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Are Nonprofits Thinking Too Small?

October 3, 2013 by Dennis Fischman 5 Comments

social media Arab Spring

This is what ROI looks like

Social media played a central role in shaping political debates in the Arab Spring.

Bloggers made such an impact in Burma that before the 2010 election, the junta was forced to shut them down.  After the election, it was those military leaders who had to retreat.

Nearly twenty-five years ago, during the Tiananmen Square massacre, the pro-democracy movement in China used fax machines to share photos of the slaughter–photos the regime had repressed.

And here in the U.S., we are fixated on using social media for fundraising?

By “we,” I mean your average nonprofit organization.  Occupy Wall Street and its offshoots used social media to get organized, to stay in touch, and to force mainstream media (and the country) to pay attention.  More than 450,000 people have joined Occupy Facebook pages to date.

Yes, nonprofit organizations need money.  Yes, it’s more important than ever to get individual donors.  But seriously, folks.  Let’s remember that many of our organizations exist to create social change. 

Please share this post if you think we in the nonprofit world are thinking too small.

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Share of Mind, Share of Heart, by Sybil F. Stershic: a review

August 12, 2013 by Dennis Fischman 3 Comments

Sybil Stershic

Sybil Stershic

Sybil  Stershic wants you Taking Care of the People Who Matter Most: the employees, volunteers, and Board members of your nonprofit organization.  In her new book, Share of Mind, Share of Heart, she explains the top two reasons why.

 

“Your service is your brand.”  Think about it: there are a lot more points where people touch your organization than just the newsletters and emails you send them, or the social media you want them to see.  Every time a client or stakeholder walks up to your reception desk, calls on the phone, takes advantage of a service, attends an event, or volunteers for one of your programs, they are forming their impression of your agency.

That means that the people who represent your organization the most often are not the Executive Director, the Communications Director, the Development Director, or the Board chair.  They are the employees and volunteers who face the public every day.

“Connection is the key.” People who work at your agency for love or money must feel connected to the mission of the organization (and know how they are helping to move you forward). They must connect with your customers (or clients) to stay dedicated to a high level of customer care.  They want and need to connect with other volunteers, and with employees. Indeed, that may be the reason they came to work for you in the first place.  It certainly will be key to keeping them coming back for more.

Stershic calls this concept “internal marketing.”  The term focuses  attention on the fact that employees, volunteers, and Board members are also customers, and they need to be motivated to keep buying what you’re selling: the good name of your organization.

What happens when employees don’t feel valued?  They disengage and leave the organization.  Or worse, they disengage and stay.

Don’t let this happen to you! Share of Mind, Share of Heart is full of examples, tips, and “action plan starter notes.”  The book is slim enough that you can read it through in a couple of hours, then go back and put the suggestions into practice that best fit the way your agency functions now.  That will help you make your organization a better place to work, improve your customer service, and at the same time, communicate to the world what you are all about.

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Brandraising, by Sarah Durham: a review

July 29, 2013 by Dennis Fischman Leave a Comment

When you create your communications strategy, Sarah Durham says, it’s  like raising a barn.  You need a lot of people working together. You’re better off with the whole picture in mind before you hand out those hammers and saws. And you’re better off building from the ground up.

barnraising photo In Brandraising, Durham recommends that nonprofit organizations trying to make their communications more effective take time and take the long view.  Begin by examining your organization.  Is everyone clear about:

  • Vision: the future you are crying to create
  • Mission: the role you are playing in creating that future–as distinct from the roles other worthy organizations are playing
  • Values: what you believe and care about, so that if they changed, you would be a very different organization
  • Objectives: what you will do this year toward achieving your mission
  • Audiences: who you are trying to reach, for what purpose
  • Positioning: “the single idea we hope to own in the minds of our target audiences” (for example the March of Dimes = fighting birth defects)
  • Personality: how you want your audiences to experience your organization.

How much time do you spend at your nonprofit talking about these things?  Probably not much.  So, does everybody at the organization understand them the same way?  If you’re really fortunate, perhaps.  But taking the time now to make them explicit–and make sure they’re shared–will pay off sooner rather than later.

Getting these “organizational level” pieces strong and sturdy lets you come up with logos, colors, taglines, and key messages that truly express who you are.  The more your staff, Board members, and committed supporters are involved in putting the pieces in place, the better they will be at using them consistently when they write, talk, post, tweet, blog, or take photos or video about the organization.

Knowing your agency will only take you so far.  Durham insists that nonprofit organizations must know your audiences and how they experience you.  That means knowing a) the touch points where you come into contact, b) what your audiences (clients, donors, media, policymakers) expect from you…and c) what they actually find when they turn to you (or you turn to them) for help.  Don’t guess at this.  Do the research to find out.

When you have put all these pieces into place, you’re ready to choose your media and your messages and create a calendar and (crucially) a budget.  Durham’s final chapter gives good advice on how to make sure you keep reinforcing the brand you have built.  Even when new staff and Board members join, you can build an understanding of your organizational identity right into the orientation process.

Durham recognizes that not every nonprofit has the means to do a complete brandraising, especially all at once.  She includes a section on “When You Can’t Do It All.”   She also offers cheaper alternatives throughout the book, including sending surveys to your audiences instead of shadowing them in the field, or developing certain items in house and saving your consultant budget for where you need an expert or outside perspective.  Smaller nonprofits may have to be creative to apply some of her advice.  But there’s a lot of good advice in these 170 pages.  Some of it will be useful to everyone.

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