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How NOT to Market Your Services

May 23, 2016 by Dennis Fischman 5 Comments

My wife, realtor Rona Fischman, was listening to a webinar when her phone began to ring. She didn’t recognize the number, but it might have been another realtor calling about a transaction in progress.  She decided to answer.

“Hello, this is [fill-in-the-blank] Media calling about your website.”

Woman grimacing at phone

Not the reaction you want.

Rona groaned. This company had been leaving messages on her voicemail for days.  “I’m listening to a webinar right now. If my website is on fire, tell me so.  Otherwise, call me back after the webinar.”

“Do you know that half the links on your home page are broken and that people who click on them will see 404 errors?”

“No, I didn’t know that. After the webinar, I will check on it.”

In fact, Rona checked her website–on Chrome, IE, and Firefox, just to make sure–and there were no broken links.  Later, she received an email from the company that had called her.  They apologized for “startling” her and listed several other “problems” with her website.  Some of them did not exist.  Others are not problems for Rona because her business model does not require a huge volume of clients.

In short, they lied to her and never took the time to find out what she really might need.

This is the internet age.  Wouldn’t it be easy to spend a little time looking at Rona’s website and finding comments about her on Angie’s List, etc., and figure out where you could really add value to her communications?

Whether you are out to make a profit or looking to recruit support for your good cause, you owe it to yourself to treat the client with respect and personalize your message.

Have you ever encountered a sales pitch like the one Rona heard? How did you react when you heard or read it?

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How Do You Say “Content Marketing” in Nonprofit?

August 24, 2015 by Dennis Fischman 10 Comments

You’re working so hard for a cause you believe in.  You wonder: Why aren’t more people paying attention?

cute cat

Can your communications compete with this cat?

You’re not alone.  In the internet age, nonprofits and businesses are all in the same boat.  We’re not only competing with each other for people’s time and interest.  We’re also competing with online games, viral videos, and cute cat photos.

What did you do the last time a commercial appeared on your TV screen?  Chances are, you muted the volume or changed the channel…if you weren’t already using a tool to “zap” the commercials right out of what you were watching.

The people your nonprofit is trying to reach are just like you.  The ways that nonprofits usually try to reach people are even easier to ignore than commercials.  It’s so easy to delete your email, ignore your press release, toss that annual report or printed newsletter or appeal letter into the recycling bin.   Most people will do just that–IF they see your outreach as just another claim upon their time.

But what if they saw you as an answer to their prayers instead?

 

Giving People What They Want through Content Marketing

People don’t like to be interrupted.  They like to be helped.  If you want to be heard, you have to give people something they want, so that they are actually grateful to hear from you.  The term for this approach that puts the audience at the center is content marketing.

Basically, content marketing is the art of communicating with your customers and prospects without selling. It is non-interruption marketing. Instead of pitching your products or services, you are delivering information that makes your buyer more intelligent. The essence of this content strategy is the belief that if we, as businesses, deliver consistent, ongoing valuable information to buyers, they ultimately reward us with their business and loyalty.

(Substitute “nonprofits” for “businesses” and “supporters” for “customers, prospects, buyers.”  The strategy is the same: give people information that matters to them and you will draw them closer to your cause.)

 

What Do People Want?

To attract people’s attention, interest, and ultimately support, you must know what they want.  Not just guess: know.  Not just a general idea: you must know them in depth and in detail, like you know a good friend.  If you don’t know that yet, stop reading this blog and go find out.

Let’s say you have done your homework and you do really know your audience.  Here are a few ways you can give them information that will make them keep coming back to you.

  • Online tools.  Give your supporters a way to do something they couldn’t do before.  A real estate company might give prospects free access to the Multiple Listing Service.  An organization for low-income families might give potential donors and partners a way to calculate the minimum a family needs to get by in a specific town.  [What will your supporters use?]
  • Blogging. In a personal voice, tell stories and give behind-the-scenes information about something you know they care about.  [Will your readers quote you in conversations with friends?]
  • Training.  Be a guest speaker.  Hold workshops.  Do webinars.  Teach other people what you know that they want to learn, and gain their loyalty and respect.  [What does your organization know better than anyone else that other people would line up to learn?]
  • Curation.  This is the current term for finding useful content that other people have produced and sharing it with your supporters–through mail, email, or social media (including Youtube for sharing video).  The key is that it has to be useful to them.  [What will they put into practice right away?  What will they find valuable enough that they will forward, post, retweet, pin, or otherwise share it with others?]

You don’t have to do all of these content marketing.  Certainly not at the start.  Perhaps not ever.  You are who you are, and your supporters are who they are, and maybe there’s another approach that makes them sit up and pay attention.

What you have to do is to find that approach.  Until you find it, the cat videos win.

 

 

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So You Want to Market to Nonprofits? How to Find Them

July 28, 2015 by Dennis Fischman Leave a Comment

There are 1.8 million tax-exempt organizations in the United States alone, from Harvard University to your local homeless shelter.  This is a huge market that many businesses don’t know how to tap.

Do you want to sell your services or products to nonprofit organizations?  First you have to find them.  Here are a few tips on how.

  1. In your local community, find a few organizations doing work you admire. Reach out to them via social media by retweeting or sharing their content.  Attend their events.  For that matter, sponsor their events.  Ask for an informational interview with the Executive Director, and if you really want to build a long-lasting relationship, volunteer!
  2. Seek out organizations that serve the nonprofit community.  The Association of Fundraising Professionals is one. State associations like the Massachusetts Nonprofit Network are good too. Go to their conferences and meet their constituency: it could be the audience you’re trying to reach. Let them know where they can find you online. Share useful information written in a way that speaks their language.
  3. Read nonprofit journals, like The Nonprofit Quarterly or more specialized publications like the Chronicle of Philanthropy. See what their readers are interested in and make those a centerpiece of your social media presence.

I also recommend becoming active in LinkedIn groups such as Social Media for Nonprofit Organizations. You can learn a lot by listening to conversations in these groups and build your own presence by genuinely getting involved.

Nonprofits, what other advice would you give to vendors who want your business?

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