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Targeting Audiences is Out. Engage Your Community.

October 10, 2013 by Dennis Fischman 9 Comments

If you read the Communicate! blog regularly, you know that I have learned a lot from Kivi Leroux Miller.  That’s why when I opened her new book, Content Marketing for Nonprofits, I was stunned to see that the first section of the first chapter is entitled “The End of the Target Audience.”

What? Here I am, doing my best to persuade the groups I work with that they have to communicate with a specific audience in mind.  I say:

  • There’s no such thing as the general public. You’ve got to focus on a particular group and tailor your approach to them.
  • Just blogging, or being on Facebook or Twitter, won’t guarantee that anybody reads you–any more than opening a bank account guarantees that anybody makes donations.
  • Go where your audience is, and tell them what they want and need to learn.

Kivi knows this.  She taught me some of it.  So why “the end of the target audience”?

“Target” is the wrong word

Think about it: would you want to be somebody’s target?

Targeting means blasting a message at someone.  It may be the right message.  It may be a clever message.  It may be visually and emotionally appealing.  But it’s all still one-way.  It’s like hitting on someone you want to date.  Targeting is no way to build a relationship.

Instead of targeting a group, Kivi suggests we attract them.  Nonprofits should use our communications to make the people we want to reach, want to get to know us.  They should seek us out because we meet their needs and make them feel good about themselves.

“Audience” is the wrong word too

Audiences listen.  We want the people we reach to ACT.  If we succeed in making ours their favorite nonprofit, they will give up to two-thirds of their charitable donations to our organization.

More than that: they will endorse, advocate, join, volunteer, spread the word, and talk about the organization in unsolicited and unpredictable ways and places that make a bigger impact than anything we say about ourselves.  They will write and blog and tweet about us, becoming co-producers of the content we call our own.  Our most loyal supporters will get us other supporters we had no chance to reach on our own.

It’s a mental shift worth making.  Identifying the groups we want on our side is still vital.  But once we identify them, let’s work on engaging with them as a community. 

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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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