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Nonprofits, Start with the Experts Who Speak Your Language

July 11, 2016 by Dennis Fischman 1 Comment

So you’ve decided your nonprofit organization needs to improve its communications.  You go online looking for advice.  What do you find?  Most of what’s written about communications (outside of this blog!) is aimed at for-profit businesses.  And there’s a lot of it.  How do you sort through the advice available to find what you can use right away?

Here’s the secret: start with the experts who speak your language.

Speak the same language

Speak the same language

You’ll find there are three kinds of articles about marketing and communications:

  1. Some are written for businesses but could equally well apply to nonprofits, with just a little translation.
  2. Some articles assume that you’re in business to make money and that all your decisions (including what you do and whom you serve) will change as the market changes.  Reading these articles is like looking at yourself in a distorting mirror.  It will take time and effort to make a picture you can recognize, let alone gain advice you can use.
  3. Some articles are entirely concerned with for-profit business problems and solutions.

Discard the #3’s.  File the #2’s for later.  Start with the #1’s.

What does it sound like when a communications pro speaks your language?  For example, take a look at Ken Mueller’s article “The Importance of Telling and Retelling Your Story.”  It makes its point in straightforward English, without a lot of jargon: you need to make sure the image people have of your organization is the image you’d like them to have.

This is why it’s important for a business to tell its story online. And to keep telling it. Not only does it tell people who you are, but it also corrects misinformation and tells them who you aren’t. In fact, every blog post, every status update, every photo, and so on, is a part of telling your story.

Just insert “nonprofit” for “business,” and you’ll hear advice that applies to you.  Look for more advice like that.  It will save you time and grief.

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Independence Day 2016

July 4, 2016 by Dennis Fischman Leave a Comment

To many people, today is just July 4th.  In the U.S., it’s the capstone of a long weekend, and a day for picnics and fireworks.

Names matter, however. This holiday is not just a date on the calendar. The name of this national holiday is Independence Day.  It’s worth reflecting on the revolution it started.

The Revolutionary Meaning of Independence

The word “revolution” has been cheapened in the market.  Honestly, people: no car is revolutionary.  No mobile phone is revolutionary.

As Friedrich Engels wrote, a revolution is not a dinner party.

  • In the American Revolution, the colonists took on the responsibility of governing themselves.
  • During the French Revolution shortly afterwards, ordinary people said they could rule without a king or nobility.
  • Around the same time in Haiti, the revolutionaries proclaimed that black people did not have to rely on Europeans to run their country.

What these revolutions have in common is the assertion of independence.

Letting somebody else do our thinking for us is easy.  Coming together as opinionated and self-interested human beings and deciding what’s good for us all is hard.  But that public deliberation is what makes us free.

Let us not depend on cheap, easy cliches in our speech.  Let us seek real consensus and real solutions in our politics.  Ours: not the experts’ or the politicians’, the pundits’ or the corporations’ politics.  Ours.  It belongs to us, inalienably.

Happy Independence Day.

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Love Your Audience

June 20, 2016 by Dennis Fischman 5 Comments

Do you know what hurts me?Rabbi Levi Yitzhak of Berdichev in the Ukraine, used to say that he had discovered the meaning of love from a drunken peasant. The rabbi was visiting the owner of a tavern in the Polish countryside. As he walked in, he saw two peasants at a table. Both were gloriously in their cups. Arms around each other, they were protesting how much each loved the other.

Suddenly Ivan said to Peter; “Peter, tell me, what hurts me?”

Bleary-eyed, Peter looked at Ivan: “How do I know what hurts you?”

Ivan’s answer was swift: “If you don’t know what hurts me, how can you say you love me?”

Love your audience.  Know what hurts them.

Know what excites them, frightens them, makes them happy, makes them proud.  Know what they want and what they detest.

Love your audience and you will frame messages just for them.  They won’t read your messages if they don’t feel the love.

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