedules the delivery of chunks of functionality over the life of the CRM initiative. Depending on your process and methodology, you might start working on some easy low-hanging fruit with users in one area while the scope and requirements in other areas remain vaguely stated in a one-page plan. Alternatively, you might choose to have a multi-year plan with significant specifications for all phases in a set of documents.

In any case, your organization should recognize that its CRM initiative is not just a technology project. For each segment of constituents, the CRM plan should have a strategy targeting the number of constituents involved, the level of their involvement, the quality of their experience in the organization, and a clear sense of how this will help achieve the mission...

Summary


This chapter outlines how to create a successful CiviCRM implementation project.

It lists common barriers to the success of CRM initiatives that arise because of either people issues in an organization or technical issues getting systems and tools supporting disparate business functions that provide integrated functionality.

We advocate a pragmatic approach to implementing a CRM strategy for your organization. We encourage the adoption of a change in approach and associated processes and methodologies that works for your organization: wide ranges in the level of structure, formality, and planning all work in different organizations. Your implementation plan should include a schedule and a realistic budget including on-going costs.

Choosing the right people for your team is crucial to the success of the endeavor. Ideally you'll include an executive or board sponsor, one or more key functional managers, one or more key staff users, and appropriate technical expertise for your team, all...

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Key benefits

  • Build a CRM that conforms to your needs from the ground up with all of the features that you want
  • Develop an integrated online system that handles contacts, donations, event registration, bulk e-mailing, case management and other functions such as activity tracking, grants, reporting, and analytics
  • Integrate CiviCRM with Drupal and Joomla!
  • Build solutions from the ground up with the help of easy-to-understand steps from practical use-case scenarios.
  • Plan a constituency relationship management strategy with ladders of engagement that will improve how your organization realizes its mission

Description

CiviCRM is a web-based, open source CRM system, designed specifically to meet the needs of advocacy, non-profit and non-governmental organizations. Elected officials, professional/trade associations, political campaigns and parties, government agencies, and other similar organizations are among its growing number of enthusiastic users. This book shows you how to harness CiviCRM’s impressive array of possibilities as you develop and execute performance-critical CRM strategies. This book will help you become familiar with the structure and main functions of CiviCRM. It will guide you in developing and successfully implementing a CRM strategy for your organization using detailed explanations and practical examples. Using CiviCRM walks you through developing a CRM Implementation Plan that is suited to your organization's size, culture, and needs. Readers will take away many constituent relationship management best practices and the knowledge of how to implement them with CiviCRM. Benefits of Using CiviCRM will be felt across your organization, and help it better achieve its mission. Overall, your organization will interact with constituents more effectively and handle staff growth and transitions by tracking all contacts and interactions with them in a system shared across the organization. Gathering and analyzing data about your constituents and their interactions with your organization will better inform your decisions. If your organization fundraises, you’ll be able to raise more money and reduce costs by identifying qualified prospects for targeted fundraising initiatives. We show how to attract new prospects and convert them to donors using online, direct mail, telemarketing and direct contact channels Using CiviCRM. You’ll learn why and how to set up and then grow your monthly donor program, as well as improve the frequency, average donation amounts, and retention rates of your donor base. With this book you’ll be able to reduce the burden on administrative resources by providing online payments and self-service options for event registrations and membership renewals. You can increase the likelihood your existing subscribers will become more involved with your organization, ensure more of your members show up to volunteer, identify potential leaders and steward their volunteer activities Finally, you'll be making relevant information easily available that quantifies what a great job you've been doing, including the number of hours that volunteers gave to your organization last year, the number of cases managed, or the number of new viral signups from your latest urgent action e-mail.

Who is this book for?

This book is for project implementers, organization leaders, staff, and volunteers in advocacy, non-profit, and non-governmental organizations, elected officials, professional/trade associations, political campaigns and parties, government agencies, and other similar organizations who want to implement CiviCRM in a manner tailored to their organization's size, culture, and needs. It addresses CRM strategists, implementers, administrators, and end users looking to become power users in communicating, fundraising, managing events, memberships, grants, cases, and people-resource management.

What you will learn

  • Create a successful CiviCRM implementation project
  • Install and configure CiviCRM in Joomla! or Drupal, understand advanced configuration options, and review the upgrade process in detail
  • Get comfortable with the CiviCRM interface and understand the basic contact functionality and concepts to perform various contact records-related operations
  • Collect data, organize it, and import it into the system to ensure smooth functioning of your projects
  • Use CiviCRM to communicate efficiently and track case history with constituents.
  • Build an integrated system to solicit, retain, and manage your donors and members through robust management and reporting tools for administrators
  • Take advantage of the many CiviCRM tools for generating both simple and complex event structures and managing registrants through every phase of the project
  • Integrate the grant management process with your other constituent management activities, making your organization a more efficient and productive financial support provider
  • Make reports using the various templates to retrieve, display and analyze your data

Product Details

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Publication date : Feb 22, 2011
Length: 464 pages
Edition : 1st
Language : English
ISBN-13 : 9781849512275
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Length: 464 pages
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Language : English
ISBN-13 : 9781849512275
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CiviCRM LLC
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Concepts :
Tools :

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Table of Contents

13 Chapters
Achieving Your Mission with CiviCRM Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Planning Your CRM Implementation Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Installation, Configuration, and Maintenance Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
CiviCRM Basics: Moving through the System and Working with Contacts Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Collecting, Organizing, and Importing Data Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Communicating Better Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Fundraising: Money for Your Mission Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Growing Your Membership and Interacting with Members Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Managing Events Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Interacting with Constituents: Managing Cases Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Providing Support: Grant Management Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Telling Your Story: Building Reports Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Customization, Community, and Cooperation Chevron down icon Chevron up icon

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rjlang May 02, 2011
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In a nutshell: this is the book I really wish I'd had when we'd first set up our CiviCRM system. It would have saved us a huge amount of time that was wasted by going down paths that we'd later had to backtrack on. But, even better, although we've now been actively using CiviCRM for a few years, I still learned an enormous amount about this complex system by reading through _Using CiviCRM_; this book will _still_ save us a huge amount of time, but now I can appreciate it better!CiviCRM has its own online documentation, but that document, typical of open-source software documentation, is choppy, not always clear, and often seems written for someone who is already intimately familiar with the system. This book, on the other hand, is solid, comprehensive, and without "talking down" to the reader, pitches its explanations at those with not much familiarity. (That was certainly needed for me.)Many technical books about software fall into one of two bins of narrowness of approach: either they focus on technical minutiae without creating an overall worldview to fit those details into. Or they focus on a small number of test scenarios with limited overlap to other usages. _Using CiviCRM_ seems to strike the right balance, with plenty of technical detail and test scenarios to be sure, but throughout there is an emphasis on a high-level understanding of the general capabilities of the system and how it can be mapped to many different organizational needs.In a way, this book is not just a primer on CiviCRM itself; it is also a pretty good discussion of how to manage constituent relations for any nonprofit organization--and then, how CiviCRM can be incorporated into that management plan.One of the hardest jobs for a user setting up a CiviCRM system is figuring out how to map the organization's use cases to the software. CiviCRM is a complex system with many dependencies among its components: decisions you make early on can have far-ranging impacts in unforeseen ways down the road. The best strategy for minimizing future surprises is to understand as thoroughly as possible the "CiviCRM Way" of doing things; and the best way to do that would be, in my opinion, to read this book from cover to cover before doing anything else.
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Mari May 18, 2015
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Great bible for Drupal development with CiviCRM
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Trevor James Jun 16, 2011
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If you use the open source CiviCRM software, and integrate it with a Joomla or Drupal site, this book is for you! It's a brand new comprehensive guide to CiviCRM. Previous to this book the only formal manual on CiviCRM is the Floss manual published by the CiviCRM community and available via the Civicrm.org community Web site. This new book published by the Packt open source publishers is slated to become the definitive guide to CiviCRM.CiviCRM is open source CRM (constituent relationship management) software that can be used by non-profit or advocacy organization groups to keep track of memberships as well as any business that wants to track clients. You can use it as stand-alone software or as a plugin module for either the Joomla or Drupal content management systems. I've used CiviCRM on a number of Drupal powered Web sites and consistently impressed with the functionality the software gives you. Out of the box you can set up events and an event registration system; integrate this registration system with payment processing so your site visitors can register and pay for events on your site; add a membership sign up form; send your site's members renewal reminders and have rolling membership renewal set up automatically. You can collect donations to your site; send e-newsletters and more. Since the software is complex in terms of the functionality it offers, it's great news that we now have a manual to using CiviCRM. The Using CiviCRM book is long overdue and anyone interested in using the CiviCRM software will benefit from reading Using CiviCRM.The book contains 13 chapters. Chapter 1 introduces CiviCRM by defining what a CRM is and why you need one for your Web site. The chapter is lengthy in terms of introductory text content but definitely worth reading for background on CRMs and why you should choose CiviCRM - the authors argue for CiviCRM primarily due to its open source nature, cost savings to run it and its active and intense development cycle. A graph of the usage per CiviCRM version is provided to show you the overall growth of the software. Other visuals show the development life cycle in terms of patches and posts to the CiviCRM development community.Chapter 2 gets into the details of planning out the requirements for your CiviCRM project. Lots of good background on development cycles is provided here including explanations of iterative and agile processes and methodologies. The book's case study and example site is introduced in this chapter. Chapter 2 is also lengthy in terms of text based content and background but will be helpful to developers and project managers who are actively planning and orchestrating new CiviCRM based Web site projects. This chapter also introduces the CiviCRM components defining Events, Memberships, Grant Management, Fundraising, Activities, Case Management, and Roles & Permissions.Finally chapter 2 shows how CiviCRM integrates with popular open source CMS including Drupal and Joomla.Chapter 3 shows you how to install and configure CiviCRM. The importance of this book cannot be stressed enough but this chapter definitely shows strengths in terms of the details provided about installing per environment - there are specific instructions on how to install on a Joomla site, Drupal site, as a stand alone and with other 3rd party applications. The authors even include a Drush install process for installing the modules on a Drupal site using the Drush commands.Configuration is next. The authors show us how to add contacts to our database; send e-mails; setup online payment processor integration with Google Checkout, PayPal, Moneris, and many more. You'll learn how to customize your site's layouts and form templates and other components; how to sync your CiviCRM users with your CMS's users table, and set up role based permissions and access control for your member user accounts. CiviCRM Roles Sync module is described in detail and this will be helpful for any site manager who wants to keep their Drupal user accounts synced to the corresponding CiviCRM record for the user. There's a wealth of detailed information on setting up cron tasks to run - a whole 4-5 pages worth. This will help to keep your CiviCRM site updated and maintained automatically. Finally the chapter covers the upgrade process and the backup process.Chapter 4 goes into much more detail on handling your contact records in CiviCRM. You'll learn how to set up contact types, navigate contact fields and details. Detailed screenshots are provided and clear step-by-step instructions.Chapter 5 shows how you can extend the core CiviCRM contact fields by adding your own custom fields to collect more data for your contact records. Once you have custom fields you learn how to integrate these fields with custom profile forms on your CiviCRM site so you can collect membership, event and contribution data. The authors show you how to expose and show these custom forms on your Joomla and Drupal sites. You also learn how to import contact data into your CiviCRM contacts database via an external contact file, for example if you have existing data in an Excel CSV formatted file that you want to import.Chapter 6 shows you how to send e-mail newsletters to your contacts with CiviCRM using the CiviMail component of the software; and how to template these newsletters so they have a specific HTML based layout. Features such as printing address labels and printing PDF versions of letters to give to contacts at your events are also covered. Again, the authors give you a wealth of information on how to manage all aspects of your mailing initiatives and strategy.Chapter 7 covers fundraising, receiving contributions and pledges, in CiviCRM and will interest many readers and users of the CiviCRM software who want to add e-commerce and payment processing to their membership site. Configuration of payment processors and setting up a secure online transaction environment is discussed in detail. You also learn how to add a contribution widget to your site to make it easy for your users to contribute.Chapter 8 shows you some tips and tricks on growing your CiviCRM membership database over time. Chapter 9 gives you hands on tutorials on how to configure events and online event registration.Chapter 10 shows us one of the overlooked components of CiviCRM, case management. The chapter details case management and how to configure and manage cases in CiviCRM. Here you and your clients will learn how to set up specific cases and track events, fundraising, membership and contacts within your CiviCRM database through an entire case workflow.Chapter 11 shows us the CiviCRM grant management tools and how to set up and track grants and grant applications and their corresponding workflow.Finally chapter 12 will be a resource for any site administrator who needs to create detailed reports of all CiviCRM functionality explained in the earlier chapters. Here you learn how to craft detailed reports. Chapter 13 wraps up the book with a preview of future CiviCRM versions and an overall project roadmap.I commend the authors of Using CiviCRM for putting together a treasure trove of CiviCRM documentation and training. Anyone ready to get up to speed with CiviCRM (especially Joomla and Drupal users) should add this title to his or her technical manual library. It's well worth it.
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Joe McLaughlin Sep 29, 2015
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Very useful!
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Zelda1925 Oct 03, 2013
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Very useful resource for non-profit volunteers (e.g. me) and staff who are thinking about using CiviCRM.This book is now about 2 yrs old, but almost all the advice is still valid (Oct 2013)I found the CiviCRM online documentation quite good, but without practical tips and useful opinions which are offered in this book. Just being aware of the best way to implement a feature (and why the alternatives are sub-optimal) makes the book a worthwhile investment.
Amazon Verified review Amazon
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