Archive for the 'Online Courses' Category
Getting Google & Your Nonprofit Website on Speaking Terms
By Kivi Leroux MillerNext Thursday’s Nonprofit Marketing Guide webinar is on keywords and search engine optimization (SEO) for nonprofits and will feature guest speaker David Westbrook, an SEO expert with lots of nonprofit experience. If you just crinkled your nose and said, “Huh?” or if you are your office’s accidental techie and default webmaster, this webinar is for you. If think you’ve done everything right and your website still doesn’t come up when you put your keywords into search engines like Google and Yahoo!, this webinar is for you too.
I asked David for a sneak peek at some of the insights he’ll share next week and here’s a good one:
“When it comes to esthetics, search engines couldn’t be much more disinterested. This is because every image looks the same to a search engine. Imagine walking through the Louvre and where others see the Mona Lisa all you see is .img and further on where others see Madonna with the Green Cushion, you again see .img. This is the world of a search engine. On the other hand, search engines are voracious readers, and while they can’t interpret a word, they do know how often it appears and they are able to assign a level of importance to it depending on where it appears and what is surrounding it.”
David goes on to talk about the importance of the ALT tag:
“Every image should have what is known as an alt tag (technically an alt attribute). I am sometimes asked if this includes when menu items are images instead of text. As it turns out, they are especially important here. Their importance extends beyond search engines, as they are chiefly important to the blind who use screen readers that have no way of knowing a link exists if it is just an image without an alt tag.”
David will share lots of ways that nonprofits can improve their search engine rankings, whether you have complete control over the design of your website or you can only write articles for it.
Get the details on Can We Find You on Google? Keywords and Search Engine Optimization for Nonprofits, taking place Thursday, March 6, 2008 at 2:00 p.m. Eastern (11:00 a.m. Pacific). Registration is $35 and includes everyone in your office who can fit around a single computer monitor and speaker phone.
read comments (0)The Most Important Part of a Nonprofit Brochure Is . . .
By Kivi Leroux MillerNOT your mission statement.
NOT your description of activities.
NOT your photographs.
The most important part of a nonprofit brochure is your call to action.
Once you’ve answered my questions about your organization and inspired me to take the next step, what do I do? Whom do I call (don’t just give me a phone number — tell me who to ask for)? Where do I go on your website? Is there a panel I can tear off and mail in?
Never publish another brochure without a call to action.
I’m doing a webinar on Wednesday (2/27/08) on nonprofit brochures called How to Make Your Brochures Pop! where you’ll get many more tips like these to make your nonprofit brochures as powerful as possible. It’s $35 for as many people from your organization as can fit around a computer monitor and speaker phone.
On Thursday (2/28/08), I’m doing my first online coaching session on brochures. Up to ten people will get personalized, hands-on advice on their nonprofit brochures, including ideas and feedback from me and other participants. That costs $99 and includes Wednesday’s webinar as well.
Bring Your E-Newsletter from Snoring to Soaring
By Kivi Leroux MillerEmail newsletters are great tools for nonprofits because they are so much cheaper to produce and distribute than print newsletters. The only problem is that they can be deleted in an instant or trapped forever in spam filters. And even when they are opened, they are often too *yawn* boring to grab the readers’ attention and move them to action.
I’m the special guest for Network for Good’s “Nonprofit 911″ training series next week and I’ll be talking all about e-mail newsletters — the good, the bad, and the ugly. Come get some great tips for your email newsletter during the free conference call on Tuesday, February 26 at 1:00 p.m. Eastern. Register here.
The Art of Chunking: An Online Writing Essential
By Kivi Leroux MillerChunking your Web and email text is one of the essential online writing skills I’ll be discussing during “Online Writing: Dos and Don’ts of Writing for the Web and Email,” a webinar on Wednesday, February 20 at 2:00 p.m. ET. Registration is open until 1:30 p.m. and costs just $35.
When people read on paper, they usually start at the beginning and work their way through in a linear fashion from page one to page two to page three, etc. When people read on the Web, however, they start where Google sent them, and that could be anywhere on your website. Once they get there, your website visitors will quickly skim the page, looking for chunks of text and keywords that tell them they are in the right spot.
What is Chunking?
When you chunk text, you break down what may have started as one really long article into smaller, manageable, more easily understood blocks of text. Your goal should be to create chunks of information that can stand on their own, but that also fit within the larger context of your website.
How Big is the Ideal Chunk?
So how big or small is the perfect chunk of text on a website? You need to find the sweet spot between too little and too much text. If you put too little information on a page, you force your reader to click around for the details, which is annoying. But if your chunks are too big, you make it difficult for your readers to immediately find the key points they are seeking.
For example, you might break down a 2,000 guide into three web pages of 600-700 words each. On each of the web pages, you could then break those 600 words into three blocks of 200 words each, complete with their own subheadings. Many professional online writers would advocate even shorter pages (no more than 500 words) and paragraphs (no more than 100 words).
Adding bulleted lists, writing in short sentences, highlighting keywords, and linking to related articles and details also contribute to successful chunking.
Which Page Has Better Chunking?
What questions would you have if you were interested in adopting a pet? Take a look at these two pages from two humane societies in Colorado and see who answers your questions more quickly.
Adoption Process Page at Humane Society of the Pikes Peak Region
Adoption Process Page at the Dumb Friends League/Denver Humane Society
Both pages discuss the pet adoption process, but one does a much better job at chunking the information.
The Pikes Peak page contains over 1,500 words and only seven subheadings. There are no bulleted lists, highlighted keywords, or links to more details to help visitors skim through the page to find the specific answers they are seeking.
In contrast, the Denver Dumb Friends League page contains about 1,000 words and has ten subheadings. The paragraphs are much shorter and you’ll find several bulleted lists and links to details. Think back to those questions you had about adopting a pet and I bet this page answers them more quickly.
The Pikes Peak page also contains the same kind of information, but in buried form that requires actual reading, rather than skimming.
This article written for teachers at Dartmouth who are putting course materials online provides some additional perspectives on chunking.
Four New Nonprofit Marketing Webinars & Calls Scheduled
By Kivi Leroux Miller
I’ve added four new events to the weekly webinar series schedule at Nonprofit Marketing Guide.com:
March 6: Can We Find You on Google? Keywords and Search Engine Optimization for Nonprofits. Can your supporters find you online? It all depends what Yahoo! and Google think your site is about. Featuring David Westbrook.
March 13: How to Write a 4-Page Nonprofit Annual Report - A Crash Course Webinar. Learn how to turn your annual report into a gift your donors and supporters look forward to receiving — all in four pages!
March 20: Converting Your Print Newsletter into an Email Newsletter - A Webinar. No, you can’t just email a PDF and call it an email newsletter. Learn the right way to go from print to pixels.
April 10: Branding for Nonprofits: What Is It and Should You Do It? - A “Hot Seat” Teleseminar Blending in with the crowd? Learn how branding can set your nonprofit apart. Featuring Nancy Schwartz.
Don’t forget, I’m also doing webinars on storytelling ideas for nonprofits next week, followed by dos and don’ts of online writing, and how to make your nonprofit brochures pop.
Got Questions on Getting Reporters’ Attention?
By Kivi Leroux Miller
As of this morning, 44 nonprofits have signed up for this week’s Nonprofit Marketing Guide teleseminar called “Getting Reporters to Cover Your Nonprofit: Tell Your Story So They’ll Tell It Too” with Claire Meyerhoff. You’ve still got time to register before the call starts on Wednesday 2/6/2008 at 2:00 p.m. Eastern. Registration is just $20 and that covers as many people as can comfortably sit around the speaker phone in your office.
We’ll be taking questions for most of the call via email and IM, but you can send in questions in advance too, whether you are registered or not. Just email them to ask@hotseatquestions.com. It’s a special email address I set up just for these “Hot Seat” interviews with experts. I’ll post a few of the best Q&As here after the call.
Here is a small excerpt from one of Claire’s messages to me as we’ve been preparing for this call:
“Nonprofits spend so much time thinking about relationships when it comes to $$$, yet when it comes to getting coverage, they think they can fire off a lame press release (caring and sharing and hope and hearts and helping and giving, blah blah blah) and get coverage. It takes time to cultivate contacts in the media!”
That’s just a tiny taste of the great real-world wisdom Claire will share with us on Wednesday. Register now to be a part of it.
How to Get Reporters Interested in You: Cut the Bull
By Kivi Leroux Miller![]() Claire Meyerhoff |
Last month, Claire Meyerhoff called to interview me about nonprofit storytelling for some articles she is working on, and we ended up having an hour-and-a-half chat about how hard it is for so many nonprofits to get press coverage, even though they have such great stories to tell.
We shared all kinds of theories about why this is true, and one of Claire’s points was really on target: Nonprofits need to cut the bull! Blathering on about your wonky mission statement, the infinitely deep root causes of a problem, and the complicated system-wide solutions required just doesn’t work for print reporters who need to think in terms of hundreds of words, not thousands, and TV journalists who can give you only 30 seconds of airtime.
I was so impressed with Claire’s down-to-earth perspective that I asked if she’d be interested in doing a teleseminar with me. Then she told me a bit more about her history and I couldn’t wait to host this event.
If you can spare $20 for some great media training, here’s where you should spend it:
Getting Reporters to Cover Your Nonprofit: How to Tell Your Story So They’ll Tell It Too!
It’s next week’s Nonprofit Marketing Guide teleseminar (in other words, it’s a toll-free conference call) on Wednesday, February 6, 2008 at 2:00 p.m. Eastern (11:00 a.m. Pacific). Gather ’round the speaker phone — as long as you are all from the same organization, $20 buys training for your whole staff.
Here’s what you should know about Claire, and why I was so eager to introduce her to all of you. Claire is a communications professional who has spent twenty-something years spreading the word with no muss and no fuss. As a news writer in CNN’s Washington bureau, she took complex stories and honed them into :30 worth of copy fit for Judy Woodruff and Wolf Blitzer. She also helped the National Safe Kids Campaign make the CBS Evening News — and I’ll have her share the story about why that wouldn’t have happened if she had done what the “higher ups” wanted her to do.
She has also reported on Hurricane Katrina’s aftermath on XM Radio’s “Red Cross Radio” channel, and she wrote and narrated an award-wining video for Ronald McDonald House of Durham, NC. Simply put, Claire gets nonprofits and on Wednesday, she’ll help you get the media.
I’m calling this a “Hot Seat” interview, which means I’ll spend the first 15-20 minutes of the hour-long call peppering Claire with some good, tough questions. Then it’s your turn. You can submit questions in advance and during the teleseminar via email to ask AT hotseatquestions.com or send them in via AIM to hotseatquestions.
Five Sure Signs Your Print Newsletter Is Really Boring
By Kivi Leroux MillerThis week’s webinar at Nonprofit Marketing Guide.com is “Ten Easy Fixes for Your Boring Print Newsletter.” It’s on Wednesday, January 23, 2008 from 2:00 - 3:00 p.m. Eastern (11:00 a.m. Pacific). Registration is $49.
Not sure if you should take this webinar or not? See if your print newsletter is showing any of these signs of being really boring:
1) The “Letter from the Executive Director” is on the cover or takes up a whole page. This is a tell-tale sign that your newsletter is more about what you think is interesting than what your audience cares about, which is the number one reason that nonprofit newsletters are boring. Even if it is not on the cover, if your executive message fills a whole page anywhere in your newsletter, odds are it’s boring.
2) You’re talking about stuff that happened months ago. Don’t summarize an event that happened three months ago in your newsletter. That tells me that you don’t have enough good stuff going on now and in the future to fill your pages. I’m not against event summaries in newsletters, but make sure they are very recent or that you’ve turned them into some other useful form of information, like a how-to article. Otherwise it’s just boring old news.
3) The photos are all grip-and-grins and fig-leaf lineups. Yes, we want people photos, but the same ol’ award ceremony and big check photos are uninspiring and have nothing to do with your mission. Same goes for the fig-leaf lineups (you know, where everyone is standing with their hands crossed in front of their privates). More on bad photo poses.
4) The word “You” is rarely used. People want to read information that is relevant to them and the word “You” in headlines, subheads, and first sentences of paragraphs signals that the writer is talking directly to the reader. If you aren’t talking to me, the reader, why should I care what you have to say? In other words, talk to me directly, or I’m bored.
5) You’ve reduced the type size to make everything fit. This usually means that you either don’t want to edit what you’ve written or don’t know how, and either way, unedited, rambling text with too many tangential details is really boring.
If you see your newsletter here, register for the webinar on Wednesday. One of my freelancing friends from my days in Washington DC, Ruth Thaler-Carter, will join me in answering your questions. Ruth is a veteran nonprofit newsletter writer, editor and designer and will have lots of great tips to share with us.







