RNLI and Euler
A 53.5% increase in email responses compared with the previous year
The RNLI is the charity that saves lives at sea. They provide an on call 24-hour lifeboat search and rescue service around the UK and Ireland, and a seasonal lifeguard service. Their lifesaving service is provided wherever possible by volunteers, generously supported by voluntary donations and legacies. Their volunteers and staff strive for excellence and are selfless, dependable, trustworthy and courageous. Although a major charity, they are community based and operate through local teams, centrally directed and resourced with no government funding. They have a proud history and tradition and have been saving lives over nearly two centuries. Overall fundraising at RNLI has been product based and driven by direct marketing activities.
Client
RNLI

Industry: Charity
Key Marketing Objective: Using FastStats to realign the charity around supporter journeys based on segmentation progression
Sector: charity
The Challenge
The Apteco Solution
The solution started with a piece of insight driven from FastStats and the new single supporter view (SSV). Working with Euler, the RNLI started to measure and score supporter engagement. A scorecard model was devised that measured all the touch-points and response from a supporter. This was more than transactional measures of products and donation levels, it measured online interaction, open rates of emails, volunteering, attendance at events, depth of information held on a supporter and their tenure and history.
Products: apteco-faststats
The RNLI now had a measure of supporter behaviour, a progression framework for supporter journeys and a basic understanding of who they were speaking to, but again, there was still a belief that there was a missing piece of the jigsaw and that was more in depth behaviour and motivations. The Insight team therefore engaged with the research team to produce sample selections from each of the 30 segments. They provided profile reports against the make-up of each segment and headline details of the breakdown of how they supported the RNLI. The research team were then asked to carry out primary research with these supporters about what made them tick, why did they support the RNLI, what would make them become more engaged and from this persona’s were built. The persona reports were carried out at 2 levels, an overall cluster level and then at a more detailed cluster by life stage segment. This extensive piece of work revolutionised RNLI’s understanding of their supporters. Now the RNLI had a full insight tool-kit to take to the marketing department. They could segment supporters based on engagement, behaviour and value and provide a description of what they looked like and what their motivations for supporting the charity were. They could provide journey paths where they wanted to take supporters and they could provide a profile breakdown of the products consumed in each cluster.
The impact on the business
The RNLI completed an entire restructure of the insight, research data, marketing and fundraising teams. This new structure looks at facilitating a supporter journey rather than forcing a supporter down a particular path. Clusters segmentation was first tested for the Christmas Appeal 2012 and delivered a 6% increase in response and income despite a 10% reduction in the campaign circulation which saved the RNLI £25,000. The appeal used the personas developed from the segments to create personalised and relevant content that was different to each target segment. It also concentrated on the channels that were relevant and used by each segment and used decision tree models to make selections within each segment. Following this success, Clusters segmentation was expanded for the summer campaign and delivered staggering results. The campaign allowed more supporters to be included with a greater execution of personalisation and messaging based on the segment profile and in doing so they delivered results of an increase of 53.5% in responders on the previous year which equated to a £285,756 increase in donations, a 9.28% response rate and a slight increase of 2.2% on average gift value.
