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Published bySabrina French Modified over 9 years ago
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Learning from Obama: Redesigning Analytics
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In 2008, Obama campaign raised $750 million Would not be enough in 2012 The fundraising challenge Not impressed. $750 million?
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The fundraising challenge But fundraising was proving more difficult in 2012 than in 2008 President less available for fundraising events In early campaign, we saw average online donation was half of what it had been in 2008 We had to be smarter, and more innovative
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Overview A/B testing in Obama’s digital department Lessons learned Don’t trust your gut Foster a culture of testing Make it personal
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Winning with A/B Testing
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Example: Draft language
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What impact can testing have? versionSubject linedonorsmoney v1s1Hey263$17,646 v1s2Two things:268$18,830 v1s3Your turn276$22,380 v2s1Hey300$17,644 v2s2My opponent246$13,795 v2s3You decide222$27,185 v3s1Hey370$29,976 v3s2Last night307$16,945 v3s3Stand with me today381$25,881 v4s1Hey444$25,643 v4s2This is my last campaign369$24,759 v4s3[NAME]514$34,308 v5s1Hey353$22,190 v5s2 There won't be many more of these deadlines273$22,405 v5s3What you saw this week263$21,014 v6s1Hey363$25,689 v6s2Let's win.237$17,154 v6s3Midnight deadline352$23,244 Full send (in millions) $2.2 million additional revenue from sending best draft vs. worst, or $1.5 million additional from sending best vs. average Test sends
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Test every element After testing drafts and subject lines, we would split the remaining list and run additional tests Example: Unsubscribe language VariationRecipsUnsubs Unsubs per recipient Significant differences in unsubs per recipient 578,9941050.018%None 578,814790.014%Smaller than D4 578,620860.015%Smaller than D4 580,5071150.020%Larger than D3 and D4
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No, really. Test every element. We also were always running tests in the background via personalized content
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Then, keep testing Example: how much email should we send? +6 emails per week
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The results Campaign raised over one billion dollars Raised over half a billion dollars online Over 4 million Americans donated Recruited tens of thousands of volunteers, publicized thousands of events and rallies Did I mention raising >$500 million online? Conservatively, testing probably resulted in ~$200 million in additional revenue
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Lessons
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Don’t Trust Your Gut Lesson #1
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Don’t trust your gut We don’t have all the answers Conventional wisdom is often wrong Long-held best practices are often wrong You are not your audience There was this thing called the Email Derby… If even the experts are bad at predicting a winning message, it shows just how important testing is.
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Experiments: Ugly vs. Pretty We tried making our emails prettier That failed So we asked: what about ugly? Ugly yellow highlighting got us better results
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Foster a culture of testing Lesson #2
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The culture of testing Check your ego at the door Use every opportunity to test something Compare against yourself, not against your competitors or “the industry” Are you doing better this month than last month? Are you doing better than you would have otherwise?
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When in doubt, test In a culture of testing, all questions are answered empirically Example: With the ugly yellow highlighting, we worried about the novelty factor Maybe highlighting would only work for a short time before people started ignoring it (or being irritated by it). We decided to do a multi-stage test across three consecutive emails
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The ugly highlighting experiment Experimental design: Determined through this test that novelty was indeed a factor Group 1 Group 2 Group 3 Group 4 Group 5 Group 6 Group 7 Group 8 Group 1 Group 2 Group 3 Group 4 Group 5 Group 6 Group 7 Group 8 Group 1 Group 2 Group 3 Group 4 Group 5 Group 6 Group 7 Group 8 First Email Second EmailThird Email
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Use data to make the user experience more personal Lesson #3
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Big data ≠ big brother Testing allows you to listen to your user base Let them tell you what they like Whether through A/B testing or behavioral segmentation, optimization gives them a better experience Usually, the interactions that are the most human are the ones that win
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Be human! In general, we founds shorter, less formal emails and subject lines did best. Classic example: “Hey” When we dropped a mild curse word into a subject line, it usually won “Hell yes, I like Obamacare” “Let’s win the damn election” “Pretty damn cool”
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Good segmentation: behavioral Behavioral segmentation was much more effective than demographic segmentation Donor vs. non-donor High-dollar vs. low-dollar Volunteer status What issues do people say they care about? After using A/B tests to create a winning message, we could tweak it slightly for various behavioral groups and get better results
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Experiments: Personalization Adding “drop-in sentences” that reference people’s past behavior can increase conversion rates Example: asking recent donors for more money Added sentence significantly raised donation rate Confirmed in several similar experiments …it's going to take a lot more of us to match them. You stepped up recently to help out -- thank you. We all need to dig a little deeper if we're going to win, so I'm asking you to pitch in again. Will you donate $25 or more today? …it's going to take a lot more of us to match them. Will you donate $25 or more today?
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Conclusions
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Test everything, especially your gut instinct Foster a culture of testing Use data to make it personal
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