69 Articles match "Blog","Facebook","Photos"

The Latest from the Nonprofit Marketing Community

Wednesday, July 28, 2010
We’re all familiar with the knock-out Facebook pages, Twitter streams, flickr albums, and YouTube channels of large nonprofits who have become models in the use of social media to grow and engage supporters. So many Facebook pages regurgitate Twitter streams, and vice versa. CC photo credit/ minxlj. //. flickr/minxlj.
 
Tuesday, June 29, 2010
Often, transmedia stories are told in real-time , with the characters posting to their Twitter accounts, writing blog posts and creating YouTube videos. It was a fun, exciting idea, and I played along, startling my Twitter friends and posting to the blog on my account at the site. a movie, a graphic novel, an audiobook). So when a 6.1
 
Friday, June 4, 2010
It gets easy to post a photo. Look through your Twitter feed and Facebook postings. Look at your competitior’s website, Twitter, Facebook, blog, etc. This week’s quote comes from Joseph Yoo of Step by Step–a blogger I discovered through Andrew Conrad. But Jesus loves you.&# But what about you?”.
 

The Best from the Nonprofit Marketing Community

This photo is from dvs' Photostream. This spring, Facebook made some significant changes to the functionality of Pages on their site in order to help brands market more effectively. This has led to a lot of discussion and encouragement aimed at nonprofits about how to market via Facebook. communicate via Facebook. Cheers!
Since you can track how a visitor moves through your site , you can see whether a blog reader clicks on the “buy tickets” button, or takes a more circuitous path to making a purchase, or abandons the site altogether. It doesn’t matter if it’s a blog or a traditional web site; this is something you can track. Photo: Bashed.
For a friend who works for a wonderful, youth-engaging nonprofit, I am seeking examples of organizations that have sponsored a youth or teen blogging project. The projects could be based on blogging platforms such as Typepad , Blogger , Wordpress , and ExpressionEngine or social networks like MySpace and Facebook. quot;).
Is it the fact that people 35 years and older are the fastest growing group on Facebook? But the reason I think your arts organization should take Facebook more seriously is this emerging trend: More and more, people are using social networks like Facebook to aggregate all the rest of their online interactions. And a free PDF?
But what else makes a good nonprofit Twitter or Facebook update? Few Special Notes on Facebook. Include links, photos, or videos that fans might want to share. Watch for guest posts at Beth’s Blog and Have Fun – Do Good on Thursday. You know they have to be short. You want people to. DO Something.
Perspectives: 20 nonprofit & philanthropy blogs written by people of color. Say “cheese”: Free stock photos online. Is Facebook fundraising faltering ? Response from Beth’s Blog Response from A. Fine Blog Extreme fundraising : Endurance, blogging, and charity Are your ears burning?: Lost “Causes”?:
There are some business-oriented blogs that have a lot to offer people who market the arts, and I don’t mean that in the old “nonprofits should be more business-like” way. couldn’t find much in the way of arts management writing online (unlike today), so I read blogs meant for small businesses. Photo: keso. still do. Uh, no.
For this month’s Nonprofit Blog Carnival , Nancy Schwartz shares the path to year-end communications and fundraising success. It’s all being run through Facebook Causes this year, wrapping up November 6. Jeff Brooks, formerly of  Donor Power Blog , is now blogging at  Future Fundraising Now. Blogging.
Can blogging and other social media help you expand your audience? Creating a wildly popular blog with tons of subscribers and visitors seems like the thing to go for, yes? The truth is that your blog can help you develop your audience, but not overnight, and not indiscriminately. He has subscribed to your blog in Google Reader.
Titled Wave 4 (after three previous annual reports), this summary shows people world-wide using online social networks like Facebook and Orkut to consolidate their content creation, content sharing, and real-time communication. And that explosion of new Facebook members? Are these people who simply join and then never return?