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Never Scramble for an Idea on Deadline Again

March 23, 2015 by Dennis Fischman 2 Comments

Nothing feels more awful than getting up in the morning and realizing you have no idea what to write.  Fortunately, there is a solution. Create a publication calendar and you’ll never have that feeling again.

You can create a publication calendar in five easy steps.

Step one: open up your favorite calendar tool. Outlook, Google Calendar, a specially designed piece of software or a paper calendar with pictures of puppies every month: it doesn’t matter, as long as it works for you.

Step two: think of seasonal topics.  Back-to-school, Fall, Winter, New Year, Spring, Summer. National holidays like Thanksgiving and Independence Day. If appropriate, religious holidays like Christmas, Easter, Rosh Hashanah, or Ramadan. Heating season, if you provide heating assistance.  Camping season, if you do summer camps.  Mark each topic on your calendar at the right time to be talking about it.

Step three: find the hook that will make each topic a real story, one that’s interesting to your audience. Back-to-school is not a story in itself. “What you need to know about your child’s first day at our preschool” is a story! Mark that on your calendar.

Step four: now think of events your organization is holding. Fundraising events, friend-raising events, community forums, advocacy days at the statehouse.  Put those on your calendar too, and find the hook for each one.

Step five: think of campaigns your organization is launching at specific times of the year. Are you registering people to vote? Signing them up for low-cost bank accounts? Creating sports teams? Put those activities on the calendar, too, along with the hook that will make your audience want to read about each one.

Now, your calendar is full of ideas and specific ways to present them.  That means:

  • You can work on them in advance. Get photos, line up interviews, look up statistics…whatever you need for the post can be done ahead of time instead of at the last minute.
  • You can coordinate your messaging. Your blog, your social media postings, your newsletter, and even your face-to-face meetings with supporter can all reinforce the same message, so people are more likely to grasp it and retain it.
  • You can improvise.  It’s easier to improvise when you already have a plan in place. If a hurricane strikes, or one of your issues trends in the news, or if you receive a visit from Michelle Obama or the Pope, of course you can put that into your calendar. You’ll be in the perfect position to decide whether to delay a previously scheduled topic or just post more often.

What do you put on your publication calendar? Is there something that you post about that makes you stand out from most other organizations?

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The Top 10 Things to Know When You’re Starting Social Media

March 16, 2015 by Dennis Fischman Leave a Comment

Are you or your organization just beginning to use social media?  It’s a little like being a new driver. “Keep your eyes on the road. Keep your eyes on the rearview mirror. Watch out for pedestrians. Watch out for signs.”

There are so many things to learn and to keep track of. How do you tell which are important for you?

Fear not! I’d like to share with you the top ten things you need to know when you’re putting your social media in gear and hitting the road.

1. What to do before you start social media. https://dennisfischman.com/ten-reasons-your-nonprofit-should-not-be-on-facebook/

2. Why you should listen first, post later. https://dennisfischman.com/listen-up-if-you-want-to-succeed-on-social-media/

3. Who sees what you post. https://dennisfischman.com/who-actually-sees-what-you-post-on-social-media/

4. How to make sure your social media actually speaks for you. https://dennisfischman.com/write-a-social-media-policy-that-works/

5. Where you start. https://dennisfischman.com/social-media-starting-small/

6. Which social media you should use. https://dennisfischman.com/what-social-media-should-i-use-the-answer/

7. How many social media you should use. https://dennisfischman.com/the-magic-formula-for-choosing-social-media/

8. How to find the time to post. https://dennisfischman.com/social-media-how-do-i-find-the-time-2/

9. What to automate and what to keep personal. https://dennisfischman.com/social-media-for-nonprofits-how-do-i-keep-up/

10. What else you’ll want to learn as time goes by. https://dennisfischman.com/congratulations-youre-our-new-social-media-expert/

What are YOU doing new this spring? I’d love to know! Drop me a line at [email protected] or give me a quick call at and tell me about it!

Dennis

 

 

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A Priest, a Rabbi, and a Communications Pro Walk into a Bar…

February 2, 2015 by Dennis Fischman Leave a Comment

Can you tell a joke?  Then you can write for blogs and social media. Priest rabbi joke

I don’t mean to say that what you write has to be funny.  Although, God knows we could use some humor sometimes!  But jokes have the basic ingredients you need to make people want to read what you write–and then, to remember what they’ve read.

Jokes invite the audience in.  Whether it’s “knock-knock,” or “What did the one say to the other?”, or “A priest, a minister, and rabbi walk into a bar,” jokes get the listeners involved. You can see them lean forward, wondering what comes next.

The next time you write, look for the opening line that makes your reader want to read the next line.

Jokes have a structure.  Human beings like to know where they’re going and how long it’s going to take to get there.  People waiting for a bus or subway are much more content to wait if they see a sign that says “Next train to Alewife Station, 10 minutes.”  When they’re listening to a joke and they hear that something happens three times, they know something unusual is about to occur and they’re waiting to find out what it is.

The next time you write, look for the structure that tells your reader when the main idea is going to arrive.

Jokes have a punch line.  Sometimes people even forget how the story went, but they remember “That’s what she said,” or “I’ll have what she’s having.”  It’s the payoff.  It leads to a reaction: laughter, or a groan, or both…but an emotional response.

The next time you write, figure out the response you want to provoke first.  Then, tell the story that will elicit that response from your readers.

A priest, a minister, and a rabbi went into a bar, and the bartender said, “What is this, some kind of a joke?”

I’ll bet you remember that one.

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