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When Multiple Photos are Better than One

February 4, 2019 by Dennis Fischman Leave a Comment

Thanks for coming along for the ride as I learn how to get more visual in nonprofit communications!

Let’s say you have a bunch of photos from a nonprofit event. How do you use them to tell your story?

Often, the best thing to do is to find just one photo, of one person, that says what you want to say. Your audience will focus in on one person better than two, three, or a hundred.

(That’s especially important when you’re trying to raise money. One story will win donations. Many? They’re likely to be forgotten.)

When is it better to use multiple photos? When you can combine them to tell a story.

What Makes a Story a Story?

A story is not just one darn thing after another. It’s not a timeline or a list of events.

A real story has a character you care about, who wants or needs something and can’t get it. They try and try. They get into trouble, and maybe they get help. And at last, you find out whether they succeed.

Here’s a very simple story about someone I care about. His name is Rocket J, and he’s a cat.

The Cat and the Closed Door

One morning, Rocket J wanted to go out. It was a very cold morning, and his concerned person, Dennis, thought that Rocket J would be better off inside. “No!” the cat said. “I want to go out!”

He came up to me with an earnest expression. He went over to the door. He turned round and round until his silly human finally got the idea and let him out. Then he ran to the street, just to show he could.

Indoors, his blonde brother, Sunshine, looked out the window quizzically. “I don’t think that was very bright of Rocky,” he said. “Look how cold it is out there! I’m just going to sit on the furniture and look out at the world.”

Your Visuals Can Do Better than Mine!

I took these photos on my iPhone, selected them, and uploaded them to Facebook with the comment, “Outdoor cat and indoor cat.” I’m not the world’s greatest photographer, as you can plainly see, but my Facebook audience loved the story.

Besides taking better photos, I know you can improve on what I did. You can:

  • Edit photos you have stored on your computer or phone.
  • Change the sequence, if you need to, so the action becomes more clear.
  • Pick the right number of photos so all of them are shown at one glance. (You can create an album on Facebook if you want to let your most interested viewers go look at them all.)

What are your  tips for better visual storytelling?

(They don’t have to involve cat pictures.)

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Going Visual

January 14, 2019 by Dennis Fischman Leave a Comment

picture worth 1000 words

I have a New Year’s resolution for 2019, and I’m going to need your help. Thanks in advance!

I’m a words person. I delight in finding the way to say it that will make an idea shimmer, dance, and sing.

I don’t even like watching video online. It takes so long! I could read an article in the time it takes you to introduce yourself on a video. But would I remember it as well?

Probably not–and what’s more, I am not my audience. You are. And all the research tells me that you are getting more visual online. When you see beautiful images, you stop and look. When you run into a cute video, you share it with your friends. YouTube is now the second biggest search engine precisely because nobody wants to “read the fucking manual”: we want to see how it’s done, right before our eyes.

I get it. So, my resolution for 2019 is to get more visual. I want to learn how to:

  • Take photos on my phone that you’ll love lo look at
  • Make and edit videos you’ll want to watch
  • Go live on Facebook, as John Haydon does to our great benefit
  • Use Instagram to tell stories
  • Create regular graphics, too. Because we all know a picture is worth a thousand words.

I’ll be telling you about what I learn, in a series of blog posts on Mondays. And I hope that over time, those posts will show, as well as tell. That’s the point: becoming visual!

Here’s where I’ll need your help. Where should I go to learn the tricks and techniques? What are your favorite tools for photos, videos, and images? What topics do you want to hear more about from me that would be better explored in pictures than in words?

Thanks for being awesome

 

 

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Message Monday: 10 Fan Favorite Posts of 2018

December 31, 2018 by Dennis Fischman Leave a Comment

Top 10Mondays on this blog, I publish posts about your nonprofit’s Message. They could be about Media, Marketing, or other Miscellaneous topics. (Do you sense a trend here?)

Behold, your favorite Monday posts in 2018.

Are You a Fundraising Outlaw? Registering your nonprofit for fundraising sends a positive message to your donors. (Guest post by James Gilmer)

DIY Prospect Research: 5 Must-Know Tools For Your Nonprofit (Guest post by Sarah Tedesco)

How to Talk about Your Nonprofit with a Complete Stranger More than an elevator pitch, I show you how to script a conversation that will feel completely natural (and let you assess the prospect while you talk).

What If Facebook Died Tomorrow? Are you taking care to build relationships on the media that YOU own?

Hiring a Communications Consultant? What to Look For Make sure you know what you’re getting for the time and money you invest.

Nonprofit Marketing: Communications with a Purpose! We all do marketing. Don’t let the word scare you away from doing it well.

How Your Nonprofit Can Listen like Austen, Write like Hemingway That means getting to know your audiences in depth so you can tell them what they most want to hear, in brief.

Self-Promoting Puffery, Technical Tripe, and Creative Crap Need I say more?

Don’t Worry about Facebook (More Than Before) There is no epidemic of cloned accounts. There is an epidemic of people wasting each other’s time and confusing one another by sending out these bogus messages!

Here’s Your Communications Strategy. Fill In the Blanks. Many things will change in nonprofit communications in 2019, but if you can answer seven questions, you’ll always stay ahead.

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