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How to Get 10 Posts Out of One Good Idea

July 21, 2014 by Dennis Fischman Leave a Comment

It’s time to post to your blog. You scratch your head, pace up and down, drum your fingers, start several posts and delete them…and at last, you have it. It’s a good idea. You put the finishing touches on it and hit “Post.”

“Uh-oh,” you say. “Now what am I going to use for Facebook?”

Save time and worry: take that one good idea and use it again. Here are ten ways you can re-purpose one good idea for blogs, social media, video, and print.

See the ten ways at:

http://elainefogel.net/2014/07/21/how-to-get-10-posts-out-of-one-good-idea

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What a Seal of Approval Says about Your Nonprofit

July 15, 2014 by Dennis Fischman 2 Comments

“There are about a dozen charity evaluation and watchdog organizations that offer seals of approval” to nonprofit organizations, according to Janna Finch of nonprofit fundraising software evaluation company Software Advice. But do they mean anything?

Yes–to your supporters.

giving-increase

Donors look for ratings seals

Finch’s survey found:

  • 55% of respondents “always” or “sometimes” check for ratings seals on your website.
  • 32% say the seal would “greatly” raise the chance they would make a donation.
  • 40% say the seal would “moderately” or “slightly” increase their chance of giving.

Why it’s too bad

There are lots and lots of nonprofits.  As a donor myself, I understand why people want better information about what they’re giving to.  But I think the focus on ratings and seals of approval is misguided.

First: ratings are based way too heavily on financials, and specifically, on overhead ratios.  But the overhead myth is holding nonprofits back.  For every charity that spends too much on administration and infrastructure, there are probably ten who spend too little–especially compared with the for-profit world.

Second: the ratings system costs money that small nonprofits can’t spare.  To display the seal of the BBB Wise Giving Alliance, your nonprofit would have to come up with $1,000-$15,000 every year.  This “pay to play” system discriminates against small-budget organizations.

Third: it’s hard to measure the “program impact” of a social movement.  What was the impact of all that marching and praying, Dr. King?  Where are your measurable outcomes for the last six months?  When seals of approval are awarded like Boy Scout badges, they may trivialize real, important, even historic work that donors should want to support.

What you should do

In the end, though, it doesn’t matter what I think of seals of approval.  It matters what your donors think.  They like them.  So if you can afford the time and the money it takes to win them, you should have them and display them on your website.

Really, though, you should communicate well enough, and often enough, with your supporters that they don’t need the Better Business Bureau or Charity Navigator to tell them how good you are. What a seal of approval is less important than what you say…and what your supporters say about you.

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Which U.S. Government Agency Are You?

June 19, 2014 by Dennis Fischman Leave a Comment

If I asked your community about your organization, what U.S. government agency would they say you are most like?

Are you the NSA?  Do you keep tabs on your donors and prospects to the point where it’s just creepy?

Are you the VA?  Do people wait for months to hear from you?

Are you the IRS?  Do your employees give incomprehensible and conflicting responses when people call them up to ask them a question?

Or are you the U.S. Postal Service, the most trusted agency, doing a service that people value despite underfunding and overregulation?

What would your community say about your organization?  Are you sure?

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