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How to Get Found: SEO and the Small Nonprofit

September 24, 2013 by Dennis Fischman 2 Comments

image of search

How in the world will they find your site?

So you work at a small nonprofit organization, and the website is one of your many responsibilities.  Everybody has been happy with the website.  It looks good, it’s easy to navigate, and you keep the content fresh.  The Board is proud of it.

Then one day the Executive Director asks, “How many people are seeing our site?”  You check your site’s analytics (perhaps for the first time).  The answer is: not many.  So now you have a new responsibility.  Somehow, you want to get more people to view the website.  How do you do it?

Is SEO the Answer?

You may have heard the term search engine optimization (SEO for short) bandied about.  What does it really mean?  “Search,” of course, means looking for something on the internet, and “search engines” are the tools you use when you look:  Bing, Ask, Goodsearch, or the giant of them all, Google.  Search engine optimization means making your website more likely to show up in searches, not by paying for it, but by taking advantage of how Google and other search engines work.

That used to be easy.  At first, search engines relied on keywords and other data that you chose for yourself.  But some websites gamed the system.

For instance, they would “stuff” their pages with keywords that they knew lots of people were searching for–whether or not those words had anything to do with their organization.  Or, they would pay SEO optimizer companies to get other sites to link back to their own (because the search engines would rank your site higher if other people found it useful enough to link to it).

These days, Google and the other search engines use complicated algorithms to rank websites.  They also track each person’s previous searches to come up with the search results that are most likely to be relevant to that person.  (That means there is no one “ranking” for your website: it depends on the interests of the person searching.)  And most recently, Google has come up with new algorithms to penalize websites that try to manipulate search results.  More changes are inevitable.

So, if anyone tries to sell you SEO services–and especially, if they promise to make your site come up at the top of the page when people search for you–be skeptical.  You  could end up paying a lot of money to make your site worse for the people who do land there…without ensuring that new people find it.

To Be Found, Be Known

I’ll let you in on a secret.  The single search term that’s most likely to bring people to your website is…the name of your organization!  You own that already, and it’s free.  The trick is not to get people to stumble upon your website.  It’s to get them to want to look for it.

Use your social networks to invite people to your website.

  • Start with the people who know you best.  Do your board members check out your website regularly?  How about your staff, your volunteers, and your loyal donors?  Ask them.
  • Make those close connections into your ambassadors.  The people who know you best can mention your website to their friends, in person or by emailing them the link.  They can post links to it on Facebook or their favorite social media.  They can quote useful information from your site and link back to the source.
  • Let everybody know about it.  When you send out email, include the URL for your website in your signature.  Make sure it’s on your stationery and in your newsletter.  When you send out press releases, say, “For more information, see our website at….”
  • Use social media.  It’s more than okay to post links to interesting items from your website on your agency’s Facebook page, or tweet the link with an intriguing title, or post the same video on your website and Youtube, or share your photos on Instagram or Pinterest.  You don’t have to do all of these.  Just make better use of the social media you already use.

What will they find there if they look?

You wouldn’t invite people to a gala and have no food and no program.  You shouldn’t invite people to your website and have nothing for them to consume there, either.  The best way to get people to come to your website–and to keep coming back–is to post what they are interested in.

If you don’t know your audience well enough to be sure what interests them, stop worrying about your website.  Go do the research!

But if you can picture the people you want to view your website, then post the articles, announcements, photos, videos, and even tools they can use.  Post your best stuff, and put it out there, and you will grow your website traffic in a way that’s organic and sustainable.

And in case you’re still wondering, yes, SEO can play a supporting role in the content that you post.  Here are ten tips for writing content that ranks in 2013.  Notice that about half of them are about good writing and promotion–not about search.  Even Google says in its own guide to SEO, “You should base your optimization decisions first and foremost on what’s best for the visitors of your site.”  Make the experience of viewing your website worthwhile and more people will seek you out.

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Is Your Image of Advertising Stuck in the Mad Men Era?

September 12, 2013 by Dennis Fischman 2 Comments

Some nonprofits hear the word “marketing” and cringe.  After reading Mad Women by Jane Maas, I can understand why–and also why that reaction is out of date.

Speedy Alka-Seltzer character

Speedy Alka-Seltzer, R.I.P.

According to Maas, there was a revolution in advertising during the 1960’s.  Before that, “Hammers pounded away at the inside of an animated head while a voice-of-God announcer reported that Anacin cured headaches three ways.”  Cora’s Country Store poured Maxwell House coffee, Madge the Manicurist recommended Palmolive dish soap (“You’re soaking in it”), and Mr. Whipple couldn’t help squuezing the Charmin.  And of course, cartoon characters like the Frito Bandito urged us to eat too much salty food, while Speedy Alka-Seltzer offered the solution.

Maas says the old kind of advertising “believed the consumer was a moron.”  So nonprofits recoil.  Our supporters are not morons!  They are brilliant enough to appreciate us, aren’t they?

The truth is that very few people will know about our work, let alone appreciate it, unless we market it.  Marketing is more than advertising. But if we have an advertising model in mind, it should not be Speedy Alka-Seltzer.  Let’s not consult Don Draper or Peggy Olson.

What did advertising become, after the revolution?

  • Irreverent.  Don’t take ourselves too seriously, even if we work on serious issues.
  • Intelligent.  Give people ideas, not just slogans, in a way that is made to stick.
  • Honest.  Sometimes admitting a weakness is endearing.  Remember “Avis is #2.  We try harder”?
  • Informed.  Focus groups kept Jane Maas from trying to peddle a cheaper coffee, and proved that even if Shake and Bake was a hit, Batter Fry would be a disaster.

Some nonprofits have the budget to do extensive research before they create a program or seek to fund it.  All of us need to gather information about how our “great ideas” will play out with people outside the charmed circle of our staff and Board.  And all of us need to find the message that will resonate with people who don’t know or care about our organizations as much as we do.  It pays to advertise.

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Listen Up! (If You Want to Succeed on Social Media)

August 29, 2013 by Dennis Fischman 6 Comments

The secret to social media success isn’t in talking – it’s in listening.Image

That’s what Dave Kerpen, the author of Likeable Social Media, wants us to know.  Dave tells the story of the time he arrived in Las Vegas after a six-hour flight only to wait another hour at his hotel, just to check in.

Frustrated, I did what any social media nerd would do – I pulled out my phone, and tweeted the following: “No Vegas hotel could be worth this long wait. Over an hour to checkin at the Aria. #fail”

He goes on to  say, “The Rio Las Vegas tweeted the following to me: ‘Sorry about your bad experience, Dave. Hope the rest of your stay in Vegas goes well.’ Guess where I ended up staying the next time I went to Las Vegas?”

Listening for Nonprofits

Now, if you work at a nonprofit organization, you might be thinking: “How does this apply to me?  I don’t run a hotel.  I don’t even have customers.  Why should I spend time listening on social media?”

  • You may not have customers, but do you have donors?  Listen to social media to find out what interests them and what bothers them.  Then , when you’re thinking what to say in your newsletter and your funding appeals–and yes, your social media–you’ll have a much better idea what donors will read.
  • Do you have clients?  Suppose you’re an organization to promote better parenting and prevent child abuse.  On Facebook, a low-income parent agonizes because she must go to work and can’t afford reliable childcare.  You give her a list of childcare providers who will accept state vouchers and offer to help her apply.  Will the word get around that your organization is a great place to go?  What do you think?
  • Do you have programs?  Maybe you’re an art museum (like the Portland Museum of Art) that offers teachers the chance to bring art into the classroom–and students to exhibit their own art at the museum. Wouldn’t it be great to know what the teachers are posting about you on Facebook or Twitter, and see the pictures the students are putting up on Instagram?  If you thank them online, you will be like the Rio Las Vegas in Dave’s story.  You won’t be doing outreach to get people into your programs: they’ll be reaching out to you.

Don’t just post, tweet, blog, email, snap photos, or distribute videos.  Make sure someone at your organization is on social media listening.  Then, listen to what they find out.

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