Book Image

Using CiviCRM

Book Image

Using CiviCRM

Overview of this book

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.
Table of Contents (21 chapters)
Using CiviCRM
Credits
Foreword
About the Authors
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

About the Reviewers

Alan Dixon has been helping non-profits with their contact databases since 1989. He works as an independent website developer, is based in Toronto, Canada, and has been building websites with CiviCRM since 2006. He maintains the site http://community.civicrm.ca.

David Geilhufe, born and raised in Silicon Valley, focuses on the intersection of technology and social change. He has founded non-profits and for-profits, built the operations of corporate citizenship organizations and private foundations, developed venture-funded enterprise software systems, brought together open source communities, and mentored at-risk youth into high-tech employment. He's always looking to create and execute a big idea that will do a little good for the world.

David currently runs http://netsuite.org/, NetSuite's corporate citizenship program focused on delivering an ultra-low-cost back office solution to charities and social enterprises worldwide.

Mohamed M. Hagag is a Unix/Linux system engineer with free open source software passion. He likes research and development on FOSS, and is working independently and with teams on FOSS R&D since 2004. His current and past employers are small and medium-scale companies working in the IT market in general with some level of UNIX/Linux specialization. Though he hasn't officially worked on any book, he has worked on translating some technical books to Arabic language.

Rico Landman is a web developer from Zwolle, the Netherlands. After working for several companies as a web developer, he started his own company Futurix. He mainly works with PHP and is a devoted open source partisan, excelling in the use of Magento, Drupal, vTiger, and so on.

In the last few years he has tended to seek cooperation with other open-source-oriented companies. Most of his projects reside under Simourix (co-owner) or Trinfinity, an international network of specialists working in the high-end Internet industry.

Eileen McNaughton lives in Wellington, New Zealand where she divides her time between CiviCRM consulting, accounts for the family automotive business, two pre-school super-heroes, and the occasional bit of sleep. She first became involved in CiviCRM while setting up online class registrations for Wellington Circus Trust (for which she is a Trustee) and has been involved in a number of CiviCRM and Drupal implementations for Fuzion since then. She has contributed numerous patches to the Core codebase including payment processors, a custom search, and enhancements to invoices. She has also been working on integration with Xero accounts package and a CiviCRM extension to the popular Drupal Migrate module.

She is a regular voice on the forums and CiviCRM blog, and is driving the Make-it-Happen initiative. She serves on the CiviCRM API and CiviAccounts team, appointments to which are an honor on some days, and bring the word "sucker" to mind on others. Eileen was part of the team that wrote the original CiviCRM Floss manual in the book sprint.