Getting Started with

401 North Michigan Avenue, Suite 2800

Chicago, Illinois 60611

312.372.4040


Welcome to Getting Started with DonorScape®. This guide will take you through the various features within the web-based DonorScape® portal.

Contents

Introduction 1

Planning Questions 1

Logging on to DonorScape® 2

Home 3

DonorScape® News and Updates 3

Current Account Status 3

Prospect Alerts 3

Navigation Tabs 4

Data Results 5

Active Prospect 5

Source of Entry Codes 5

View Prospect Details Button 5

Update Prospect Button 5

Remove Prospect Button 6

Summary Report 6

Tearsheet Report 6

Full Profile 6

DonorScape® Predictive Modeling Ratings 7

Major Gift Code 7

Annual Giving Code 7

Planned Giving Code 8

PRIZM® Cluster Code 8

Top Philanthropic PRIZM® Segments 9

Special Focus Indicator Code 10

Philanthropic Capacity Rating (PCR) Code 10

DonorScape® Capacity Ratings 11

Gift Capacity Rating and Estimate 11

Constituent List 12

Constituent List Table 12

Assigned Prospect Views 12

Match Quality Rating (MQR) Filter 12

Include Historical Matches 13

Sorting and Navigation 13

Quick Query 13

Select Query 13

How to Change the Active Prospect 14

Data Source Match Details 15

Prospect Match Drop-Down 15

Matched Elements 15

Change MQR 15

Prospect Match Statistics Summary 15

Match Details 15

Custom Query 16

Household Demographics 16

Who Knows Who? 17

Notes 17

Custom Ratings Calculator 17

Custom Report Builder 18

Comma-delimited Constituent List Export 18

Individual Prospect Report: Active Prospect Only 18

Individual Prospect Report: Constituent List 18

How to Create a List of Prospects 19

Search 20

New Prospect Search 20

Search Activity 20

Express Upload 20

Preferences 22

Manage Password 22

Contact Information 22

Match Preferences 22

Alert Settings 22

Administration 23

Create/Edit/Delete Users 23

Create/Edit Prospect Assignments 23

Add/Delete Queue 24

Client-Defined Fields 24

Batch Update 24

Match & Usage 25

Client Usage Report 25

Match Statistics Report 25

Export All Data 25

Support/Logoff 26

Support 26

Logoff 26

Appendix A: MSA Codes for Queries 27

Appendix B: Sample Reports 36

Summary Report 36

Full Profile 37

Appendix C: DonorScape® Wealth Screening Data Sources 41

Biographical Information 41

Hard-Asset Data 43

Philanthropic Activity 44

Names presented in GG+A DonorScape® training materials are from public records and bear no relationship to any GG+A client institutions. The names are appended with fictional giving and relationship data and are included for demonstration purposes only.

DonorScape® Online Support Resources – www.DonorScape.com

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Introduction

DonorScape®, brought to you by Grenzebach Glier and Associates, is a suite of prospect screening services especially designed for not-for-profit fundraising efforts. While many institutions across the world utilize the DonorScape® portal, each institution’s account is unique and secure.

Planning Questions

•  Who will be the DonorScape® Administrator for your organization?

•  Who will be the backup administrator?

•  Who will have direct access to DonorScape®?

–  What access rights will each person have?

–  How will non-research staff be trained on DonorScape®?

•  How much dedicated time is allocated for staff to work with the DonorScape® data?

•  What are the goals and priorities for your organization?

–  Funding priorities or program initiatives

–  Building major gift portfolios

–  Annual giving growth objectives

–  Planned giving opportunities

•  Do you plan to import the DonorScape® ratings into your fundraising system?

Logging on to DonorScape®

Logging on to DonorScape® is as simple as opening up your favorite web browser and entering the following http address:

https://www.my DonorScape.com

DonorScape® works best on Windows XP machines running the most up-to-date version of Internet Explorer, but also functions on Mozilla/Firefox, Safari, and Chrome browsers.

DonorScape® uses the same level of security and encryption as online banking and credit card transactions. Look for the secure and trusted site logos in the bottom right-hand corner of your screen.

Enter the Username and Password provided to you by either your Account Administrator or your Account Representative. Username and password are not case sensitive. If you are having problems logging on, please contact your Account Administrator or call DonorScape® support at (866) 378-8540.

Note: Your administrator does not have access to your password. If you have forgotten your password, you may reset it using the link provided below the login button.

Home

Upon successful log in, you will be taken to the DonorScape® home page.

DonorScape® News and Updates

Important announcements and updates regarding DonorScape® functionality are posted here. It is the first place to check for enhancements that have been developed to ensure that DONORSCAPE® continues to meet your needs.

Current Account Status

This box is available to Account Administrators only. Pending prospect requests, the number of searches remaining, and the date your account expires are displayed here for your convenience.

Prospect Alerts

The bottom portion of the home page displays alerts, informing the user about changes in prospect data. New Prospect Alerts are provided weekly for your assigned prospects. The Prospect Alert box displays the date of the alert, the type of new data, and the number of prospects for which that data is available. The “who?” link opens a box containing the names and match quality ratings of the newly available data for each individual. By clicking on “update,” you add all the new data matches to the record you have selected, and the updated record will appear on the Data Results tab. Once a prospect has been updated, the alert will disappear. Alerts stay active for one week.

Navigation Tabs

At the top of the home page you will see a series of tabs that allows you to navigate through the DonorScape® web site.

Data Results

The Data Results page contains all of the information for individual prospects. Viewing data and producing prospect reports are done from the Data Results page.

The upper portion of the Data Results page will display information for the active record. The lower portion contains a set of “sub-tabs” that provides different ways for you to access your data.

Active Prospect

The upper left portion of the Data Results page contains the name and address of the active prospect. The active prospect, by default, is the prospect listed at the top of your Constituent List (see below). Alternately, a new active prospect can be selected by clicking on that prospect’s name, state, or Gift Capacity Rating in the Constituent List. Additionally, the Active Prospect Box contains the prospect ID, source of entry, insert date, and last update date.

Source of Entry Codes

B = Batch performed by GG+A

E = Express Upload

S= Single Name Search

The upper left hand table contains the active prospect information. A number of functions are available via buttons in the bottom portion of the Active Prospect Box:

View Prospect Details Button

Clicking this button opens a new window containing all of the additional constituent information provided as part of the screening file. This includes, but is not limited to; spouse name, business details, constituent codes, and “client-defined fields.”

Update Prospect Button

Clicking this button will re-screen and update all available sources for this prospect. If no new information is available, a message is displayed indicating there is no new data. Updating will not reacquire data that has been manually removed by the user nor will it reset changes to match quality ratings.

Remove Prospect Button

Clicking this button will remove the prospect and all accompanying data from the database. Accounts that are set to require administrator approval will have the “remove prospect” request go into a queue awaiting administrator approval.

Note: Please check with your DonorScape® administrator to determine if you have access rights to request a prospect update, search, or removal. Some organizations decide to use the queue function available to review prospect update, search, and removal requests prior to submitting them to DonorScape® for screening or removal.

Summary Report

A single-page standardized report that provides basic information, ratings, and aggregated totals of the active prospect’s identified assets by data source. The report is generated and presented in Microsoft Word.

Tearsheet Report

The Tearsheet report, also created in Microsoft Word, contains greater detail than the Summary Report but is not fully comprehensive.

Full Profile

The Full Profile report contains all available data for the active prospect from each data source in a predefined Microsoft Word format.

DonorScape® Predictive Modeling Ratings

The upper right hand box contains the results from a DonorScape® predictive modeling screening. If a prospect has not gone through a predictive modeling screening, this section will not contain any values. DonorScape® Predictive Modeling Ratings are a result of the data modeling process provided on all of the prospects your organization submitted to GG+A.

Major Gift Code

The Major Gift Code is a scale “A” through “E,” with “A” rated prospects the strongest prospects for near-term major gift support. The Major Gift Code does not suggest any specific dollar value, rather a stronger or weaker propensity and financial capacity to make a major gift relative to the other members of your prospect pool.

Major Gift Code
A / Strongest
B
C
D
E / Weakest

Annual Giving Code

The Annual Giving Code rates prospects on an ascending numeric scale (1 through 6). This rating identifies the best prospects to target for an annual giving effort. Unlike the Major Gift Code, the Annual Giving Code does correspond to a suggested giving level.

Annual Giving Code / Potential Gift Range
1 / $5,000+
2 / $2,500 to $4,999
3 / $1,000 to $2,499
4 / $500 to $999
5 / $100 to $499
6 / Up to $100

Planned Giving Code

The Planned Giving Code, similar to the Major Gift Code, identifies those prospects with a strong capacity and disposition for a bequest or other deferred gift. Prospects are coded as “P” (Primary), “S” (Secondary), “T” (Tertiary), or “X” (Non-Prospect), with “P” being the highest level. Because of their affluence and neighborhood lifestyles, in addition to their ages, individuals coded as “P,” “S,” or “T” represent the best targets for deferred giving solicitation.

Planned Giving Code
P / Primary
S / Secondary
T / Tertiary
X / Non-Prospect

PRIZM® Cluster Code

The PRIZM® Lifestyle Segmentation is today’s most reliable and widely used consumer segmentation system. By segmenting residential areas according to ZIP + 6 postal geography, PRIZM® enables GG+A to precisely describe the lifestyles and socioeconomics of an individual’s household. There are 66 unique PRIZM® segments, coded 1 through 66. Each segment represents a unique set of socioeconomic behaviors and characteristics. Generally speaking, segment 1 (“Upper Crust”) is the most affluent, and as the segment number increases, the level of affluence decreases. GG+A has identified 7 segments that most strongly correlate with philanthropic giving (1, 2, 5, 6, 7, 9, and 10).

Top Philanthropic PRIZM® Segments

01 / Upper Crust / The nation's most exclusive address, Upper Crust is the wealthiest lifestyle in America—a haven for empty-nesting couples over 55 years old. No segment has a higher concentration of residents earning over $200,000 a year or possessing a postgraduate degree, and none has a more opulent standard of living.
02 / Blue Blood Estates / Blue Blood Estates is a family portrait of suburban wealth: a place of million-dollar homes and manicured lawns, high-end cars and exclusive private clubs. The nation's second-wealthiest lifestyle, it is characterized by married couples with children, college degrees, a significant percentage of Asian Americans, and six-figure incomes earned by business executives, managers, and professionals.
03 / Movers & Shakers / Movers & Shakers is home to America's up-and-coming business class: a wealthy suburban world of dual-income couples who are highly educated, typically between the ages of 35 and 54, often with children. Given its high percentage of executives and white-collar professionals, there's a decided business bent to this segment: Movers & Shakers rank number one for owning small businesses and having home offices.
05 / Country Squires / The wealthiest residents in exurban America live in Country Squires, an oasis for affluent Baby Boomers who've fled the city for the charms of small-town living. In their bucolic communities noted for their recently built homes on sprawling properties, the families of executives live in six-figure comfort. Country Squires enjoy country club sports like golf, tennis, and swimming as well as skiing, boating, and biking.
06 / Winner’s Circle / Among the wealthy suburban lifestyles, Winner's Circle is the youngest, a collection of mostly 25- to 34-year-old couples with large families in new-money subdivisions. Surrounding their homes are the signs of upscale living: recreational parks, golf courses, and upscale malls. With a median income of nearly $90,000, Winner's Circle residents are big spenders who like to travel, ski, go out to eat, shop at clothing boutiques, and take in a show.
07 / Money & Brains / The residents of Money & Brains seem to have it all: high incomes, advanced degrees, and sophisticated tastes to match their credentials. Many of these city dwellers, predominantly white with a high concentration of Asian Americans, are married couples with few children who live in fashionable homes on small, manicured lots.
09 / Big Fish, Small Pond / Older, upper-class, college-educated professionals, the members of Big Fish, Small Pond are often among the leading citizens of their small-town communities. These upscale, empty-nesting couples enjoy the trappings of success, belonging to country clubs, maintaining large investment portfolios, and spending freely on computer technology.
10 / Second City Elite / There's money to be found in the nation's smaller cities, and you're most likely to find it in Second City Elite. The residents of these satellite cities tend to be prosperous executives who decorate their $200,000 homes with multiple computers, large-screen TV sets, and an impressive collection of wines. With more than half holding college degrees, Second City Elite residents enjoy cultural activities—from reading books to attending theater and dance productions.

To learn more about PRIZM® segments go to http://www.claritas.com/MyBestSegments/Default.jsp

Special Focus Indicator Code

The Special Focus Indicator identifies prospects who have very strong indications of wealth yet have not significantly given to your institution. They can be considered low-risk and high-reward prospects and are coded as “NL” for “Nothing to Lose.”