1687 Articles match "Organization","Work"

The Latest from the Nonprofit Marketing Community

Thursday, July 29, 2010
Perez said marketing used to work like this: A company would think it had an offering that was so important, people would come looking for it - and buy it. Marketing in this way permeates an entire organization, because it fuels product development, not just promotion. Old school. Modern marketing. What do your donors want?
 
Thursday, July 29, 2010
Steel swords will never work. It’s not like dropping LBM activities from your social media portfolio will save you 10 hours a week of work. Of all the social media tools my organization uses, LBM requires the least amount of work. Few users. Mostly male. Educated and influential among friends and family.
 
Wednesday, July 28, 2010
love keeping track of what they’re doing…thanks in part to Beth Kanter and others who share these organizations’ experiments and growing wisdom with us. Content freshness is a well known value by now; most organizations try to tweet and update often. flickr/minxlj. I’m also a little worried. My, me, mine.
 

The Best from the Nonprofit Marketing Community

And if you’re not in an arts organization, can you take these lessons and apply them to your own nonprofit? fundraising realtime web social media allison fine arts chronicle for philanthropy museum nina simon participatory museum rob stein social media for arts organizations The Wing Asian Museum, Seattle. love this! Behold.
This is a great way to raise the profile in a small way of your organization. Tags: Working For You As you’ve probably noticed this month I’ve been promoting a nonprofit, The Wellspring Foundation encouraging people to help a school in Rwanda. The URL that you’d like me to use. The duration of your campaign.
quot; Simple and powerful, Twitter is a must for nonprofit organizations. Those nonprofits who are most successful at utilizing social networking Web sites like Twitter, Facebook, and MySpace know from trial, error, and experience that a “marketing and development approach” on social networking sites does not work. Have personality.
Blogging allows you to share stories about your organization’s successes on a regular basis. Searching for stories for a regular blog provides you with regular content to use in other areas of your work. And you will provide your donors a method to communicate with the organization. Why not? What’s holding you back?
Have they received your letter of inquiry and responded that your organization may apply for their grant? Again, you'll be dealing with a good number of organizations that you'll have to manage information for. For instance, if your office works on Microsoft software create a grant work tracking spreadsheet in either Excel or Access.
After graduate school, from experience I'd had with small town local organizations, I saw that the most effective public administration, protection, education, and the most dedicated care for any resource, cause, or project occurred at the local level. was intrigued by grassroots work. You'll get to learn about the work and cause.
In my experience, enewsletters don't really work. Print newsletters, by the way, still work very, very well for most organizations.) If you have an e-newsletter, pay attention to this article in Third Sector Online, a UK publication for charities: Charity email newsletters 'a waste of time', says Obama strategist. He's right.
The fact in itself that NWF is asking for help (and people like to be asked to help, it makes them feel involved), is going to make its network feel more involved with the organization. Nothing's more vital to your org's health than constant interaction with your base to ensure that your marketing, programming, etc. So it's a real home run.
Consultant Debbie Stewart (Stewart Communications, Prescott AZ) offers this referral to the grantwriting officer seeking help fielding multiple, miscellaneous requests from program staff in his own organization. Maryn Boess of JustGrants!Arizona These worksheets look really, really useful.
Nonprofits, like any other business, have either had a website for X number of years (if they can afford to) or have done what they can (free options such as blogs, social networking, listing your organization on donation portals, etc. There are questions as to what is effective and what is not working, (e.g. are great).