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Goldilocks and the Three Nonprofits

March 7, 2016 by Dennis Fischman 4 Comments

just right

When are your communications just right?

Once upon a time, there was a little girl named Goldilocks.  She liked to give away money.

One day Goldilocks went exploring the forest of letters, email, and online posts she received.  She found herself in the house of three nonprofits.  She sat down at their table and sampled what they were offering.

She tasted the first nonprofit.  “Oh, this is too hot!” she exclaimed.  The nonprofit was sending her something every day, and all of it was peppered with funding appeals.

She tasted the second nonprofit.  “This is far too cold,” she realized.  The nonprofit was communicating with her only when it was asking for money.  And by the time she received a thank-you letter, she’d reached the bottom of the bowl.  She had no appetite for any more donations.

Goldilocks tasted the third nonprofit.  “Ahhh,” she breathed.  “This is just right!” Here was the porridge she’d been looking for.  The main ingredient was content that pleased her palate, spiced with a healthy dash of humor and with nuggets of information to chew on.  The funding appeals had absorbed the flavor of the dish and went down smoothly.

“Someone’s been eating my porridge,” Goldilocks heard a voice say.  There was the Communications Director of the third nonprofit, smiling.  And behind her was the Development Director, asking “Would someone like to sit in my chair at my next event?”

 

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Are You Communicating Better This Year?

December 31, 2015 by Dennis Fischman Leave a Comment

resolutions

10 easy ways to communicate better in 2015

It’s a new year.  Here are ten resolutions that every organization should make to improve their communications in 2016.

  1. Google yourself. What are the first things people see about you? Would you support the group you see on screen?
  2. Take charge of your brand. Create your own reputation through the news you make and the stories you post.
  3. Cultivate local reporters.  They work too hard: if you feed them human interest stories and photos, they’ll be grateful.
  4. Everyone in your organization speaks for you.  What are they saying to their friends? Do they have stories to tell your supporters?
  5. Your website: keystone of all your communications.  Ask an outsider to click through it. Is it easy to navigate? Informative? Fun?
  6. Facebook is a party, not a meeting.  Find ways to get your fans talking with each other.  They’ll come back more often and like you better.
  7. Which social media should your group use?  Depends.  Who do you want to reach?  Where do they go when they’re online?
  8. Horror movie: “I mail to dead people.” In January, take people off your postal and email lists if you haven’t heard from them since 2013.
  9. Photos: not just for breakfast any more. Your readers want to consume photos at every meal, including online posts.
  10. Your good name is your most valuable asset.  What’s it worth to you?  THAT’S the return on investment for your communications.

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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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