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How Small Nonprofits Light Up Social Media

December 16, 2013 by Dennis Fischman 6 Comments

Are you a small nonprofit organization, based in a single community?  Congratulations: you have natural advantages when it comes to social media.

What are your advantages?  The same strengths that social media maven Mark Schaefer sees for small businesses–only more so.

Local angle.  “I could care less about a tweet from a mega-brand,” Schaefer writes, “but I would certainly be interested to get to know a local shop owner in a personal way.” The people you serve, their families, your staff and Board, their families and friends, your city council, your school committee, and all your donors and volunteers are interested in you in real life.  They might be interested in you on Facebook or Twitter, too…but only if you show you’re interested in them.

Personal touch.  As a small nonprofit, you can know more of your supporters personally.  This one is always talking about raising a biracial child.  That one prides herself on her mouthwatering vegetarian recipes.  When you can provide useful information on a subject they care about , your supporters will notice.  (And they will always appreciate a compliment!)

Relationships. Businesses, and large nonprofits, are tempted to look at everything in terms of ROI, Return On Investment.  They miss the intangible results that small nonprofits perceive. If your supporters are telling you, “I loved that picture you posted,” or if they’re sharing information that you put out, or if municipal officials are treating you with more respect, you know you are building loyalty that will help you sooner or later.

Don’t Hide Your Light

“But I don’t know how to use social media,” you say.  “And I don’t have the time.”  You do know how to be social in real life, right?  A good consultant can train you on how to do social online.  A consultant can also help you use your time to best effect, or you can pay him or her to be your online voice.

Is it worth it?  Using social media well means getting closer to the people who matter most to your organization.  Yes, that’s worth doing.  You are ideally positioned to do it.  Go ahead: let your light shine!

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Can Your Nonprofit Learn from Coca-Cola?

November 5, 2013 by Dennis Fischman 2 Comments

Running a nonprofit is harder than running a business.  Still, nonprofits can learn lessons for free that corporations have spent a lot of money to learn.

Coca-Cola ad

Coke can give your nonprofit ideas

Take Coca-Cola, for example.  If your nonprofit were as widely known as Coke, you’d have a lot easier time attracting “customers” (clients, donors, and funders). How do they do it, and can you do the same?

Things Go Better with Content Marketing

Jeff Bullas reports that Coke now sees content marketing as the key to its outreach.  Content marketing means you don’t push your message out so much as attract your audience in.  Give people information that matters to them and you will draw supporters closer to your cause.

Coke is betting the farm that they can

develop content that makes a commitment to making the world a better place and to develop value and significance in people’s lives…while at the same time driving business objectives for Coca-Cola.

If Coke can do well by doing good, why not you?

Content Marketing Lessons You Can Bottle

Here are five lessons we can learn from Coke.  Jeff Bullas listed, and I translated them into nonprofit.

  1. Create “liquid content.”  No, you’re not going into the soft drink business!  “Liquid content” means stuff that people love and can’t wait to share.  Whether you create an article, a video, a graphic, or an online game, make people glad they saw it.  (That means you have to know your audience.)
  2. Ensure your content is linked to your mission, goals, and values.  It’s not enough that they love it.  It has to fit what you do as an organization.  People may love that cat video, but what does it have to do with your homeless shelter?
  3. Create conversations.  Don’t just publish. Interact with your audience. They’re asking questions online: do you have answers? They’re commenting on a topic you care about too. Reply.  And let what they say give you ideas for more content.
  4. Move on to dynamic storytelling.  This means you allow the story to evolve as you interact with your supporters. If you are truly engaged with them, they will care more about you.
  5. Be brave and creative with your content creation.  Sure, 70% of what you put out may be tried and true.  20% of it may be new but based on what has already worked.  But 10% of your time, experiment.  Try a new form–video or radio instead of writing–or a new medium–what is this thing called Google+–or an idea that’s a little off the wall.

Be prepared to fail sometimes.  Remember New Coke?  Not that many people do.  If you try something that doesn’t work, people will forget…and you will learn.  And you will come up with the real thing.

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Can Social Marketing Change the World?

September 30, 2013 by Dennis Fischman 2 Comments

Social marketing

Social marketing is the juice of social change

Communications is the orange juice of the nonprofit world: it’s not just for fundraising any more.  Many organizations are using social marketing to change the way people behave.

  • Cigarettes used to be cool and sexy.  Now they are seen as a public health hazard.
  • Drunk driving was the topic of jokes.  Now it’s seen as criminal behavior.
  • Binge drinking is currently being redefined from college hijinks to a serious problem with alcohol.

Are you using social marketing?  How?  What results have you seen?

 

Social Marketing: Good for Your Health

Social marketing is “the systematic application of marketing, along with other concepts and techniques, to achieve specific behavioral goals for a social good.”  If getting a lot of people to change their individual behavior over time will let you reach your goals, then social marketing may be a powerful tool for you.

How powerful?  In her book Robin Hood Marketing, Katya Andresen tells the story of how a nonprofit in Cambodia–a country known for its sex industry–convinced men to wear condoms.  Beth Kanter summarizes:

A journalist, [Andresen] was covering a World AIDS Day event in Phnom Penh.  She saw how the giant condom-shaped balloon emblazoned with the words “Number One” was attracting attention and scores of people were grabbing up free samples of condoms….

As she writes in the introduction of her book, “For once, I heard no doom-filled message of fear or shame.  In its place was an appealing sense of pride and fun.”  As it turned out the giant condom was part of a business-minded marketing approach by a nonprofit organization, Population Services International (PSI)….

She points out that PSI condoms are now available in virtually every brothel in Cambodia, helped by a law that has since mandated condom use in sex establishments.

Social marketing can change something as personal and ingrained as sexual behavior.  What problem are you tackling that’s more difficult than that?

 

How Social Marketing Works

People buy a product for many reasons besides the product itself.  They may like the image they think it gives them, or the people or values associated with the product.  “Think different” is not a feature of Apple computers.  It’s a vision of the kind of person who uses Apple computers.  Wanting to be that kind of person has made a lot of people buy Apple.

People “buy into” your social marketing campaign for many reasons, too.  The American Legacy Foundation’s truth campaign

tapped into adolescents’ need for independence, rebellion, and personal control by presenting appealing social images of a nonsmoking lifestyle–cool kids living without tobacco. According to research, the decline in youth smoking attributable to this campaign equates to some 300,000 fewer youth smokers and thus millions of added life years as well as tremendous reductions in health care and social costs.

One technique that I find appealing is simply showing your target audience, “No, everybody isn’t doing it.”  Spreading the message that the vast majority of college students are moderate drinkers, not binge drinkers, has gone a long way toward stigmatizing the extreme behavior of the few.

 

Should You Be Using Social Marketing?

The easiest examples of social marketing to find are in the field of health.  That is certainly not the only area in which it can be useful.  In the U.S., the Washington D.C.-based organization “Men Can Stop Rape” anti-rape movement have successfully used social marketing in posters and other media targeting a rape-prevention message at boys and young men.  And it can also work for more affirmative goals, like getting people to enroll in literacy courses.

Has your organization ever used a social marketing campaign?  What results did you see?

Are you considering using social marketing to change behavior in your community?  What would you like to learn before you start?

 

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