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Nonprofits, Great Customer Service Speaks For You

September 22, 2015 by Dennis Fischman 1 Comment

January 13, 2010:  We woke up to the news that a huge earthquake had devastated Haiti.  Many of the clients at the Somerville, Massachusetts agency where I worked had family in Haiti.  So did some of the staff.  In those early hours, none of them knew for sure whether their loved ones were alive or dead.

Pennies for Haiti

Head Start children collect Pennies for Haiti

We wanted to help.  But what could we do?

First, we spread the word about the disaster to our staff, Board, and email list.

Second, when our state funding agency turned to us and asked what we could do, we responded within the hour.

Third, we collected food and clothing for our new clients: Haitian refugees who started arriving in Somerville.  We helped their families find them places to live.

Finally, we helped raise funds for Haitian relief from our donors using our newsletter and email.

What our agency did was great customer service.

Each of these four responses served a different set of customers–because those are the “customers” a nonprofit has to serve.

  1. Internal:  As Sybil Stershic points out, nonprofits have to take care of our own staff to make sure those employees take great care of our funders, clients, and supporters.  A Haitian employee told me, “When I saw how this agency responded, I knew I was working in the right place.”
  2. Institutional: The funders used our information to tell the public how they were helping Haiti.  We served the funders by making them look good–giving them yet another reason to keep funding us in the future.
  3. Clients:  Clients are a nonprofit’s most important customers.  If we served them poorly, the staff would know, the funders would eventually know…and all the PR in the world wouldn’t make up for it.
  4. Donors:  We gave our donors a chance to do something about Haiti right away, and a trusted channel through which they could provide their gifts.  That served them well and made them identify with our agency more strongly.

 

For nonprofits, customer service is the best marketing.

“Customers” and “marketing” aren’t words that nonprofits use.  But nonprofits DO serve customers, as the examples above have shown.

And we DO engage in marketing. We communicate with the purpose of moving people to support us and our causes.  But what we do communicates better than what we say.

As Laura Click says, “Every interaction and touch point with customers can be scrutinized or applauded and then shared with the world….every employee can make or break a customer’s experience.”

Do your employees know the different kinds of customers you serve?  What are their actions saying to their coworkers, funders, and donors, as well as to their clients?

P.S. Haiti is still in desperate need of help.  Consider donating to Project ESPWA.

 

 

 

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Are You Listening, Nonprofits?

September 21, 2015 by Dennis Fischman 4 Comments

The main thing a nonprofit organization should do online is learn how to listen.

not listening

Your community is online, talking. Why aren’t you listening?

Did you ever say to yourself, “I wish I knew what my donors were thinking”?  Or “It would be great if clients just told us what they need. I can’t read minds”?

Online, people tell you what they think, feel, want, and desire.  Online, you can read minds.  But only if you talk less and listen more.

First, Find Your People

People are talking about what they care about online all the time.  The key is to find your people, talking about the issues that matter to your organization.

Start with the people you already know: the people on your mailing list.  Take a sample of them and search for them online.  What social media do they use?

If they’re on Facebook, set up a Facebook interest list and add them to it.  That way, any time you go on Facebook, you can see what those specific people are talking about.

If they mostly use Twitter, you can also create a list.  You might find that you spend most of the time you’re on Twitter looking just at that list (which will help you cure the feeling that you’re drinking from a fire hose!)  And you can do the same for other social media.

Then, Listen

Spend a little time each day getting to know your supporters.  What do they post about most often? Are they sports fans, foodies, readers?  Are some of them heatedly discussing a local or national issue?

Going online is like walking into a party where people have already begun to mingle. Once you have figured out what their conversation is about, you can find ways to contribute.  That will raise your visibility and gain you good will. In the long run, it will lead to more volunteers and donors.

But don’t go in and start trying to change the subject to what your organization is doing.  You’ll find people excusing themselves and heading to another corner of the room!  When in doubt, listen longer.

Do Some Research

The next time you open Facebook, try searching for pages liked by people who like [your organization].  You can do it in two steps:

 

  1. Find your organization’s numerical Facebook ID. (You can go to http://www.findmyfbid.com/ and type in the name of your Facebook page, and it will tell you the number.)
  2. Then, go to Facebook and search on https://www.facebook.com/search/your ID/likers/pages-liked. (Where it says “your ID,” put in the numerical ID before you search.)

 

Run that search and Facebook will tell you:

  • All the pages that your followers have liked, and who liked which page.
  • How many people, total, like that page.
  • Other pages that people who like a specific page also like.
  • Which of your own friends liked that page (if you are using Facebook as an individual)

You can read about seven different ways to use this information in my blog post “Find and Attract the Audience You Want.”

Listening to a Broader Community

It makes sense to start listening to the people who know you best already.  What if you want to hear what a broader range of people think about you and your work?  Then you should set up a Google Alert and use hashtags on Twitter to search for:

  1. The name of your organization.  (Be sure to look for misspellings and abbreviations, too.)
  2. The names of your partner organizations and your competitors.
  3. The field you work in as the public thinks of it.
  4. Key words associated with your work.
  5. The phrase “I wish” and any of the first four items on this list.  That’s a good way to understand what people want and are not getting already.

 

How Valuable is Social Listening?

Take a tip from someone who does social media for a living, Candie Harris.  (What you’ve been reading is partly her ideas “translated” from business to nonprofit.)

As a former brand marketer, if someone had told me I could have access to the hearts and minds of my most loyal consumers (as well as my competitor’s), my first question would be: “How?” My second question would be: “How much will it cost?”

Social listening can give nonprofits “access to the hearts and minds” of clients, donors, prospects, volunteers, even policymakers who affect our work–and all it will cost is time.

Is your organization using social listening now?  Please share your experience!

Would you like to listen to what your supporters have to say online but feel you don’t have the time? Drop me an email at [email protected] and let’s see if we can find an affordable solution for you.

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For Nonprofits, It’s Better to be Heard than to be Seen

September 17, 2015 by Dennis Fischman Leave a Comment

Touch your right eye.  Now, your left.eyeball

You have just put your finger on the most valuable commodity online.

Eyeballs are what you have.  Eyeballs are what the social media companies are selling.  Facebook is famous for selling you to brands, and now Twitter is getting into the act.  They will stick ads anywhere they can to offer more viewers to their advertisers.

That’s how they make money.

Nonprofit organizations have a different reason for being.  If you work at a nonprofit, you are trying to accomplish a mission.  Money may be a means to the end, but it is not an end in itself.

Nonprofits shouldn’t be in the eyeball business. We should aim to be heard.

We should be telling stories so well that people continue to hear them all day, inside their heads.  We should be getting our readers to talk about us with their friends.

One person who “gets it” because they read your blog, post, or tweet is worth a hundred who just saw it.

 

 

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