Blog Gallery
Build lifelong relationships
Latest stories, guides, and benchmarks from the world of alumni relations, fundraising, donor engagement, advancement services, events, and higher-education philanthropy
The Almabase events module is meant to be the central place for you to get all information related to the event in one place. As an admin, you can pull a report of all the attendees or send an email to all of them at once and much more. However, we realized that many of you were not getting all of your registrations on the Almabase platform. A couple of registrations would always come in via phone or mail and they were typically being maintained in separate spreadsheets.
We realized how cumbersome this is for you and have now introduced an ability for you to add such registrations from the backend. Once you do, it is just as good as that user registering for the event by themselves.
You can “Add an Attendee” by clicking on that button from your admin interface.

Then just follow the instructions to pick the profile, the event, any payment instructions etc and save. As simple as that!

Pro Tip
If the person who you want to add is not on your database yet — so you don’t have a profile on the Almabase directory for that person, then you cannot use the above process since you cannot pick the profile. In this case, the recommended process is to open your event page on a new browser or “incognito mode” where you are not logged in to the website. Then just register as a guest with their details. This would then create their registration as a guest user but you would have them among the attendees.
We hope you find this addition useful to have all your event registration details in one centralized place rather than many different spreadsheets. Please do let us know what you think.

External Event Registrations
The Almabase events module is meant to be the central place for you to get all information related to the event in one place.
Product updates
With an exclusive window of 24 hours, a specific theme to motivate each donor to donate and a big goal to achieve, Giving days have changed for better now.
Having an exclusive Online platform has to be the way for a Giving Day.
A well planned Giving Day can lead to achieving fundraising goals, acquiring new donors, instilling the culture of giving in your constituents and much more, by transforming the experience of giving.
A Giving Day dedicated for fundraising has quickly become one of the most exciting fundraising vehicles for many educational institutions. However, not every Giving Day is successful. Many schools fail to achieve even 50 % of their set goal.
A look at a few unique factors around Giving Day will help us understand the need for a special consideration for a Giving Day platform from other forms of fundraising.
24 Hour Limited Time
1. Giving experience has to be a breeze. Shorter forms. Just a few clicks
2. The entire journey of giving should take less than a minute
3. An online platform should enable easy share on social media and to larger audience
A specific theme
1. Unlike a generic request for donation, a compelling theme with an exclusive treatment creates an emotional connection with donors that motivates them to donate immediately
2. A clear purpose increases participation as donors understand where their money is going and how it is going to be used, they tend to give more readily
3. The entire marketing of day becomes lot easier and thus gets special attention from your donors
Reaching larger audience in less time
1. Real-time analytics play a game-changing role in the success of a Giving Day
2. Peer to peer solicitation should be easy so that your donations can come from new networks
3. Gamification & Leaderboard features on an exclusive online platform transform the entire Giving experience
Understanding the importance for an exclusive online infrastructure is one aspect and choosing the right infrastructure is another. A few of the aspects that you should keep in mind are:

1. Mobile compatibility: Be mobile compatible, to give the donors the comfort to donate from their mobiles.
2. Peer-to-peer solicitation: Enable the Peer-to-peer solicitation for your donors to reach out to their network.
3. Ease of Giving: Make the most fundamental aspect “ Giving” very smooth and easy.
4. Gamification: Enable to display challenges and leaderboards to engage & encourage more participation.
5. Admin Dashboard: Display all the critical data for an Admin at one place & in the most effective way that leads to taking actions.
6. Push your valuable data to CRM: The donation data that you collected from your donors is precious. No manual effort should be needed to push that data to your CRM.
Needless to say, having an exclusive Giving Day Platform will boost your Goals. And a little spend on the right online platform has the power of multiplier effect on your team size and resources that can transform your entire campaign to a different level.
Looking for an in-depth understanding of each feature that you need on your Online Infrastructure?
Then do download our Ebook, A Comprehensive Guide to Planning a Giving Day for Schools & Universities, for free today, that answers all your questions.


Why should you opt for an exclusive online platform for a Giving Day?
A look at a few unique factors around Giving Day will help us understand the need for a special consideration for a Giving Day platform from other forms of fundraising.
Fundraising

Hey Calvin, could you share a bit about yourself?
Yeah. My name is Calvin Chuang. I have been working as the Executive Director of the Loma Linda University School of Medicine Alumni Association for a year. Prior to that I was working at the office as a documentary filmmaker. I got the opportunity to visit several countries. I did a documentary in Sierra Leone and Liberia on Ebola. I got to go to Africa a couple of times. And before that I owned my own production company back in Australia.
Could you tell a little more about how you transitioned from that sort of a role – to working for the Association - and then eventually into your current role as the executive director?
It's not a traditional change that most people have. I was actually out climbing Mount Kilimanjaro and I met this group of people who were from this city Loma Linda and had a great time with them. And they said you should come work for us, we're going to Loma Linda. I said “ You find me a job I'll come out there.” So long story short they found me a job in this alumni office doing documentary filmmaking. So here I came.
How did you transition from doing video productions to working closely with the alumni association as you do now?
I was working in the alumni association office and my boss retired and was looking for a replacement. And they brought in some people to interview and he asked me to be one of those people and because I had been working in the office for a while, so I knew the culture.Our office is very unique in that it is wholly run by the alumni themselves. The school actually doesn't own it. The alumni themselves actually fund and run the operation and it is because of that uniqueness and its unique culture, that they actually appointed me as the new executive director of the association.
So, what does your job look like nowadays? I mean it's probably quite different from what you were used to with video production. What does a typical day look like for you?
My typical day looks like a lot of meetings - more than I've ever had to do before. As we are our own 501(c)(3) non-profit, everything runs through boards and committees. So I'm sitting on a lot of committees and I sit and I discuss what they want to do and they give me my marching orders and I carry them out. So, that involves a lot of e-mails a lot of organizing a lot of event planning. And I try to bring in some of my old skills like graphic design promotion marketing as well into the role.
It's interesting how you are bringing your own unique approach to it. You've seen the association from an outsider's perspective and now you're running it. So if you are asked “what were the big changes that's been happening in alumni relations over the last few years?” What would those be?
Good question. I think I'll expand that even more to nonprofits in general. What we're seeing is that people don't support nonprofits as much as they used to. There is a sharp decline. If you look at the research there’s a sharp decline of support for nonprofits across the board. For alumni association that's even lesser support. Especially since you don't see a lot of (well we're not seeing a lot of) younger alumni support the organization. What we are seeing is that younger alumni love to support causes. They'll support the things like the ice bucket challenge - those kinds of things. But the actual organization behind it, they won't know - They want a cause to support.
So what we've noticed is that we've had to change our strategy. For the younger millennials who are passionate about causes - we can find causes for them to kind of sink their teeth into. While the older alumni still prefer supporting the association as it is.
How or where do you think all of this – technology, online communities, giving - fits in with the broader perspective?
It's actually been really interesting. This organization is approaching 100 years old. So it's gone through a lot of technological changes. In fact, not too long ago (probably about 15 years ago) I heard a previous employee say they were still using the typewriter in here. So it's gone through a big change. They've gone from typewriters to computers and now they're embracing the Internet and online activity. What it has helped us do, though, is to cut down the amount that we spend to mail out.
Earlier, we used a lot of mail outs, and now we're using a lot of emails - which has helped.
We're able to track the e-mails and see who has opened them. Their community - the platform itself - has allowed us to see who's active and to monitor their progress and for moving forward.
I think the big thing for us is that medical school which is the alumni association I belong to is a very unique course in which these guys go through four years of intense training together. So there's a certain bond there. Having a platform where they can all get reconnected with each other and keep those bonds alive - that's really helpful for us moving forward.
Another thing that you’re doing a great job of - is online fundraising. Where do you see online fundraising going, a few years down the line?
Online fundraising has been interesting as well. We've seen more recently that crowdsourcing is becoming more popular with communities. That really just helps people to say “OK we're going to get this”. And when they hit that goal - they're excited and then they want to get past that goal. We have some pretty ambitious donations or causes right now that we're trying to fill. And last week, we passed our student goal by 20 percent. So it's been really helpful just to see that money coming in.
That's really good to hear! So just one other question around that. You have said in the past that technology while it's great, it needs to kind of come together to amplify the human aspect as well. So, how do you move things in such a way?
Yeah, that's true. In the past and I think even today - technology is a tool. It's a tool that we use to try and build the community at the end of the day. As an alumni association, we are simply a community that is our product. If we don't have the community we don't have a product; we don't exist. So what we're doing with technology is basically “Trying to get people to interact with the technology to build that community”.
So, being able to contact classmates that they haven't seen is big. Then, we have a program for students to reach out to alumni. They do an interview at trial - so they reach out to fellow alumni in those cities to provide free accommodation. Those kinds of touch points and those kind of connections are what built our body as a community of medical alumni. So while knowledge is important, it helps facilitate that it's those connections that will actually help grow our relationship.
You're one of the people who has been with us as we grew as a company - you've been with us for a while now. So how has working with us changed your approach to your day to day work?
When we went looking for website companies and a database company online - we had very specific goals in mind and we had very specific requirements because we are a 501(c)(3).
One of those was tiered membership payments. What I really like working with Almabase is that actually they actually looked at our requirements and said “You know, our platform can do X, Y, Z but it can't do A, B, C”. So eventually they actually modified their platform to include A, B, C and is continually still providing and looking at ways that they can meet our specific requests.
Which we are really appreciative of - because being medical alumni we have very unique things like specialties like certifications things that other schools don't have.
But thankfully, Almabase has been able to structure their database so that we're able to capture that information. And that's information that gives us so much more value as an organization - because doctors often look for specific information - and we have that information now. So that's been great.
Glad we are able to help, so let's say someone was to call you up and ask you. “Hey, we’re checking out this company. What if I was to do business with them?” What would you tell them?
I'd say, look you're getting a lot of support. For a great value of money. You're getting people. It's like it's getting a team of professionals to do your work for what you would pay for an employee or much less than that. So why would you do the work? This kind of specialty work - when there's a team on the platform and there's great service available elsewhere?
So it's definitely I'd recommend them because it saves you headaches, and it gets things done quicker. Because the platform can do it quicker than what you can do it.
Everything is becoming more data-driven, and you're getting a lot of information end-to-end. With all of this, where do you see technology impacting alumni relations the most in the next say four to five years?
Good Question. I would say, from the perspective of this office, I can see technology benefiting us in making appropriate connections. Making appropriate connections not only for financial giving, to ask for the right amount of dollars if we do a fundraising campaign. But, to make appropriate connections when it comes to mentoring. To make appropriate connections when it comes to asking someone to essentially be on board for a specific cause.
Having that data, and being able to look at that data, and that history - will allow us to make more appropriate decisions.
Right now we're basing it off what we know, what someone else said, or what little information we have. Which isn't bad, but now we can actually look at the data and say this person on paper is good, let's get a few references and let's connect up.
That way, I think making appropriate connections will help us build a community that is stronger and more vibrant.
That’s great to hear! One of the best things that we like about the relationship that we have with LLUSMAA and you, in particular, is that we think in the same direction. It's great to hear that we're on the same page.
Yeah, I know. It's been fun working with you guys. Really! Thank you for your team and what you guys have been doing for us!

How a 100 year old Medical School is using Almabase's Engagement Cloud?
Calvin Chuang, Executive Director at LLUSMAA shares his experiences using Almabase's Alumni Engagement Cloud for his institution.
Product updates
Many schools and universities have found the Giving Day event to be a great approach to finding new donors and achieving their annual fundraising goals.For some schools, Giving Days seem to be working magically. Have you ever wondered why?
In our efforts to help and guide schools to plan and conduct their Giving Days successfully, we have written two e-books as part of Giving Day series.

Few of the questions we attempt to answer in these books:
1. Why Giving Days are Important?
2. How to set an Optimal Goal?
3. Why choosing a theme and a date are critical?
4. What all resources are needed to Plan a Giving Day?
5. What key features to look for in your Online Infrastructure for a Giving Day?
6. How to Market your Giving Day?
We hope that your Giving Day works remarkably well for your school’s goals too and that these e-books will help you develop a successful strategy that makes giving exciting for both your team and your donors.
Grab your free copy by reaching out to hello@almabase.com, today!
Make it Big! We wish you every success on your next Giving Day.

Introduction to Giving Day books
In our efforts to help and guide schools to plan and conduct their Giving Days successfully, we have written two e-books as part of Giving Day series.
Fundraising
Events are a key component of your alumni engagement strategy and Almabase supports all kinds of events — from a simple page where a user can RSVP in one click to a complex multi-day event like Homecoming.
We’re now introducing an ability for you to accept donations while users register for events. This is how it would work.
When you have a ticketed event, if you enable donations on it, users will see the option to add a gift along with choosing a ticket for the event. Users can choose from predefined amounts or enter a specific amount. Users can also choose exactly which campaign they want to support. These campaigns are automatically picked from the fundraising campaigns you have already listed on the platform so there is no additional maintenance required from you
The user then makes a single online payment that includes the tickets and the gift amount. On the admin panel, you will see an event registration as usual with the details of the gift associated with it. Also on the donations interface of the admin panel, you will see this new gift. When you export your event attendee list, this information is also provided there.
We have also provided for customization of the text displayed on this section. This is a feature that has to be enabled for each platform individually so if this seems like an interesting way to increase your gift participation, reach out to your customer success manager and they will help you out.
We’re excited to see how this helps. Please keep your feedback coming in!

Accept donations with event registrations
We’re now introducing an ability for you to accept donations while users register for events.
Product updates
Several alumni engage on your Almabase platform everyday. Knowing who is engaging and how is useful to take decisions on how to drive further engagement. It also provides interesting reasons to talk to specific alumni and build those relationships.
You always had the ability to lookup these kind of reports from data studio but we realized it would be better if we surfaced out these specific insights for you automatically. Wouldn’t it be so convenient if we delivered these reports to you every day? :-)
Introducing Daily Engagement Report

You will now start receiving an email every morning at 7 AM with a report of the users that were active on your Almabase platform yesterday. These are the segments you will see on this email:
1. Signed up yesterday — All the new users who signed up yesterday. You could use this list to verify those users, you could write them a personal note, you could give them a call and say “Hey, I noticed you signed up on the alumni website yesterday, how are you doing?”.
2. Users who updated their profiles — All the users who updated their profiles yesterday, so you can see the updated information. Users who are interested in keeping their information updated tend to be more engaged.
3. Users who registered to an event — If you have upcoming events, this email will give you a quick heads up on the registrations you are receiving.
4. Gifts — Users who made a gift on the platform yesterday will be shown up here. We recommend using this list as a reminder to write a personalized thank you note or maybe even a phone call.
But that's not all :) We've also included a section for all your members who are celebrating their birthdays or wedding anniversaries today. Go ahead and wish them personally.
If you are an admin of the Almabase platform, you will receive this email, on the email ID mentioned on your profile. If you haven’t received this email, please reach out to us and we’ll be able to include you.
As always, please do keep your feedback coming in. We’d love to know how you use this report everyday.

Daily Engagement Report
Several alumni engage on your almabase platform everyday. Knowing who is engaging and how is useful to take decisions on how to drive further engagement. It also provides interesting reasons to talk to specific alumni and build those relationships.
Product updates
Is sending out periodic e-mails to your alumni an important part of your job?
If yes, congratulations you are among the 46% of the schools who have recognized the need for engaging alumni over emails and newsletters.
Did you know?
61 % of all the communication with alumni is via e-mails.
But an alum on an average receives 16 e-mails in a year and there has been a 23.4 % increase in opt-outs of the communication.
What do all these stats point to? There is a clear room for improvement in this regard. In the age of too much information sending out e-mails that people love is a rare talent indeed. But don’t worry, we got your back.
In this post, we’ll cover some of the best practices for writing effective alumni emails that maximize your open rates and replies. When we're talking about creating an effective alumni message, there are 5 things that all the email tricks on the internet boil down to:
1. Find a reason to connect
2. Tell them why they should care
3. Bridge the gap
4. Give a clear CTA (Call-To-Action)
5. Write the subject
Let's take a deeper look at each of these.

1. CONTENT: Give your alumni/audience a reason to connect
Give your alumni a reason they should connect with you; a reason to care. There is no real easy way to do this. You really have to forget about your job, your school and your advancement goals for a moment, and really dive deep into what your alumni want. Keep in mind, you may not be able to take a one size fits all approach here. Your millennials segment may want something different from your GOLDS segment.
If you don't know the specifics of what your alumni want. You can start with some general survey data done in the past by numerous organizations.Here are some of the most common things alumni look forward to from their school/college.
1. News about recent events at the school
2. Stories on their fellow alums
3. Recent awards, recognition or achievements
4. A good blog post or shared content
5. General positive contribution to the community
A lot of first reactions to this list are, " Well, that doesn't seem like much!", but keep in mind that what you are trying to do is reinforce your mission to your constituents, showcase success and progress. If executed properly, this inevitably (though slowly) creates a vacuum, a fear of missing out from what is happening within the community - pushing more alumni to engage with your campaigns.
2. CAUSE: Tell them why they should care
A lot of people make the mistake of rambling on with email content, without mentioning why all of it matters. Be sure to clearly and concisely explain your value to your alumni. It’s not going to be easy, and will take a lot of iteration, tweaking, testing, and wordsmithing before you seem to get it right, but is tremendously powerful when you nail it.
Statistically, 83% of the Millennials give to, and 49% of them are willing to volunteer for a cause that they believe in.
Are you reinforcing your value well enough in a manner that your alumni can relate?
Something like “An opportunity to meet your favorite teachers “, would go a long way than “Click here to donate"
.jpeg)
3. CONNECT: Bridge the gap between your content and your cause
This is the heart of your email. Explain the reason for the content you picked in Step-1 and connect with how this is of value to your alumni.
This could be as short as a sentence, but no longer than four sentences.
Since the Avg. time people spend on reading an e-mail is 15-20 seconds, brevity is our best friend here.
Here is an example, “Your participation would help 20 more deserving students spend their best time here at the Regency Academy…"
At this point, you should have three things in your email: a reason to connect, a transition word or statement and more information on the reason you are emailing them today with your content.
4. CALL: Give a clear call-to-action
Don’t forget why you’re there in the first place. Did you just want your alumni to read your email and get back to whatever they were doing?
Prompt your reader to take an action with a Call-To-Action (CTA) at the end of the email.
Keep your CTA reasonable. Asking for donation, signing up on the new platform, registering for an event or volunteering opportunities are a few common CTAs. Make the hurdle as low as you can.
Lastly, there should only be one CTA in your email. The bottom line doesn't make it hard for them to say yes -- make it dead simple and easy.
Your CTA should be another one-liner like “Click here to confirm your presence at the Annual Gala.”
It is also important to note that more than one-third of your alumni may read emails on their phones, so make sure that your email is mobile-friendly.
5. CLOSE: Write the subject now!
It may seem counterintuitive to do this last, but the subject line is a reflection of the body content of the email, therefore should be written last. If you write the subject line first, you’re biasing the rest of the email and will risk overlooking important and relevant information by trying to conform your content to the subject line.
Since the goal of the subject line is to get the recipient to open the email and read the first sentence, you want your subject lines to reflect the content from step 1 - the reason you are reaching out today to connect.
It could go something like:
“St.Thomas Family welcomes you back ”
“Join us at the Regency Scholars Luncheon!”
Keep your subject line to seven words or fewer.
But, there's one more thing... Edits
At this point, you could step away from my email for a little bit and come back later with a fresh set of eyes. When you come back you can evaluate the email again over a checklist.
→ Is it personal? Emails that are obviously automated are immediately ignored. Remember, customization is not personalization.
→ Does it sound like a sales email? People love to give but hate to be sold to. At the first sign of an appeal, your reader is most likely to raise the fence.
→ Does the email have a natural flow to it? Stitching otherwise meaningful sentences may make up a confusing paragraph. One sentence should lead right into the next, and reading the email should be effortless. Also, be sure to write in a conversational tone.
→ Is it short, concise and to the point? After your first draft, cut it in ½. Then cut out another 20%. Remove extemporaneous words that don’t add to the message. Don’t use 15 words when 8 will do.
→ Does it offer value? This may seem obvious, but how many emails have you received that don’t offer any value?
→ Would I open it, read it and respond to it? Step into their shoes. Would I open the email? Would I feel compelled to respond?
→ Is it a truly thoughtful email with your Alumni in mind? Use the word “you” more than “I.” Have I made it obvious that I took the time to research my Alumni?
You can get really creative with the content of the email, but if you use this general outline, you'll be able to quickly and easily create effective emails that work. You'll see that most of the templates follow this relative structure.
Types of alumni outreach emails
Now that you know how to write some excellent emails, let’s take a refresher on the more common kinds of emails you are most likely to send out:
- Welcome emails: For new alumni joining the network.
- Event invitations: For reunions, webinars, and alumni gatherings.
- Fundraising appeals: Requests for donations or support for alumni-related projects.
- Newsletter updates: Regular updates on school events, alumni accomplishments, or news.
- Volunteering opportunities: Emails encouraging alumni to get involved or mentor current students.
- Survey or feedback requests: To collect insights on alumni engagement or program improvement.
- Milestone announcements: Celebrating important anniversaries or achievements of alumni or the institution.
- Alumni spotlights: Featuring the achievements or stories of individual alumni.
- Job or networking opportunities: Sharing career development resources or job openings.
- Alumni benefits or perks: Highlighting discounts, services, or exclusive offers available to alumni.
Examples of alumni outreach emails
Now, let’s look at a few solid templates that you can take inspiration from for your own emails:
1. Event invitation
Subject Line: “Join Us for the 2025 Alumni Homecoming Weekend!”
Dear [First Name],
As a valued member of the [University Name] Class of [Graduation Year], you’re invited to reconnect with classmates at our Homecoming Weekend from [Dates]. This year’s agenda includes:
- A keynote speech by [Notable Alumnus] on [Topic]
- Campus tours showcasing the new [Facility Name]
- Networking sessions in [Industry-Specific Groups]
RSVP by [Date] to secure your spot and enjoy early-bird pricing. We’d love to hear how [University Name] shaped your journey!
Best regards,
[Your Name]
Alumni Relations Office
[University Name]
2. Fundraising appeal
Subject Line: “Help Shape the Next Generation of [University Name] Leaders”
Dear [First Name],
Did you know 85% of current students rely on scholarships made possible by alumni like you? Your gift of [$50/$100/$500] directly funds:
- Merit-based scholarships for first-generation students
- Cutting-edge research labs in [Department Name]
- Campus sustainability initiatives
Click here to make a tax-deductible donation before [Fiscal Year-End Date]. Every contribution, no matter the size, makes a difference.
With gratitude,
[Your Name]
Advancement Team
[University Name]
3. Post-event follow-up
Subject Line: “Thank You for Attending [Event Name]!”
Dear [First Name],
On behalf of [University Name], thank you for joining us at [Event Name]. We hope you enjoyed [Keynote Speaker’s] insights and reconnecting with classmates.
Share your feedback via our survey to help us improve future events. As a token of appreciation, you’ll receive early access to [Upcoming Resource/Event].
Stay connected:
- Follow us on [Social Media Links]
- Save the date for [Next Event] on [Date]
Warm regards,
[Your Name]
Events Team
[University Name]
4. Mentorship program invitation
Subject Line: "Share Your Expertise: Join Our Alumni Mentorship Program"
Dear [First Name],
Your journey since graduating from [University Name] in [Year] with a degree in [Major] has been remarkable. Your work at [Company/Organization] exemplifies the kind of success we hope all our graduates achieve.
Would you consider sharing your professional insights with current students through our Alumni Mentorship Program? The commitment is flexible:
- Virtual mentoring sessions (1-2 hours monthly)
- Career panel participation (quarterly)
- Resume review opportunities (as your schedule permits)
Last year, 87% of student participants reported that alumni mentorship significantly influenced their career decisions. Your expertise in [Industry/Field] would be invaluable to students exploring similar paths.
Please complete our brief interest form by [Date] to join our mentor network. We'll match you with students based on your field and availability.
Warm regards,
[Your Name]
Alumni Relations Coordinator
[University Name]
Conclusion
Despite all the advice and templates we offer, your alumni are individuals with their motivations and concerns. Remember to personalize your overall outreach to give your alumni the value they deserve from each email you send out.
If you’re looking for a platform to power your outreach efforts and streamline your communications, do give us folks at Almabase a try! 🤗 ⬇️


How to write emails your alumni love?
Know the best practices for writing effective emails that maximize your open rates and replies. Read these 5 tips that all the email tricks on the internet boil down to.
Alumni Engagement
Over the last few weeks, most of you have seen and taken benefit of the Facebook engagement and Email engagement insights. Those were two cogs in the wheel as we try to present you more information about each alum to help you take data driven decisions. The remaining piece of the puzzle involved showing engagement with events, memberships, and gifts.
You can now view any member’s engagement across various verticals :
1. Email Engagement — Shows you which emails were opened, which links were clicked, etc.
2. Event Engagement — Shows you which events this member has registered to, how much they’ve paid for tickets, etc.
3. Gifts — Shows you the entire history of gifts from this member.
4. Memberships - Shows you the entire membership payment history
5. Facebook Engagement — Shows you all the reactions and comments of this member on your Facebook posts.



The key idea here is that with all this data in one place, visible against each member, you are able to quickly get a sense of their engagement with your institution. In order to make this simpler, we’ve also introduced an engagement snapshot on the profile which gives you a quick summary of the member’s overall engagement.

Pro Tips
1. Using Event Engagement, you can also see if a member tried to register to an event but didn’t complete it. It’s a great strategy to follow up with them and help them register. They’ve already shown you their intent.
2. Using Gifts insights, you can see if they have attempted to donate to a campaign but failed to complete it successfully. It is a neat way to close those donors that need just a little more push.
This is already enabled on your Almabase website, you just need to make sure your Facebook pages are connected, send emails to alumni, create events, and collect gifts on Almabase.
I hope this data is very useful for you. Please do let us know if you want to see any other data in the engagement snapshot, and as always, do reach out to us if you have any questions.

Engagement Snapshot
Over the last few weeks, most of you have seen and taken benefit of the Facebook engagement and Email engagement insights. Those were two cogs in the wheel as we try to present you more information about each alum to help you take data driven decisions. The remaining piece of the puzzle involved showing engagement with events, memberships, and gifts.
Product updates
See how leading institutions put these ideas into action




































