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A practical guide to fundraising reporting

We share a six-step guide to creating impactful fundraising reports, with a free template from fundraising platform iRaiser 

Bright-coloured toy building blocks arranged like a report bar chart on a plain blue background

The success of a charity fundraising strategy depends not only on upcoming campaigns, but also on the ability to analyse past ones.

 

In a context where digital channels are multiplying, acquisition costs are rising, and donors are constantly being solicited, the pressure on nonprofit teams is significant. 

 

Organisations are planning new campaigns, refining messaging, and testing new formats. But one essential step is often overlooked: taking the time to analyse past performance in a structured way.

 

Without clear reporting, it becomes difficult to understand how supporters actually engage, what drives online donations, and where to focus future fundraising efforts. This is particularly true in today’s environment, where multiple fundraising channels coexist and touchpoints are multiplying.

 

If you’re looking to better understand past campaign performance, don’t miss out this ready-to-use Excel reporting template. In six simple steps, not-for-profits can turn insights into clear priorities and strengthen their digital fundraising strategies over the long term.

 

Download the fundraising guide + Excel template

 

 

Why structured reporting matters in charity fundraising


Every campaign, whether it’s a fundraising event, a year-end appeal, or a peer-to-peer fundraising campaign, generates valuable data.

 

But too often, organisations analyse campaigns in isolation. They review results one by one without building a broader view of their online charity fundraising performance.

 

Structured reporting helps solve this by allowing you to:

  • Understand which actions truly generated revenue

  • Identify your most effective online fundraising channels

  • Track changes in donor numbers and average gift

  • Detect early warning signals (erosion, dependency on a single channel, seasonal peaks)

  • Define clear priorities for planning upcoming campaigns

In other words, reporting becomes a genuine strategic tool: it transforms isolated figures into actionable insights, moving beyond impressions (“this campaign seemed to work well”) to rely on objective data.

 

Over time, this approach strengthens not only performance, but also your ability to scale your fundraising efforts in a consistent and predictable way.

 

 

A practical reporting framework for nonprofits


This guide is designed to support nonprofit organisations at different stages of maturity.

 

Some teams already run advanced digital fundraising campaigns and rely on peer fundraising platforms, while others are just beginning to structure their data. This guide’s methodology adapts to both, following six simple steps.

 

 

Six steps to structure your fundraising reporting

 

This practical, step-by-step approach is designed to help busy teams quickly structure their reporting and turn insights into clear strategic actions.

 

1. Analysing overall performance

 

The first step of the guide encourages you to step back and measure total funds raised, changes compared to previous campaigns, number of active donors, average gift, the share of online donations in total fundraising, and more.

 

These indicators provide a consolidated view of performance. At this stage, the goal is not just to observe changes but to understand what drives them.

 

This overview also helps you reconnect with your initial objectives:

  • Did you aim to grow online fundraising?

  • Did you aim to increase recurring giving?

  • Did you launch new peer-to-peer campaigns?

Understanding the gap between goals and results is the foundation of any strong digital fundraising strategy.

2. Evaluating fundraising campaigns


Not all campaigns serve the same purpose: some are designed to acquire new donors, others aim to retain existing supporters or create engagement through community fundraising events.

 

In this second step, campaign-level reporting helps you understand:

  • Which campaigns drove the most revenue

  • Which ones attracted new donors

  • Which ones supported your long-term engagement strategy

  • Which formats (email, social, event fundraising) performed best

For example, a peer-to-peer campaign might not generate the highest revenue immediately, but it can create strong engagement through personal campaigns and expand your reach organically.

 

Similarly, a fundraising event may require more resources but offer a valuable fundraising opportunity to connect with your community.

 

The key is not to assess campaigns in isolation, but to understand their role within your overall fundraising efforts.

 

3. Understanding channel performance

 

Behind every donation, there is a journey: a supporter might discover your cause through social media, click on a campaign page, receive an email, and finally complete an online donation.

 

That’s why analysing your main fundraising channels is critical. Typical channels include:

  • Email

  • Social media

  • SEO

  • Paid advertising

  • Peer-to-peer fundraising

  • Fundraising events

This fundraising guide and its Excel template allow you to go beyond revenue per channel to analyse:

  • The fundraising channels strategic roles (acquisition, engagement, retention)

  • Their ROI

  • Their growth potential

This is especially important in a shifting fundraising landscape. For example, changes in social media advertising can directly impact your digital campaigns, forcing organisations to rethink their digital fundraising strategies.

 

By understanding your channels, you can better allocate resources and identify where your next fundraising opportunity lies.

 

4. Examining donation forms and payment methods

 

Donation forms and payment methods directly influence conversion. No matter how strong your campaign or messaging is, friction at this stage can significantly impact your ability to collect donations.

 

This step helps you track conversion rates, average gift, and payment methods, while identifying friction points and optimisation opportunities.

 

By highlighting areas for improvement, you can understand which technical adjustments on your forms or platform could increase fundraising performance.

 

5. Analysing donor segment dynamics

 

Focusing solely on total funds raised does not tell the full story. Segmenting your donor base allows you to see who contributed, how they engaged, and where retention and loyalty could be strengthened.

 

For organisations with structured data, analysis can go further:

  • Donor behaviour over time

  • Retention and warning signals

  • Donor value and priority segments for future campaigns

  • Engagement strategies to enhance loyalty and lifetime value

This section of the guide is more advanced and designed for organisations with access to structured donor data. It enables in-depth donor analysis to build a sustainable strategy based on relationship quality, not just acquisition.

 

6. Formalising strategic insights

 

Reporting only has value if it leads to action. In its final step, the guide summarises:

  • Key findings

  • Action priorities

  • Optimisations to test

  • Budget trade-offs to consider

When used effectively, reporting becomes a strategic management tool, turning insights into clear priorities for future campaigns.

 

 

How to use reports strategically

 

Time and resources are often limited in charity fundraising. That is why iRaiser’s fundraising guide and ready-to-use reporting template are designed to be:

  • Simple and progressive, with tabs organised by analysis level: essential, recommended, advanced

  • Adaptable to different levels of organisational maturity

  • Usable even with limited data

With the right structure and approach, reporting becomes much more than a retrospective exercise. It becomes a practical tool to guide decision-making and strengthen your overall fundraising strategy.

 

With this guide, reporting helps nonprofit organisations to:

  • Make informed decisions

  • Allocate resources more effectively 

  • Optimise campaign performance

  • Strengthen donor relationships 

  • Build a more sustainable, long-term fundraising strategy

That way, reporting becomes a central part of your fundraising approach, not just a review exercise. This practical guide helps you turn your charity’s data into clear, actionable steps you can apply to your next campaigns.

 

 

Download your fundraising reporting guide

 

With the right tools and structure, you can take control of your fundraising data and make more confident decisions for your next campaigns.

 

Download the iRaiser guide “Fundraising Reporting Template for Charities” and start structuring your reporting today.

 

Download the guide

 

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