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Amplify Your Voice: Getting Started With Google Ad Grants

June 6, 2023 by Dennis Fischman Leave a Comment

A guest post by Jessica King of Getting Attention

Nonprofit marketers at small nonprofits have to make every penny count, especially when up against big-name organizations with established brand awareness. One of the most cost-effective ways to garner attention is by building an online presence. A strong digital presence can go a long way in making a name for your organization and establishing a pipeline of motivated supporters.

Google offers free access to its advertising platform to nonprofits. The program — known as the Google Ad Grants program — is designed to help nonprofits amplify the most important pages that will push their missions forward. By applying, you’ll receive $10,000 monthly to spend on Google search ads.

With some work, you can make powerful strides in different areas of your daily operations — whether focused on fundraising, volunteerism, advocacy, or something else. To help, we’ll offer practical tips for getting started with Google Ad Grants by answering these questions:

  • What Content Can My Nonprofit Promote?
  • How Can I Maximize Google Ad Results?
  • How Do I Apply For the Program?

$10,000 a month can make an astounding impact on any cause, especially those operating on limited budgets. Through thoughtful nonprofit marketing, you can maximize your resources and drive more support for your nonprofit.

What Content Can My Nonprofit Promote With The Google Ad Grant?

The Google Ad Grant can supercharge your digital presence and maximize supporter engagement. However, experiencing those wonderful benefits means you must amplify the right content with your ads. Center each campaign around a specific area of your mission, whether you want to increase volunteer registrations, raise more donations, or secure new members.

While great for advancing any area of your work, the Google Ad Grant is most often used to promote pages related to fundraising, events, and volunteering. Getting Attention’s ultimate Google Ad Grant guide delves into these use cases for the grant:

  • Increase fundraising and memberships by sharing your online donation form, member registration form, current campaigns, and sponsorship opportunities.
  • Share upcoming events to increase attendance.
  • Boost volunteer registration forms and other volunteer content to strengthen recruitment and retention.
  • Provide details about your organization’s services to spread mission awareness.
  • Amplify advocacy activities such as online petitions and advocacy events.
  • Promote educational content to educate users about your cause.

Remember, any content you promote should directly impact your mission, so go beyond choosing your nonprofit’s homepage. After all, Google enforces a series of compliance requirements for Ad Grant recipients, one of them being driving meaningful conversions. Stick to one of the options above, and you’ll be set.

How Can I Maximize Google Ad Results?

$10,000 in free advertising credits is a substantial amount of money that can have an even more substantial impact on your cause. Instead of crossing your fingers and hoping for the best, put some thought into your Google Grant management approach.

Some easy ways you can optimize your budget include the following:

  • Write an attention-grabbing ad. Ensure your ads are persuasive and concisely summarize your case for support. Start with an eye-catching headline related to the search query, and use your description to provide more details about how users can help. Don’t forget to include a call to action, or CTA, calling people to donate, volunteer, or take another step.
  • Target the right keywords. Your keywords are just as important as the ads themselves. Choose high-value keywords that prospects might search to find your mission. Whichever ones you choose should be connected to your cause instead of being generic like “donate to a charity.”
  • Optimize your landing pages. When your ad inspires someone, they’ll click through to your landing page. Direct them to a page that is equally as inspiring and meets their search intent. Start by choosing one that serves a specific role in advancing your mission. Then, organize your content into sections, don’t clutter the page with unnecessary details, include keywords to indicate relevance, and feature impactful videos or images to capture attention.

Let’s take a look at a quick example. Let’s say you’re fundraising for a youth shelter. You might target terms like “donate to a youth shelter” and “youth homelessness support.” Then, your ad’s headline could be “Support Hope & Safety for Vulnerable Youth.” Your description can be along the lines of

Donate to our youth shelter and provide a safe haven. Your contribution will help provide shelter, meals, and mentorship. Make a difference today!

When clicked, the ad should direct users to your donation page.

Outsourcing Ad Grant Management

No matter your cause or goals, maximizing results often requires an advanced perspective and a watchful eye on your campaigns. Turn to a Google Grant manager for help, especially if you’re limited in staff capacity.

NXUnite’s guide to Google Ad Grant agencies explains that these experts offer professional experience to save your team time and eliminate the program’s learning curve. Plus, they can keep a close eye on your campaigns to interpret your performance data and ensure your account stays in compliance.

Great… Now How Do I Apply For The Program?

If you’re ready to take the next step, you’ll need to apply. Before doing so, we recommend confirming your eligibility. To allocate funds to the organizations that need it most, Google implements a series of eligibility requirements for Google Ad Grants. You’re likely eligible if you’re a registered 501(c)(3) organization. Although, there are three types of organizations that are automatically ineligible, regardless of charitable status:

  • Government-affiliated organizations and entities
  • Hospitals and other healthcare organizations
  • Schools, academic institutions, and universities

You’ll also need a user-friendly website with promotable content. If you meet the basic requirements, it’s worth it to apply.

Note that the Google Ad Grants application process entails quite a few steps. Here are the required ones to get started:

  1. Register your nonprofit with TechSoup or Percent, both of which are third-party organizations that work with Google to verify organizations’ legitimacy. U.S.-based organizations must be verified by TechSoup.
  2. Create a Google for Nonprofits account. Using your verification token from TechSoup, set up your account by providing information like your tax ID and non-discrimination policies.
  3. Fill out the Google Grant application. Once Google activates your account, you can access the program’s application. You’ll provide information like your website’s URL and some basic information like your goals for the program.

Once you’ve done all this, wait for the program’s coordinators to approve your application. After you’re approved, you can amplify your content via Google Ads. Just know that beyond the initial eligibility requirements, you’ll need to meet ongoing compliance requirements to stay eligible.

 

We can’t wait to see how you amplify your nonprofit’s voice with the Google Ad Grant!


Jessica King head shotJessica King, Business Lead at Getting Attention

 

Jessica helps nonprofits acquire and manage the Google Ad Grant to expand their impact. Prior to her work at Getting Attention, Jessica worked in nonprofit and higher education organizations focusing on communication and digital marketing, and most recently in search engine optimization in the mission-driven sector. Jessica holds a master’s degree in communication from Virginia Tech. In her free time, you can find her reading, building furniture, and hanging out with her cats, Benny and Olive.

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Fundraising Tuesday: An Event is Not a Fundraiser

May 23, 2023 by Dennis Fischman Leave a Comment

An event is not a fundraiser. A person is.

Your nonprofit organization may pour a lot of time into holding events. When the weather is good, you may organize walks, 5k runs, barbecues, or golf tournaments. When the weather pushes you indoors (and the pandemic permits), you may have a gala dinner, an auction, a night at the museum–although I hope you have learned how to make them online events too!)

Those are not fundraisers.

Why?

  1. Some of these events are intentionally aimed at saying thank you rather than raising money. Appreciation events for donors, staff, or volunteers build relationships but may cost money in the short run.
  2. Some of these events aim to make money but don’t. Oops! (And even more of them run at a loss, or a wash, if you take into account the huge amount of staff time spent organizing them.)
  3. The main reason is that people who go to events because they enjoy them are not necessarily people who support your organization through thick and thin. They are not the loyal donors whose lifetime value to your nonprofit is huge.

The only way you can create loyal donors is by having people get in touch with them. The people who do that? They’re the fundraisers!

Rev up your fundraisers: reduce your events

You may already have held a spring event or two. You may have summer and fall events in the works. I would urge you to think about your events calendar again. What event can you cut?

Which of your events is

  • Raising less money each year?
  • Taking the most time to produce?
  • Getting stale for your supporters?
  • Forcing your fundraisers to spend time with vendors when they could be talking with donors?

Ask yourself those questions. Then, cut one event from your annual schedule.

What should a fundraiser do instead?

If you free your fundraising people from organizing yet another event, they can write personalized thank-you notes, make phone calls, ask donors what makes them give and mark that information in your database.

They can write great newsletters, email messages, and social media posts.

They can produce annual reports that donors will want to read and impact statements that will make them proud to be a donor.

A fundraiser is so much more than an event planner. Give them the time they need for real human contact and watch your income grow. Share on X

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Fundraising Tuesday: Are You Talking to Me?

May 2, 2023 by Dennis Fischman Leave a Comment

When your nonprofit sends out fundraising appeal letters, who are you talking to? It’s vital to know.

Imagine that you sent out a beautifully written appeal letter–to the wrong address. What are the chances that the person who received it would give, out of the blue? Are they a lot less likely to give than the person who’s already on your list? Of course! Your beautiful letter would be a waste of time and postage. What a shame!

Or imagine that you put a lot of time and effort into producing an appeal aimed at the interests of the donor…and then you called them by someone else’s name. (It happened to me!) Doesn’t your heart sink at the wasted effort–and potentially, the lost donor?

Literally knowing who you are talking to makes a huge difference. Knowing who you are talking to as in what they are interested in makes all the difference in the world.

Because they might not be interested in you.

A Fundraising Appeal that Didn’t Speak to Me

Last December, I received an appeal letter from an elder care organization that was so beautiful, I would use it as a model of what to do.

  • The envelope had a return address and a lovely seasonal graphic.
  • The graphic continued inside, as a border around the letter.
  • The salutation said “Dear Dennis,” not Dear Mr. Fischman or Dear Friend.
  • The letter included a story about one individual the organization helped.
  • The text of the letter included bold type and a pull-quote to call the reader’s attention to the message.
  • The reply vehicle included chances to give in honor or in memory of someone–very appropriate for an eldercare organization. It also made it simple to make a monthly donation, either by check or online.

With all these advantages, why didn’t the appeal letter work for me? It wasn’t talking to me!

The best-written fundraising appeal in the world won’t raise funds if the person who receives it doesn’t care about the organization that’s asking.

Yes, my mother lived at a home this organization bought about halfway through her three years there. And yes, the place kept her and all the other residents safe through the darkest days of the Covid pandemic, before the vaccines. I’m grateful for that.

But they did it by keeping residents isolated in their rooms. My mother, in her eighties, suffered greatly by not having anyone to talk to besides the people who delivered her meals on a tray and did her laundry. She declined physically and mentally, and it has taken years for her to gain back some of what she lost.

Mom is also a vegetarian, as many more old people will be in the coming years. The organization really did not know how to feed her. Too many days, meals consisted of grilled cheese for lunch and pasta and cheese for dinner.

Do they know they’re talking to someone who has mixed feelings about their assisted living home? They do not. Because they never asked.

So they send me a letter that’s aimed at people who have bought into their mission statement and their ability to deliver. And that’s not me.

Before you send out your next fundraising letter, please do your nonprofit a favor. That is, find out as much as you can about who you are talking to. Because I’d hate to see your lovely letter go into the recycling bin of someone you didn’t really mean to send it to at all.

 

 

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