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A Resource Guide for People Who Want to Help Neglected or Abandoned Pets

March 14, 2022 by Dennis Fischman Leave a Comment

A guest post by Elena Stewart, life coach

If you love animals, the thought of your four-legged friends being abandoned or neglected can be outright heart-breaking. However, you don’t have to sit back and let these things just happen. You can make a difference. This resource guide provides actionable tips for people who want to help pets in need.

Determine How You’re Going to Help Pets

 Come up with a concrete plan to inform a clear path of action.

  • Research animal charities and the work they do to get ideas for how you can help.
  • You might also conduct a community needs assessment to see what your local area needs in terms of animal care.
  • Once you have an idea, sketch out a business plan detailing things like your mission statement, required resources, and overhead costs.
  • Consider setting up a formal nonprofit entity to structure your support efforts.

Invest in the Resources You Need to Make a Change

You’ll likely need some supplies, which you can fund yourself or with the help of donations.

  • Make a list of all the possible startup and overhead expenses you can think of.
  • If you don’t have the money yourself, look to external sources to fund your startup.
  • Start by securing the basic facilities and equipment. For example, if you start an animal rescue, you’ll need accommodation.
  • You’ll also need manpower to run your nonprofit. Find like-minded volunteers who care as much about animals as you do.

 Gather Support by Spreading the Word About Your Efforts

By getting more people to support your cause, you can help more animals in need.

  • Create a website with information about what you do and how they can help.
  • Make business cards, pamphlets, flyers, and other printed materials to share with your community. There are free online tools that you can use for professional business card design and more.
  • Connect with other nonprofits in your area that serve animals, such as veterinarians or your local humane society, or ASPCA.
  • Work with communications professionals who specifically serve nonprofits to further raise awareness.

If you see animals in your community that could use a helping hand, don’t despair. You have the power to make a change. Trust the tips above to guide you as you figure out how to best help pets in need in your area.

 


Elena Stewart made the jump from a corporate job she wasn’t entirely happy with, to running her own business that gives her the financial freedom and flexible lifestyle she’s always wanted. As a life coach, she now gets the happiness of helping others get to the places that might seem out of reach.

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3 Ways to Make Your Volunteer Opportunities More Accessible

March 7, 2022 by Dennis Fischman Leave a Comment

A guest post by Shreya Tragad, Digital Marketing Specialist at InitLive

As a volunteer coordinator, you work to recruit and engage exceptional volunteers and encourage these individuals to stick with your organization. But are you doing everything you can to engage the widest possible audience?

One way to ensure your volunteer opportunities are truly open and inclusive to all community members is to make them more accessible. In this case, accessibility means your volunteer opportunities are open to everyone, regardless of their age, background, or ability.

Here are three ways to make your upcoming volunteer events more accessible:

  1. Take an individualized approach to accessibility.
  2. Diversify your recruitment efforts.
  3. Make volunteer opportunities more flexible.

1. Take an individualized approach to accessibility.

Accessibility doesn’t mean adopting one-size-fits-all solutions to attempt to make your opportunities inclusive for all. It means getting to know your volunteers on a deeper level to understand their personal barriers to participation and how you can help reduce or eliminate those barriers.

To ensure you don’t leave any volunteers out, send out surveys before your volunteer events or incorporate questions into your registration page that ask volunteers whether they’ll require certain accommodations. This will provide you with the information you need right from the start and also leaves a good first impression, showing your volunteers that you value offering everyone an equal chance to engage.

These are some of the common barriers your volunteers may face:

  • Time restrictions: Your volunteers may have full-time jobs or children to take care of. Consider offering evening shifts or a variety of shift options for those who have busy schedules.

 

  • Physical barriers: Certain volunteers may face physical barriers where they cannot stand for long periods of time and may require wheelchairs or other devices to assist with mobility. Consider planning volunteer tasks for them to participate in that don’t require physical work.

 

  • Language barriers: It’s important to remember that not every volunteer will be able to speak fluent English, which can cause some difficulty in participating. Try to incorporate different languages in your program, such as offering multilingual training materials.

 

  • Transportation barriers: Not every volunteer will have access to reliable transportation. Try offering a shuttle service or carpool program to offer everyone a chance to participate.

When your volunteers see that you’ve really thought about what barriers they may face and the right solutions to help them, they’ll feel more invested in your program and will be more inclined to continue engaging with your volunteer opportunities.

2. Diversify your recruitment efforts.

Reach out to new groups or audiences that you might not have connected with in the past. This includes individuals from all backgrounds, abilities, and ages. When you have a team of individuals from different backgrounds, it helps your organization become more creative and innovative. This will also allow new volunteers to feel more comfortable being a part of your organization when they see themselves reflected in your existing volunteer base.

Ensure your recruitment materials are accessible to all and reflect a diverse range of experiences. For example, your online registration page should feature accessibility best practices like using alternative text for images, ensuring sufficient contrast between the foreground and background, and avoiding flashing or strobing elements. Plus, your images should reflect the diversity of your volunteer base so that prospective volunteers can visualize themselves working with your organization.

Remember to craft your volunteer opportunity descriptions in a way that will attract a diverse group of candidates to avoid filtering down your volunteer options. For example, avoid saying “looking for young volunteers,” as it may exclude older, talented volunteers who are just as passionate about your cause. To have a diversified recruitment strategy, it’s important to have an inclusive approach right from the beginning of your volunteer management process.

3. Make volunteer opportunities more flexible.

Ensure your volunteer opportunities are flexible, as finding the free time to volunteer can often be a major barrier for supporters. Your volunteers may have busy schedules, which may prevent them from participating in your volunteer opportunities, even though they have the desire to. A great solution to this is offering flexible volunteer opportunities, including:

  • Micro-volunteer opportunities. This helps accommodate volunteers with busy schedules or childcare conflicts. For instance, if you’re planning a major event, consider offering shorter one-hour shifts so that your volunteers only have to take minimal time out of their days to participate.

 

  • Virtual opportunities. These opportunities allow volunteers to support your organization from home. This can open your volunteer opportunities to those with transportation or mobility restrictions. You can even engage your virtual volunteers to help support your digital fundraising campaigns, such as your crowdfunding campaigns.

 

  • A variety of volunteer roles within each shift. For instance, if you’re working on sprucing up your community garden, you might have some volunteers working on planting or weeding. You can have others take on less physical roles, such as logging your plant inventory in your virtual database or creating educational materials for visiting school groups.

 

The goal is to enhance your volunteer’s experience and allow everyone an equal opportunity to participate. To make your volunteer opportunities more flexible, adopt a well-rounded approach that’s most effective for your supporters.

 

Now that you’ve learned some of the ways to make your volunteer opportunities more accessible, it’s time to start planning! There’s no reason not to embrace accessibility and work to incorporate more inclusive elements into your volunteer program. Increasing the accessibility of your volunteer opportunities creates a more positive, engaging experience for all volunteers.

It all starts with understanding any restrictions your volunteers face and trying to overcome them by providing multiple solutions. Once you’ve got a handle on that, it’s all about providing ongoing support.

 


Shreya Tragad, InitLiveShreya Tragad, Digital Marketing Specialist at InitLive

Shreya is a creative content creator focusing on delivering information about the importance of volunteerism for nonprofit organizations. She is passionate about creating engaging content, writing, and graphic design to help viewers easily retain information. You can find her work at www.initlive.com or on Linkedin and Twitter.

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3 Strategies to Drive More Nonprofit Website Traffic

February 14, 2022 by Dennis Fischman Leave a Comment

Say you’re standing in line at a coffee shop, waiting to get a cappuccino. To kill the time, you strike up a conversation with a stranger about your nonprofit. You tell them about your mission and recent fundraising events, and before you go your separate ways, you direct them to your website for more information. That’s where you want them to go, right?

Your nonprofit’s website is one of your biggest assets. But for many organizations, the challenge of leveraging this asset comes from figuring out how to boost website traffic and get people to actually use your website as a resource.

So, aside from suggesting to strangers in coffee shops that they check your website out, how can you drive more nonprofit website traffic? Here are three strategies that can help:

  1. Create high-quality content.
  2. Employ SEO best practices.
  3. Integrate your website with social media.

With these tips and a website building tool created for nonprofits, you can direct more traffic to your website, cementing it as a great resource for your supporters to get information about and contribute to your cause.

1. Create high-quality content.

One of the most important things you can do to boost website traffic is to ensure that you’re posting high-quality content on your website. After all, you want to give your audience a good reason to visit it. And, according to Morweb’s guide to the best nonprofit websites, having great content on top of a solid website design will do the trick.

Here are some ways you can ensure that your content is high-quality:

  • Create a donor communications calendar that outlines the website content you want to publish.

 

  • Consistently publish on your blog to demonstrate that supporters can come to your website on a regular basis for fresh content.

 

  • Incorporate multimedia elements into your content such as images, videos, interactive graphics, and audio clips or podcasts.

Whatever content you choose to create, be consistent in developing and publishing it. Consistency will signal to your supporters that your organization is actively moving its mission forward and interacting with its community of supporters.

2. Employ SEO best practices.

Search engine optimization (SEO) is the process of creating website content that will help increase your visibility on search engine results pages. SEO can seem intimidating at first, but it’s actually pretty easy for anyone to improve their content’s rankings. Here are some actionable SEO best practices you can start using today:

  • Incorporate keywords into your content: Keywords are words or phrases that people type into search engines. Use relevant, non-competitive keywords throughout your content that will help you rank higher on search engine results pages.

 

  • Make your website accessible to everyone. In addition to helping you connect with more supporters, optimizing for accessibility can help improve your SEO rankings. Add alt text to graphics and images and provide captions and transcripts on videos so all users can interact with your content successfully.

 

  • Create useful meta tags. Meta titles are the titles that appear on a search engine’s results page. Similarly, meta descriptions are the text underneath the meta titles that inform a user (and a search engine) what your page is about. Make them specific and informative. Also, try to keep your titles under 60 characters and descriptions under 155 characters. Otherwise, Google might cut them off.

SEO may require you to take a few more steps in the content creation process, but in the end, implementing best practices will help you drive more website traffic as search engines will have the information they need to see your content is valuable to users and rank you higher on results pages.

3. Integrate your website with social media.

Connecting your nonprofit website with your social media profiles can create a stream of two-way traffic between these two tenets of your online presence. For example, if someone discovers your nonprofit through a Facebook post about an event, they might follow a link in that post to your nonprofit’s website.

Here are some ways to boost traffic between your social media and your site:

  • Share your website content on your social media profiles.
  • Include social media icons on each page of your website and encourage your website visitors to share those pages with their family and friends.
  • Add a live social media feed to your homepage so visitors can see you have an active social media presence and can click through to your profiles.

Getting your supporters moving between your social media profiles and your website will create a constant flow of traffic between them. This is also a great strategy for connecting with prospects you might not have had access to before, as you’ll be able to connect more easily with your supporters’ personal networks on social media platforms.

As driving nonprofit website traffic becomes a constant part of your marketing strategy, you can empower your nonprofit to raise awareness, welcome new supporters to your community, and pull in more donations.

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