Your to-do list is probably overwhelming right now. Campaigns to plan, content to create, audiences to engage, channels to manage. It never ends. But what if 20% of your efforts could generate 80% of your results?
The 80/20 rule isn't just a theory for nonprofits. This week, we're exploring how to identify your highest-impact marketing activities and double down on what's already working.
Organizations like Christian Relief Fund focused their scattered marketing efforts on one strategic approach and turned $4K in ad spend into $107K in donations. Meanwhile, new research shows that targeting life stages works better than chasing generational differences.
Most nonprofit marketers have endless to-do lists but limited time to execute. This Pareto board template from Notion helps you apply the 80/20 rule to your marketing tasks by identifying the vital few activities that drive most of your results. The visual drag-and-drop system lets you assess tasks by impact, evaluate time and effort required, and quickly see which 20% of your marketing efforts will generate 80% of your outcomes.
The 80/20 rule for nonprofits 📖
Does your team feel stretched thin, juggling dozens of priorities while making inches of progress? This playbook talks through how nonprofits can use CRM data to identify their highest-impact activities. Turns out, most organizations find that 20% of their donors provide 80% of revenue, 20% of volunteers contribute 80% of hours, and 20% of marketing efforts drive 80% of results.
The generation gap has closed. Has your strategy? 📖
Turns out Gen Z and Boomers differ by only 4 percentage points in why they use Facebook and Instagram. Tobes Kelley digs into research showing that life stage matters way more than age. For instance, someone buying a home shows higher purchase intent, whether they're 22 or 52. Forward-thinking nonprofits could get ahead by targeting life moments instead of birth years.
Where to spend your budget for maximum returns 📖
Tighter marketing budgets demand smarter resource allocation. Apply the 80/20 rule to identify which customer segments, content pieces, or channels drive most of your results. The hard part is having the discipline to invest heavily in what works while cutting back on everything else.
Christian Relief Fund was stuck doing what most nonprofits do: spreading efforts across print, direct mail, social media, and traditional campaigns without clear tracking. Director of Marketing Caleb Dansby knew they needed to focus on something that would move the needle.
Rather than doubling down on everything, they zeroed in on following potential sponsors digitally from the first website visit through to donation. The focused approach paid off big time: $107k in online donations from targeted digital ads.