Guessing games may be great for parties, but they’re not necessarily the best way to run your nonprofit inbound marketing efforts. Yet that’s what many marketers do when they create only a single version of a campaign, email or donation page. If you're trying to decide which copy, design, or CTA will get the most engagement for your nonprofit, this can be easily determined by A/B testing.
A/B testing, also called split-testing, allows you to compare one version of an email, donation page or campaign against another version of that same email, donation page or campaign. You present each version to a different group of audience members, with the winning version as the version that gets the better results.
Nonprofit A/B testing can help improve conversions, fine-tune your message, increase your impact and otherwise enhance your overall marketing efforts.
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Your initial task is to determine why you’re conducting the A/B testing in the first place. What are you trying to drive more of? Depending on the piece of content you’re testing, your goals could include everything from increasing email open rates to determining if your audience prefers drawings or photographs on your donation page.
The reason behind the test will guide you in setting up the test as well as calculating the results.
Just because you can test even the smallest changes in any given piece of content doesn’t mean you should. Rather than expending loads of effort on small changes that may only result in minute results, focus on bigger changes that can have a much bigger impact.
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A few quick best practices for nonprofit A/B testing include:
Nonprofit A/B testing is ideal to use to test two different versions of a campaign. Set up an entire campaign, complete with details that include duration, fundraising goal, headlines, images and body content.
Then duplicate the campaign, changing whatever key element you desire. Choices can include using two different headlines, images, CTAs, or donation options. Label your first campaign “A” and your second campaign “B.”
Divide your testing portion of your audience in half, and then send campaign A to one half of your test audience and campaign B to the other half. The two campaigns are going to run simultaneously until the finish.
Once the campaigns are complete, it’s time to analyze the data for each one to determine which was more successful in reaching the goal you established at the beginning of the test. Send the winning version to the remainder of your audience and watch the success roll in.
A/B testing is essential to determine what marketing resonates best with your audience. You can use nonprofit A/B testing and these tips to continuously improve your marketing to more consistently achieve your goals. For additional help with nonprofit A/B testing or other marketing strategies, contact LyntonWeb today.