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Nonprofits Can Do Better with Content Marketing

October 28, 2013 by Dennis Fischman 11 Comments

Give people information that matters to them and you will draw them closer to your cause.content marketing

This is the basic principle of content marketing.  It’s a natural approach for nonprofits to take.  Many of us know a lot about the issues we work on and the communities we serve.  We have stories to tell.  We have news people can use.  And it feels more respectful to us to engage our communities rather than to “sell” our programs.

So why are a lot of nonprofits who are trying this approach feeling stuck?

Three Stages on the Journey

In her excellent new book Content Marketing for Nonprofits, Kivi Leroux Miller says organizations typically go through three stages before they get content marketing right: Doing, Questioning, and Integrating.

Doing: We know we should be putting the word out, but we’re constantly scrambling to find things to say, or pictures to share.  It gets done at the last minute.  Nobody is in charge, so it feels like extra work to the people who do it–or one person is in charge, but he or she has to beg program staff for content to use.  We know how much we’re doing but not whether it makes a difference.

Questioning: We realize that it’s not about us–it’s about our participants and supporters.  We have started trying to find out what they want to hear/see/read, and to give them what they want.  We have a plan and a publication calendar.  We’re looking for more resources and training to do communications in a way that makes people want to support our agency.

Integrating: We listen to our community as much as we talk.  We bring what we know about our community back into every discussion about program, marketing, and fundraising.  We fund and staff communications, not only for short-term goals like the next event or fundraising appeal but for the long-term health of the organization.  We find the right message for the right audience at the right time.  People want to hear from us and engage us in conversations online and in person.

What It Takes to Move Forward

Which stage best describes your nonprofit organization?  Kivi thinks most of us are in the Questioning stage.  From my own experience, I’d say many smaller nonprofits are in the phase of “just do it” and only just beginning to recognize that there must be a better way.  The good news: yes, there is!

If you are interested in “engaging your community, becoming a favorite cause, and raising more money” (the subtitle of the book), then here are some steps I think you might want to take.

  1. Bring together the people within your organization who “get it.”  It doesn’t matter what department they’re in or what title they have.  As long as they can see things from the point of view of your key constituencies, they can help you reach those participants and supporters (and help them reach you!).
  2. Find a champion.  Someone whom everybody respects has to make content marketing a priority.
  3. Spend time.  Free staff from some of their other duties so they are getting paid to do this work.
  4. Seek funding.  Ask a foundation for a capacity-building grant, or ask a major donor or business to invest in your communications effort.
  5. Acquire expertise.  An outside consultant may be just the guide you need to move to the next stage.  If you are in a position to hire a Director of Communications, he or she can lead the organization.  Not do it all, but lead you in the right direction, so you don’t feel stuck any more.

 

Are you ready to move forward?  Can I help you?  Then please email me for an initial consultation: [email protected].

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Targeting Audiences is Out. Engage Your Community.

October 10, 2013 by Dennis Fischman 9 Comments

If you read the Communicate! blog regularly, you know that I have learned a lot from Kivi Leroux Miller.  That’s why when I opened her new book, Content Marketing for Nonprofits, I was stunned to see that the first section of the first chapter is entitled “The End of the Target Audience.”

What? Here I am, doing my best to persuade the groups I work with that they have to communicate with a specific audience in mind.  I say:

  • There’s no such thing as the general public. You’ve got to focus on a particular group and tailor your approach to them.
  • Just blogging, or being on Facebook or Twitter, won’t guarantee that anybody reads you–any more than opening a bank account guarantees that anybody makes donations.
  • Go where your audience is, and tell them what they want and need to learn.

Kivi knows this.  She taught me some of it.  So why “the end of the target audience”?

“Target” is the wrong word

Think about it: would you want to be somebody’s target?

Targeting means blasting a message at someone.  It may be the right message.  It may be a clever message.  It may be visually and emotionally appealing.  But it’s all still one-way.  It’s like hitting on someone you want to date.  Targeting is no way to build a relationship.

Instead of targeting a group, Kivi suggests we attract them.  Nonprofits should use our communications to make the people we want to reach, want to get to know us.  They should seek us out because we meet their needs and make them feel good about themselves.

“Audience” is the wrong word too

Audiences listen.  We want the people we reach to ACT.  If we succeed in making ours their favorite nonprofit, they will give up to two-thirds of their charitable donations to our organization.

More than that: they will endorse, advocate, join, volunteer, spread the word, and talk about the organization in unsolicited and unpredictable ways and places that make a bigger impact than anything we say about ourselves.  They will write and blog and tweet about us, becoming co-producers of the content we call our own.  Our most loyal supporters will get us other supporters we had no chance to reach on our own.

It’s a mental shift worth making.  Identifying the groups we want on our side is still vital.  But once we identify them, let’s work on engaging with them as a community. 

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Google Search is Changing. How Will It Affect YOU?

October 7, 2013 by Dennis Fischman 5 Comments

Google search has changed

Will Google find you?

If your organization is on the Internet, chances are you want people to find you.  Right?  They may buy your products, use your services, give you money, or volunteer their time…but only if they know you’re there.

Google Search is one of the ways people find you.  It’s also one of the ways they learn about you before they decide to trust you with their time or money.  But big changes have been happening in Google Search.  Unless you’re a particular kind of geek, you may not understand these changes or what they mean to you.

Have no worries!  Here are a few quick reads that will help you figure out what’s going on and how to keep people finding you online.

  • The Evolution of Search, by Danny Sullivan. How does search work, and how has it changed over time?
  • How Google is Forcing Your Content to Get Better, by Jay Baer.  Google is in business to give the searcher good results.  If you want the search to find you, post what people are looking to find.
  • 5 Reasons Blogging Is The New SEO, by Jason Clegg.  “Search Engine Optimization” (SEO) used to mean stuffing the most-searched terms into your posts.  Now there are fewer tricks to fool the search engines.  Good writing on interesting subjects will win.
  • Why Google’s Hummingbird Algorithm Is Perfect for Inbound Marketers, by Steve Haase. If you blog about topics your customers are interested in, Google will help you get found. 
  • How to Get Found: SEO and the Small Nonprofit, humbly submitted by me!  Why nonprofits with a tight budget should know your audience and build your relationships (on and off-line) and worry very little about SEO.

If you find these article useful, please pass this blog entry along to your friends.

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