Skip navigation
Blog

2 approaches to improve fundraiser performance metrics

February 25, 2019

In our 2016 study Making Meaning of Metrics, we concluded that there is no such thing as “magic metrics” when it comes to performance management schemes for major gift officers (MGOs). Formal metrics should only be selected with your advancement shop’s culture, prospect base, and other variables in mind. It is ill-advised to respond to shop performance by piling on reflexive metrics in a reactive way. Metrics should also vary across individuals or teams to account for differences in fundraising experience, portfolio size, and as the MGO’s additional responsibilities.

Advancement leaders must be flexible with the metrics they use for MGO performance management. We know from experience that MGOs, especially those who are new to an organization, will become more productive over the long term if they work under a stable set of expectations. Changing metrics frequently may cause confusion and unintended outcomes.

To ensure a smooth transition to robust performance metrics for your shop, we recommend the following two approaches:

  1. Shop-wide trial period: Introduce new metrics in conjunction with the introduction of new data reporting or tracking processes. Offer to put the metrics into place on a one-year trial basis where the metrics are reported but staff are not evaluated on them. The trial period can allow for feedback on how metrics affect fundraising behavior, and the newly-tracked data can help establish more accurate target levels.
  2. New-hire trial period: After introducing MGO candidates to performance metrics during the hiring process, consider offering a one-year trial period where metrics are tracked but do not impact performance evaluation. This provides an opportunity for new fundraisers to onboard and acclimate to the new role without the pressure that formal metrics carry.

Team Goals

Pros

  • Collaboration always prominent
  • Information sharing constant
  • Activity of supporting staff increased
  • Office culture highly positive
  • Donor interests always of paramount importance

Cons

  • Jobs tend to become ill-defined
  • Staff has difficulty prioritizing activities
  • Little incentive for individuals to outperform
  • Individual accountability difficult to measure
  • Underperformers can hurt team’s morale

Considerations
– Consistent managerial oversight necessary
– Managerial span of control limited
– Employees must embrace spirit of collaboration
– More staff will have personal stake in outcome of MGO candidates interviews

Individual Goals

Pros

  • Roles more clearly defined
  • Sense of control over own performance
  • Useful as a guide to plan time
  • Awareness of appropriate performance level
  • Awareness of success
  • Sense of fair evaluation
  • Ability to refuse non-MGO work

Cons

  • Reduced flexibility
  • Risk that goals will be hit in dysfunctional manner
  • Short-term view promoted at expense of long-term horizon
  • Target levels may be difficult to set correctly
  • Target levels may become ceiling instead of floor

Considerations
– Goal implementation typically leads to debates about definition and credit
– Goals can promote negative behaviors
– Fewer goals better than more goals
– Goals should not be changed often

MGO performance metrics can take on different shapes and sizes. They can be individual or team-based, have numerical thresholds or ratios, or be dollar-based or point-based. For example, Northern Arizona University used the proposal close probability to estimate dollar goals and Freed-Hardeman University adapted a points-based system from a local TV station. Advancement leaders must decide which incentive scheme makes sense for their organizations given their team culture, donor base, and other factors.

Perhaps the single most important factor for the success of a metrics system was not the system itself, but its level of staff buy-in. To achieve optimal staff buy-in, advancement leaders should consider gradually acclimating their fundraisers to an environment characterized by formal metrics.

By thoughtfully aligning MGO performance metrics to the division’s strategy, providing flexibility for unique cultures and individual profiles, and committing to a system for the long term, development leaders will begin to see a measurable rise in the productivity and efficiency of their fundraisers.

Additional resources on major gift officers

Fundraisers’ recent successes at the top of the giving pyramid have had an unexpected consequence: the ranks of pipeline donors have grown thin. Discover how to invest in pipeline donors and create a sustainable fundraising strategy through major gifts.

Eight tools to help you design a tailored onboarding program to help new hires gain the skills necessary for success and increase long-term MGO retention rates.

Join representatives from Royall & Company for a 30-minute webconference, "Pathway to Major Gifts: How Investing in Young Alumni and Annual Giving Pays Dividends." In this session, you'll discover the quantifiable relationship between annual giving and major gifts.

More Blogs

Blog

EAB survey confirms higher ed advancement talent crisis

Without a fully staffed shop, chief advancement officers risk not meeting yearly fundraising goals at a time of…
Advancement Blog
Blog

Why you should invest in holistic talent reviews

Learn how focusing on talent reviews rather than performance evaluation can help direct managers to provide strategic, employee-focused…
Image from /wp-content/themes/eab/src/images/card-placeholder.gif
Blog

6 ways to connect metrics with incentives and boost fundraiser performance

Learn how to use metrics to incentivize your fundraisers to improve their performance.