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For Nonprofits, It’s Better to be Heard than to be Seen

September 17, 2015 by Dennis Fischman Leave a Comment

Touch your right eye.  Now, your left.eyeball

You have just put your finger on the most valuable commodity online.

Eyeballs are what you have.  Eyeballs are what the social media companies are selling.  Facebook is famous for selling you to brands, and now Twitter is getting into the act.  They will stick ads anywhere they can to offer more viewers to their advertisers.

That’s how they make money.

Nonprofit organizations have a different reason for being.  If you work at a nonprofit, you are trying to accomplish a mission.  Money may be a means to the end, but it is not an end in itself.

Nonprofits shouldn’t be in the eyeball business. We should aim to be heard.

We should be telling stories so well that people continue to hear them all day, inside their heads.  We should be getting our readers to talk about us with their friends.

One person who “gets it” because they read your blog, post, or tweet is worth a hundred who just saw it.

 

 

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It’s the Holiday Season Already

September 10, 2015 by Dennis Fischman Leave a Comment

shofar

Child blowing the shofar to mark Rosh Hashanah

Sending holiday greetings to your customers and community is a great way to let them know you’re thinking of them. But not everyone celebrates the same holidays.

This Sunday night, Jews begin the new year, with the Rosh Hashanah holiday. Ten days later comes Yom Kippur, the Day of Atonement, followed shortly by Sukkot and Simchat Torah.

Wiccans and other pagans celebrate the Autumnal Equinox (Mabon) on Monday, September 21.

Muslims in North America.mark Eid al-Adha on Wednesday evening, September 23, 2015.

And you thought the holiday season was in December!

Sending Greetings to Your Mailing List

How do you wish people well on their holidays when you may have Christians, Jews, pagans, Muslims, Hindus, Buddhists, and atheists on your list?

Ideally, you keep a record of which holiday each person on your list celebrates. Then, you send personalized email to each one.

(It helps a lot if your email list is in a database instead of a spreadsheet and if you use an email service provider like Constant Contact or MailChimp and not just Outlook or Gmail.)

If you haven’t kept records of which holidays are meaningful to which of your contacts, now would be a good time to start!

My Holiday Gift to You

While you are putting together those records, I’ll help you send holiday greetings to all. Here’s how: feel free to cut and paste the second, third, and fourth paragraphs of this message into your email and social media. Add these words: “To all our friends who celebrate these holidays, we send our warmest greetings.”

That’s it for now. Who’s looking forward to Groundhog’s Day?

 

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What a Toddler Taught Me about Communicating

September 8, 2015 by Dennis Fischman 4 Comments

toddlers communicate

What is she saying now?

My nineteen-month-old niece was crying as if her heart would break.

Her heart was fine, actually.  It was her grandfather’s heart that was cracked open for a triple bypass, in a hospital an hour away.  So her mother had gone to the hospital, and I was spending the day taking care of her.  Alone.

“Honey, what do you want?” I pleaded with her.  And I thought, “If only she could tell me what she’s thinking.”

But she could.  She did tell me.  And your audience is telling you too.  Look and listen to what they do online, and you will find out what they want.

How does a toddler tell you what she wants?

Pointing.  My niece knows the milk is in the refrigerator, the bananas are on the table, and the TV remote is on the couch.  If she points at the table, you know she wants to eat a banana.  If she hands you the remote, it’s time for Bubble Guppies or Sesame Street.

Your audience knows where to find what they want online.  If they’re visiting your website or social media pages often, there’s something there they want.  So, find out where they’re pointing!  The pages, posts, or tweets they visit will tell you what will keep them coming back again and again.

Making happy noises.  My niece laughs, squeals, and talks excitedly in full sentences in a language I don’t understand when something makes her happy.

Your audience likes, shares, retweets, or recommends the content they like the best.  So, listen to their communications with other people to find out what kind of content will keep them gurgling with delight.

Keeping to a routine.  My niece gets up around the same time each day.  Five hours later, it’s time for her nap.  If it’s around 2:00 or 3:00 in the afternoon and she’s rubbing her eyes, I know it’s time to take her to her crib.

Your audience is online at certain times more than others.  Find out their pattern and you’ll know when to post.  They like reading more serious articles at certain hours and they go for distraction at other hours.  Keep track of that and you”ll know what content you should post when.

Oh, my brother-in-law is fine.  Thanks for asking!  And my niece is adorable–and three years old now, with an infant brother.

So I’m back to communicating with my audience: you. I post to the blog on Monday, Tuesday, and Thursday, at times that you have shown me you’re online. And I hope this message brightened your day a bit. If so, make happy noises: share this post with a friend!

 

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