Archive for July, 2008
Extending the 8-State, 7-Province Deal through August
By Kivi Leroux Miller
Photo by Nataliej on Flickr |
If you live in the eight states or seven Canadian provinces/territories below (or know someone who works for a nonprofit and does), read on. I’m extending the deal I mentioned last week through the end of August, to give all of you summer vacationers time to get back in the work groove.
So here is the deal. If you live
in these 8 U.S. states: Delaware, Hawaii, New Hampshire, North Dakota, Rhode Island, South Dakota, West Virginia, and Wyoming
or
in these 7 Canadian provinces/territories: Saskatchewan, New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, Prince Edward Island, Newfoundland and Labrador, Yukon, and Nunavut
I will convert a $35 webinar registration into an All-Access Pass (usually $97) at no additional charge. You pay for one webinar, but you end up getting access to all of our live webinars for 12 weeks, plus access to the webinar archive and our on-demand courses.
All you have to do is live in one of the places mentioned above and register by August 31, 2008 for any webinar currently on our schedule (the webinar can take place after 8/31; you just have to register before then). I’ll keep an eye out and convert your registration to an All-Access Pass.
Why am I doing this? Because these places are missing from the roster of locations represented by the nearly 500 nonprofits who have participated in the Nonprofit Marketing Guide.com weekly webinar series and this kind of stuff drives me crazy. Take advantage of the lunacy. Get your All-Access Pass for a measly $35.
Pass it on!
read comments (0)Worst Nonprofit Website Mistakes? Check This List
By Kivi Leroux MillerMichelle Murrain at Zen and the Art of Nonprofit Technology has posted this week’s edition of the Carnival of Nonprofit Consultants on the worst mistakes nonprofits can make with their websites. Check it out!
What’s Hot and What’s Not?
FYI, the Carnival will no longer publish weekly, but will now appear on the 1st and 15th of each month, beginning August 15. I’ll be hosting that edition and in honor of the dog-days of August, the theme will be “What’s Hot, What’s Not.” If you blog about nonprofit issues, what’s hot in your particular niche, and what’s not? Help your friends and followers in the nonprofit sector understand the latest trends. To submit your post for consideration, use this form or email npc.carnival AT yahoo.com by 5:00 p.m. ET on Thursday, August 14, 2008.
Make Your Website About Visitors, Not About You
By Kivi Leroux Miller
The biggest mistake that a nonprofit can make with its website is to use it as an old-fashioned brochure, where you immediately hit the visitor with your long, jargon-filled mission statement, right at the top or smack in the middle of the home page, followed by bulleted lists of “projects” or “services.”
Why is this so bad? Because it’s all about the organization (and usually the most boring parts at that) and it shows little interest in what your website visitors really care about.
But isn’t our website supposed to be about us, you ask?
Yes and no. Yes, it’s about you and what you do, but organized in a way that’s easy and intuitive for your site visitor. What they want is more important than what you think they should be interested in.
Two Easy Ways to Organize Your Site for Your Visitors
Let me show you what I mean. There are two easy ways to organize your website so it is more audience-focused.
The first is to divide sections according to who the visitors are. The home page of KidsHealth.org is a splash page with links to sites for parents, kids and teens. Each group is going to respond best to information presented in ways that speak to their age groups and specific needs and questions. Ultimately the facts may be the same on each mini-site, but the language and presentation are totally different depending on the audience.
The second way, and the one I usually prefer, is to organize your website around (1) the answers to the top questions people are most likely to have and (2) the actions they want to be able to take on your website. What three main questions would a potential website visitor have and what three things would they like to be able to do on your site? Figure that out and organize your site accordingly.
The New York City Meals of Wheels program, for example, has three tabs right across the top: Get Meals, Volunteer and Support Us. That about sums it up, doesn’t it? The overwhelming majority of people who come to a Meals on Wheels website will want to find out how to get meals delivered or how to volunteer to deliver them, and “support us” is thrown in for good measure. The left side menu includes additional information, but those three tabs right at the top stand out, and show me that they know exactly why people are coming to their website.
Learn more about nonprofit websites during these upcoming webinars: July 30 - Attracting More Website Visitors: Traffic-Building Tips for Nonprofits | August 14 - Online Writing: Dos and Don’ts of Writing for the Web and Email | August 28 - Online Marketing Basics for Nonprofits: From Email to Social Media
“Help a Reporter Out” & Get Some Publicity for Your Cause
By Kivi Leroux MillerI came across HelpaReporterOut.com last week and it’s an email list that I highly recommend you subscribe to.
This is what happens: Reporters from all around the U.S., including those who work for major media outlets and freelancers who write for just about every publication under the sun, send their needs for sources and interviews to Peter Shankman. He compiles all the requests a few times a day and emails them out to his list of people who might be good media sources.
Anyone can subscribe to this list - as long as you agree to play by the rules. Which means that you *only* respond to a reporter when your story or source is a really good fit. If you start spamming or forcing your cause where it doesn’t fit, you’ll be booted from the list.
Over the last ten days, I’ve received at least 20 emails and all of them have contained at least one story where a quote from a local nonprofit agency would be perfect.
If Social Networking Isn’t Marketing, Why Bother?
By Kivi Leroux Miller
Photo by kevindooley on Flickr |
The nonprofit blogerati have been weighing in lately about how nonprofits are bad, bad, bad for looking at social networking as a way to market their organizations. And “communications” seems to have become a dirty word too.
Here are a few samples:
Online Social Networks are Not Mailing Lists by Michael Gilbert of the Gilbert Center. “Once the idea of ‘online social networks’ starts tugging at their sleeve, these are the unfortunate kinds of questions that nonprofits start asking: How do I reach new audiences? How can I get my message out? . . . ”
Holly Ross at NTEN agrees in R-E-S-P-E-C-T. She sums up Gilbert’s points this way: “He argues that thinking about how to use social networks as communications channels is disrespectful” and says that she agrees with him.
In last week’s Chronicle of Philanthropy chat on online marketing, in response to a question about creating online publicity, Beth Kanter said “The word ‘publicity’ implies communications, broadcasting - not social media.” And to a question about using Twitter, she replied “Twitter is not a promotion device!!”
Why I Disagree
Their key point seems to be that nonprofits should use social media/social networking only for listening and learning through engaging in conversation. You cannot expect anyone to listen to what you have to say, unless you are listening too and responding in kind. With this basic premise, I do agree.
However, I strongly disagree with this whole notion that nonprofits who want to use social networking as part of a larger communications strategy, including as a way to get their messages out and to reach new people, are somehow being disrespectful for even considering it.
I’ve gained immeasurably from Michael, Holly, and Beth’s work and insights on technology issues. But this kind of flagellation of nonprofit communicators makes me want to pull my hair out.
How It Looks from Here
It feels to me like they are giving special golden status to what is really just one more set of tools (albeit some very cool ones) that help people communicate with one another and connect in different ways.
Maybe they are talking about the big nonprofits with budgets in the many millions of dollars with staff whose job descriptions actually include words like “social networking.” And maybe those organizations should be much more sophisticated than they are about their approach to social networking.
But those are not the kinds of organizations I work with and train on a daily basis. The nonprofits I work with are much, much smaller and have much more limited resources. They often don’t even have a full-time staff person dedicated solely to communications or even to fundraising.
So for these groups, let’s get real: “listening” and “learning” are luxuries.
“Listening” is something that might happen once a year in a survey. I know many readers of this blog don’t even have a budget line item for traditional training, let alone some extra hours in the day for “learning via social networking”. The to-do list is already miles long, and unless they can find a way to show their executive director or board how using social media is going to pay off in some tangible way, it will stay way down at the bottom of that to-do list.
In other words, the decisionmakers will ask “If we can’t use social media to market our cause, why bother?” And if you listen to the voices above, your answer will probably be, “Listening and learning are important. But you are right — we just don’t have time for that right now. We need more than listening and learning as an outcome. Nevermind.” And that, I think, would be a real shame.
A Better Way to Look at This Issue?
Instead, I turn to my friend Katya Andresen’s definition of respectful nonprofit marketing: “Asking people what they care about and then relating our cause to their values is respectful. Good marketing is a conversation.” This is from her post, Is Marketing Slimy? and I believe that it applies to social networking as well. The harm is not in using social media as a communications tool, but in treating that tool as if it were a megaphone. “Communications” is NOT automatically one-way (as many nptech bloggers seem to think), but includes one-way, two-way, and every-which-way movement of information and insights.
When you use social media/networking tools as they were meant to be used — to engage in real conversations where you neither control nor dominate the dialogue — then I see no problem with using them to talk about your cause and your work and to make new connections too. And when you do that the right way, you will also learn a whole lot in the process, too. It need not be an either/or situation.
UPDATE on 7/24/08: The Chronicle of Philanthropy’s Give & Take section picked up this post. Leave a comment here and continue the conversation over there!
Notes on “Building Your Online Presence on a Tight Budget”
By Kivi Leroux Miller
“Conversation in the Clouds” |
The Chronicle of Philanthropy hosted a live chat earlier this week with Beth Kanter (Beth’s Blog) and Jonathon Coleman (The Nature Conservancy) called “Building Your Online Presence on a Tight Budget.”
Beth and Jonathon are two of my favorite social media experts, so I took a few minutes to read the transcript today.
I recommend that you look over the whole transcript yourself, but here are a few points that stood out for me:
- Beth has an insane amount of material online and available to you! I knew this already, and it’s one of the reasons she is a favorite, but all of the links she shared during the chat definitely reinforce the value of the treasure trove that is her blog, wiki, etc.
- Lots of people are questioning the amount of time they need to invest in social networking sites like Facebook and what you get out of them for all that time. The metrics are still evolving, but focusing on what you learn from the conversation versus more standard fundraising or marketing metrics is the way to go right now.
- Search engine optimization and linking strategies are still incredibly important to the success of your website, as is great content. David Westbrook and I will be spending much of the hour during our July 30 webinar, “Attracting More Website Visitors: Traffic Building Tips for Nonprofits” on these topics.
- You don’t need much money to be a rock star in the nonprofit world online (although it certainly helps). What you do need is big buckets full of time. Time to read all the great how-to and what-for material out there. Time to sort through your options. Time to experiment. Time to participate in the conversation. Time to contribute in meaningful ways. So I take that back. You do need money to pay your staff for all this time they are spending working on your social media strategy!
- There’s some tension between the idea of using social media for publicity or promotion and using it more strictly as a conversation tool. I don’t think these two ideas are mutually exclusive — having good conversations with people can be a type of promotion — but I do agree that the conversation should come first.
- Nonprofits are overwhelmed by the options and the long list of to-dos associated with doing social media and online marketing right. I hope this blog and my nonprofit marketing webinar series are helping you feel less overwhelmed and more like you can tackle these tasks with confidence!
Canadians Can Get in on Free Webinar Upgrades Too
By Kivi Leroux Miller
Photo by Cam in Van on Flickr |
I thought this might happen, and sure enough, the Canadians want in on the free webinar upgrade program I announced yesterday for nonprofits in these eight U.S. states! So, I’ve gone back and checked the registration records and Googled the list of Canadian provinces and territories (how many can you U.S. citizens guess of the 13?).
It’s the same deal: If you live in one of the areas listed below, I will convert your $35 webinar registration fee into an All-Access Pass ($97), which gets you access to 12 weeks of live webinars, plus the webinar archive and our on-demand courses. All you have to do is register between today and July 31, 2008 for any webinar currently on our schedule.
This offers applies to nonprofits in the following areas of Canada:
- Saskatchewan
- New Brunswick
- Nova Scotia
- Prince Edward Island
- Newfoundland and Labrador
- Yukon
- Nunavut
I’ve had attendees this year from nonprofits in Alberta, Manitoba, British Columbia, Ontario, Quebec, and Northwest Territories, so if you live there, this particular offer doesn’t apply to you.
Spread the word to your Canadian nonprofit friends!
Live in These 8 States? Free Webinar Upgrades 4U!
By Kivi Leroux Miller
Photo by Nataliej on Flickr |
I was just reviewing the registrations to date this year for the Nonprofit Marketing Guide webinar series. We are approaching 500 nonprofits participating, from 42 U.S. states, 6 Canadian territories/provinces, and a handful of other countries (Yes, you Aussies and Kiwis can register and view the recording the next day, so you don’t have to get up at 4:00 a.m.!)
I’d really like to be able to say that nonprofits in all 50 states have participated in our webinars, so that means I need nonprofits in these eight states to register:
- Delaware
- Hawaii
- New Hampshire
- North Dakota
- Rhode Island
- South Dakota
- West Virginia, and
- Wyoming
Here’s a big incentive: I will convert the $35 webinar registration of every nonprofit in these eight states into an All-Access Pass ($97), which gets you access to 12 weeks of live webinars, plus the webinar archive and our on-demand courses. All you have to do is register by July 31, 2008 for any webinar currently on our schedule.
Spread the word to your nonprofit friends in these eight states!
UPDATE: Now there’s a deal for Canadians too!






