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Putting the We in Winning: a review of Tell to Win, by Peter Guber

August 19, 2013 by Dennis Fischman Leave a Comment

Fifty pages into Peter Guber’s acclaimed book Tell to Win, I was getting more and more upset.  Where were the women?

Norma Kamali made lower-income women her heroes

Norma Kamali made lower-income women her heroes

Not in the blurbs on the back cover: from Roger Ailes to Mohammed Yunus, all men.  Not in the many stories that Guber told to “connect, persuade and triumph with the hidden power of story” (the subtitle of his book).

All of the stories he included were told by and about men.  The exception that proved the rule was Susan Feniger, co-owner of the Border Grill chain…and her story was told by a waiter in one of her restaurants.

I’m a man, so why did I care about the missing women?  I’ve worked all my life with nonprofit organizations, where women are the majority (and increasingly, the leaders).  By leaving women out, Guber was sending a signal that this book might not be for me or the organizations I care about.

Add to that the idea that success always involves “winning” and making a sale–as opposed to building community, nurturing relationships, or exerting power for social good–and Guber was talking right past me.  I was about ready to put the book aside.

And that would have been too bad, because Tell To Win offers a lot of sound advice for anyone trying to lead through persuasion.  For instance:

  1. People WANT to hear stories. Who would go to the movies to see a PowerPoint presentation?
  2. “Move your listeners’ hearts, and their feet and wallets will follow.”
  3. “Get your audience to step into your hero’s shoes.”
  4. Begin with a problem, build tension with your hero’s struggle, and end with a solution that inspires the listener to act.
  5. Know your listener well enough you can predict how they will react.  Prepare, prepare, prepare.
  6. It’s more important to be interested (in your audience) than to be “interesting.”  Make the story about them, and about what you share.
  7. Meet the listener where they are.  Find the context where they will be most receptive to the story you are going to tell.
  8. You’ll know you’ve really succeeded when your listener starts telling your story to others.

Everything here is relevant to nonprofit work, and if Peter Guber were talking to me face to face, he probably would have told his stories differently, to bring me in.  As it was, he really didn’t reach me…until I read about Norma Kamali.

Norma Kamali was a high-fashion designer with a “naturally quirky style.”  Walmart approached her about designing a line of clothing for lower-income women.  She was excited but afraid.  Walmart’s suppliers were used to producing clothing as quickly and cheaply as possible.  What could she say that would make the people who actually cut and sewed garments for Walmart give low-cost clothes their utmost care and attention?  She knew that’s what it would take to make her new customers proud to wear her designs.

What she remembered was the stories she had been told by low-income mothers at a public high school in Manhattan….These mothers were so ashamed of their clothes that they never came in for school conferences or even met their kids’ teachers.

“Norma told the story of those mothers to the vendors, sales force, and media, and everyone who supported this new brand felt like a hero,” Guber wrote.

Aha!  There are the women–and there is the hook for nonprofit organizations.  Let’s tell stories that make people who work for good feel like a team of heroes.  We may be playing in a different league than Guber and his Hollywood buddies–a league of our own--but we can win, together.  Read this book if you want to make the team strong.

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The Nonprofit Marketing Guide, by Kivi Leroux Miller: a review

July 1, 2013 by Dennis Fischman 2 Comments

Kivi Leroux Miller feels your pain.  And she wants to help.

Kivi Leroux Miller

Kivi Leroux Miller

You work at a nonprofit organization.  Either it’s too small to have a communications department or nobody has recognized the need to market what you do until now.  You’ve recognized the need, but you feel daunted.  There are so many things you could do…and the so-called experts want you to do all of them yesterday!

Where do you get started?  How much can you do?  What will work best for your group and its cause? You don’t need theory or grandiose notions.  You need a friend who’s been there and can guide you through the process. Kivi wants to be that friend.

Throughout this book, you will hear great advice that you can put to use right away.  If you love the idea of a “quick and dirty marketing plan,” this is the book for you.

Be warned, though: “quick” is a relative term.  There are no magic wands to wave and no lamps to rub to get a genie to do the work for you.  This book will give you a good sense of what you need to do to be ready to plan and of all the resources–mostly time–that you’ll need to turn that plan into reality.  Knowing all that ahead of time will reassure you.  You’ll be able to see the road ahead.

As you go on reading the book, I predict that you’ll stop feeling daunted and start feeling excited.  You’ll see that (in Miller’s words), you can do it yourself without doing yourself in.  The later chapters of the book offer excellent advice on how to organize your efforts, how to take advantage of outside help when you need it, and “where to spend your limited dollars and where to scrimp.”

In other words, all the things you’d ask a trusted, wise advisor if you could sit down with her over lunch?  They are either in this book or on her blog.  Spend some time with each.  Then get started.

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Social Media For Social Good, by Heather Mansfield: a review.

June 17, 2013 by Dennis Fischman 1 Comment

You work at a nonprofit organization. Perhaps you even lead the organization. Your group has a website, an email list, maybe even a Facebook page (because everybody tells you that you have to have one). In the back of your mind, though, you have the nagging feeling that other groups are doing more, or better, with social media. You wish you had a tech-savvy friend who really gets it about nonprofits who would sit down and explain to you what the heck is going on.

Heather Mansfield is your new best friend. In Social Media for Social Good, she lays out what you’re likely doing now (and how you can do it better), what else you can do now, and what you may want to be doing soon. (Just to show you how friendly she can be, in May 2013 Heather published 33 Must-Read Updates to the book. I wish more how-to authors would do the same!)

What you’re probably doing already is what the author calls Web 1.0. You took written materials and photos you had on the shelf, posted them on the web, and left them there for people to find (the “static web”). Maybe you even got around to updating them on a semi-regular basis and supplemented them with an e-newsletter (the “broadcast web” described in the 33 Updates). Web 1.0 is still crucial. If you do nothing else, follow Heather’s suggestions on how to improve them. (You will find examples and checklists at the end of each chapter to make it easier to put her suggestions into practice.)

We are already well into the age of Web 2.0, the social web. Read the middle section of this book to figure out how to be social online: it is a new skill set for most nonprofits and it can be learned. Read this section also to learn what you could do for your mission with Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, and photo and video sites like Instagram and Youtube. Are you blogging? Blogs are the quiet powerhouses of social media. I strongly recommend you read that chapter.

Since this book came out in 2011, the world has moved quickly on to Web 3.0, the mobile web. Today, over 40% of the people who view your website or read your email do so on a mobile phone or a tablet like the iPad. You have to make your organization accessible and attractive to them, or else you’re losing a lot of the benefits of being on the web in the first place. Read this section for tips on how to get those people checking their mobile phones on the subway to check in on you.

Your tech-savvy friend might also be so enthusiastic, she tells you more than you want to know. Heather does that sometimes. This book also has some of the “you must” intensity that true enthusiasts bring to their subject. If you’re a cynical reader, you might wonder if, in this book (and even more in the 33 Updates, and in the highly informative webinars that Heather offers), she’s not proselytizing for more jobs for people like her.

I read the book in a different light. Heather Mansfield strongly believes in your organization…AND in the power of social media to help you change the world. It truly pains her that you’re not taking advantage of the tools that are out there. She also points out that early adopters of new media learn how to use them best, and they’re best positioned to learn the next wrinkle when it comes along. That makes sense, but not every organization has the capacity of CARE, or Partners in Health, or NPR. You have to figure out what your organization can do. So, accept her help, and use your own judgment. But stretch yourself a little. If there’s one takeaway message from this book, it’s that social media will create new possibilities faster than we think, and we need to be ready to take advantage of them.

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