The document outlines 50 social media tactics for nonprofits. It provides descriptions of tactics across various social media platforms like Twitter, Facebook, Foursquare, YouTube and others. Some of the tactics mentioned include using Twitter widgets on websites, enhancing team collaboration on Twitter, creating Facebook events and tabs, claiming locations on Foursquare and Facebook Places, and livestreaming events. Resources and examples of nonprofits using different tactics are provided at the end.
2. Chad Norman & Melanie Mathos| Page #2
#50smtIf you’re tweeting:
3. Chad Norman & Melanie Mathos| Page #3
50
Social Media
www.blackbaud.com/50Tactics
2132
0
8 15
2
44
36
22
9 1
41
You may remember…
Tactics for
Nonprofits
4. Chad Norman & Melanie Mathos| Page #4
So, you’ve got a social media plan, right?
* From Charlene Li and Josh Bernoff's book Groundswell:
Winning in a World Transformed by Social Technologies
P = People: Who?
O = Objectives: Goals?
S = Strategies: Outcomes?
T = Technologies: Tools?
The P.O.S.T. method*
Today, T is for “Tactics”
5. Chad Norman & Melanie Mathos| Page #5
51
SOCIAL MEDIA TACTIC
Use Twitter Widgets to display
updates on your website or blog.
Use Twitter Widgets to display
updates on your website or blog.
6. Chad Norman & Melanie Mathos| Page #6
52
SOCIAL MEDIA TACTIC
Enhance team collaboration
by scheduling and
assigning tweets and
monitoring.
Enhance team collaboration
by scheduling and
assigning tweets and
monitoring.
7. Chad Norman & Melanie Mathos| Page #7
53
SOCIAL MEDIA TACTIC
Learn what
hashtags mean
and analyze them
in real-time.
Learn what
hashtags mean
and analyze them
in real-time.
8. Chad Norman & Melanie Mathos| Page #8
54
SOCIAL MEDIA TACTIC
Measure how far
your tweets travel.
Measure how far
your tweets travel.
9. Chad Norman & Melanie Mathos| Page #9
55
SOCIAL MEDIA TACTIC
Help web visitors tweet about
your content with one click.
Help web visitors tweet about
your content with one click.
10. Chad Norman & Melanie Mathos| Page #10
56
SOCIAL MEDIA TACTIC
Register with
Twitter's Hope
140 Program.
Register with
Twitter's Hope
140 Program.
11. Chad Norman & Melanie Mathos| Page #11
57
SOCIAL MEDIA TACTIC
Automatically feed
your blog to Twitter
and Facebook.
Automatically feed
your blog to Twitter
and Facebook.
12. Chad Norman & Melanie Mathos| Page #12
58
SOCIAL MEDIA TACTIC
Identify your top contributors
and influencers.
Identify your top contributors
and influencers.
13. Chad Norman & Melanie Mathos| Page #13
59
SOCIAL MEDIA TACTIC
Ask your friends and top
fans to share your news.
Ask your friends and top
fans to share your news.
14. Chad Norman & Melanie Mathos| Page #14
60
SOCIAL MEDIA TACTIC
Share the backchannel
chatter at your event.
Share the backchannel
chatter at your event.
15. Chad Norman & Melanie Mathos| Page #15
61
SOCIAL MEDIA TACTIC
Organize a chat room
conversation around a hashtag.
Organize a chat room
conversation around a hashtag.
16. Chad Norman & Melanie Mathos| Page #16
62
SOCIAL MEDIA TACTIC
Create and share a daily
roundup of tweets
important to your cause.
Create and share a daily
roundup of tweets
important to your cause.
17. Chad Norman & Melanie Mathos| Page #17
63
SOCIAL MEDIA TACTIC
Use interactive video overlays to
increase conversions.
Use interactive video overlays to
increase conversions.
18. Chad Norman & Melanie Mathos| Page #18
64
SOCIAL MEDIA TACTIC
Use video annotations for
multiple calls to action.
Use video annotations for
multiple calls to action.
19. Chad Norman & Melanie Mathos| Page #19
65
SOCIAL MEDIA TACTIC
Create a photo petition in
support of a campaign.
Create a photo petition in
support of a campaign.
20. Chad Norman & Melanie Mathos| Page #20
66
SOCIAL MEDIA TACTIC
Release your photos
under a Creative
Commons license.
Release your photos
under a Creative
Commons license.
21. Chad Norman & Melanie Mathos| Page #21
67
SOCIAL MEDIA TACTIC
Claim your location of
Foursquare to ensure accuracy
and maximize exposure.
Claim your location of
Foursquare to ensure accuracy
and maximize exposure.
22. Chad Norman & Melanie Mathos| Page #22
68
SOCIAL MEDIA TACTIC
Create a branded page on
Foursquare to maximize
your presence.
Create a branded page on
Foursquare to maximize
your presence.
23. Chad Norman & Melanie Mathos| Page #23
69
SOCIAL MEDIA TACTIC
Create a custom badge on
Foursquare to encourage
check-ins and repeat visits.
Create a custom badge on
Foursquare to encourage
check-ins and repeat visits.
24. Chad Norman & Melanie Mathos| Page #24
70
SOCIAL MEDIA TACTIC
Extend your mission by
leaving tips at check-in spots.
Extend your mission by
leaving tips at check-in spots.
25. Chad Norman & Melanie Mathos| Page #25
71
SOCIAL MEDIA TACTIC
Encourage students to explore
their campus with Foursquare
for Universities.
Encourage students to explore
their campus with Foursquare
for Universities.
26. Chad Norman & Melanie Mathos| Page #26
72
SOCIAL MEDIA TACTIC
Create special offers to
reward your supporters.
Create special offers to
reward your supporters.
27. Chad Norman & Melanie Mathos| Page #27
73
SOCIAL MEDIA TACTIC
Raise money and awareness
with campaigns geared
around check-ins.
Raise money and awareness
with campaigns geared
around check-ins.
28. Chad Norman & Melanie Mathos| Page #28
74
SOCIAL MEDIA TACTIC
Make your content
shareable on Facebook
by adding a Like button.
Make your content
shareable on Facebook
by adding a Like button.
29. Chad Norman & Melanie Mathos| Page #29
75
SOCIAL MEDIA TACTIC
Incorporate
Facebook activity
into your website with
a social plugin.
Incorporate
Facebook activity
into your website with
a social plugin.
30. Chad Norman & Melanie Mathos| Page #30
76
SOCIAL MEDIA TACTIC
Display the rules for your
Facebook community.
Display the rules for your
Facebook community.
31. Chad Norman & Melanie Mathos| Page #31
77
SOCIAL MEDIA TACTIC
Encourage action
with a "Get Involved"
Facebook tab.
Encourage action
with a "Get Involved"
Facebook tab.
32. Chad Norman & Melanie Mathos| Page #32
78
SOCIAL MEDIA TACTIC
Support a specific call to
action with its own tab.
Support a specific call to
action with its own tab.
33. Chad Norman & Melanie Mathos| Page #33
79
SOCIAL MEDIA TACTIC
Provide a forum for
sharing personal
experiences with the
Facebook Stories
application.
Provide a forum for
sharing personal
experiences with the
Facebook Stories
application.
34. Chad Norman & Melanie Mathos| Page #34
80
SOCIAL MEDIA TACTIC
Officially "claim" your location
on Facebook Places.
Officially "claim" your location
on Facebook Places.
35. Chad Norman & Melanie Mathos| Page #35
81
SOCIAL MEDIA TACTIC
Ask your fans to share
your organization's page
with their friends.
Ask your fans to share
your organization's page
with their friends.
36. Chad Norman & Melanie Mathos| Page #36
82
SOCIAL MEDIA TACTIC
Launch a friend campaign
to broaden your audience.
Launch a friend campaign
to broaden your audience.
37. Chad Norman & Melanie Mathos| Page #37
83
SOCIAL MEDIA TACTIC
Add [TICKETED] [FREE] or
[REGISTRATION REQUIRED] to
your Facebook event titles.
Add [TICKETED] [FREE] or
[REGISTRATION REQUIRED] to
your Facebook event titles.
38. Chad Norman & Melanie Mathos| Page #38
84
SOCIAL MEDIA TACTIC
Create a branded social network
around a specific topic or cause.
Create a branded social network
around a specific topic or cause.
39. Chad Norman & Melanie Mathos| Page #39
85
SOCIAL MEDIA TACTIC
Leverage social media
culture in your
organization's internal
communications.
Leverage social media
culture in your
organization's internal
communications.
40. Chad Norman & Melanie Mathos| Page #40
86
SOCIAL MEDIA TACTIC
Participate in social buying platforms to
acquire new visitors and members.
Participate in social buying platforms to
acquire new visitors and members.
41. Chad Norman & Melanie Mathos| Page #41
87
SOCIAL MEDIA TACTIC
Crowdsource feedback
from your social network
with question platforms.
Crowdsource feedback
from your social network
with question platforms.
42. Chad Norman & Melanie Mathos| Page #42
88
SOCIAL MEDIA TACTIC
Use QR codes to provide instant
access to information and engage
supporters in a unique way.
Use QR codes to provide instant
access to information and engage
supporters in a unique way.
43. Chad Norman & Melanie Mathos| Page #43
89
SOCIAL MEDIA TACTIC
Monitor conversations about your organization and
cause with social media monitoring services.
Monitor conversations about your organization and
cause with social media monitoring services.
44. Chad Norman & Melanie Mathos| Page #44
90
SOCIAL MEDIA TACTIC
Socialize your online pressroom to
extend reach and to provide real-
time updates and dynamic content.
Socialize your online pressroom to
extend reach and to provide real-
time updates and dynamic content.
45. Chad Norman & Melanie Mathos| Page #45
91
SOCIAL MEDIA TACTIC
Encourage supporters
to leverage their social
networks for
alternative giving.
Encourage supporters
to leverage their social
networks for
alternative giving.
46. Chad Norman & Melanie Mathos| Page #46
92
SOCIAL MEDIA TACTIC
Involve your blogger community to
share first-hand experiences with
your organization and cause.
Involve your blogger community to
share first-hand experiences with
your organization and cause.
47. Chad Norman & Melanie Mathos| Page #47
93
SOCIAL MEDIA TACTIC
Use universal commenting tools
to encourage participation on
your blog or site.
Use universal commenting tools
to encourage participation on
your blog or site.
48. Chad Norman & Melanie Mathos| Page #48
94
SOCIAL MEDIA TACTIC
Participate in giving
contests (with caution).
Participate in giving
contests (with caution).
49. Chad Norman & Melanie Mathos| Page #49
95
SOCIAL MEDIA TACTIC
Livestream your events to
extend your reach and engage
your online community.
Livestream your events to
extend your reach and engage
your online community.
50. Chad Norman & Melanie Mathos| Page #50
96
SOCIAL MEDIA TACTIC
Bookmark this website:
www.jumo.com.
Bookmark this website:
www.jumo.com.
51. Chad Norman & Melanie Mathos| Page #51
97
SOCIAL MEDIA TACTIC
Establish your presence
on wiki communities.
Establish your presence
on wiki communities.
52. Chad Norman & Melanie Mathos| Page #52
98
SOCIAL MEDIA TACTIC
Add your organization's voice
and expertise in forums and
on social networks.
Add your organization's voice
and expertise in forums and
on social networks.
53. Chad Norman & Melanie Mathos| Page #53
99
SOCIAL MEDIA TACTIC
Help your cause on
LinkedIn by using the
Nonprofit Learning Center.
Help your cause on
LinkedIn by using the
Nonprofit Learning Center.
54. Chad Norman & Melanie Mathos| Page #54
100
SOCIAL MEDIA TACTIC
Share your content and resources
on the web's largest community for
sharing presentations.
Share your content and resources
on the web's largest community for
sharing presentations.
Twitter widgets are a great way to bring the Twitterverse onto your website are blog.
You can setup and customize widgets at twitterm/goodies/widgets
You can make it any size, customize the colors to match your site, and change the way it behaves.
Great way to bring interactive dynamic content onto your site – it moves!!!
The widgets include:
- Profile Widget showing your last few tweets
- Search widget showing tweets related to search criteria
- Faves widget showing your account’s favorites
- Lists widget showing the tweets of one of your lists
"- Tools like Cotweet and Hootsuite are essential for social media teams of two or more
- Both support scheduled tweets (optimize delivery time or become more efficient with time), assigned tweets (delegate responses and monitoring) multiple users for team collaboration (unique accounts), monitoring, and social network aggregation. (Hootsuite more than Cotweet), Hootsuite also has a native iPhone app with standard edition."
What the Hashtag?! is a user-editable encyclopedia for hashtags found on Twitter that offers real-time feeds and analytics (for past 7 days and for top contributors and by type).
This is a great way to anaylize hashtag activity for a particular hashtag in an attempt to measure it’s impact.
Also a great way to identify your key influencers and staffers participating in the conversation.
It can tell you:
- Top 10 contributors by number of tweets
- Total number of tweets
- Total contributors
- Tweets per day
- % from the top ten
- % of retwets
- % that are mentions
- % with multiple hashtags
"- We all know that the power of Twitter is rooted in the power of the RT.
- RT's become a lot more meaningful when you can measure actual impressions.
- With Tweetreach, you can query on a specific subject or hashtag (for free)
- Tweetreach will give you a detailed report with key metrics like reach, exposure, and top influencers who are furthering your messages.
- Up to 50 tweets are free, then you get into the paid model - up to 1500 for $20 or you can subscribe for $84/month"
Popular Twitter plugin inserts "Tweet This" links so your readers can share posts with one click. Can automatically tweet new posts via OAuth.
- Twitter button from Twitter.com
- The TweetMeme retweet button was popular first.
"- If you were at Wednesday's Ignite session, you got to hear about Twitter's social good initiatives (if not, you can catch the replay on Blackbaud.tv
- Based at the center of it is the Hope 140 program - Twitter's homebase for case studies and opportunities for nonprofits
- Currently, you can go there to see how some of the leading nonprofits like Room to Read and Charity Water are leveraging Twitter
- There are also examples of some of the Twitter-backed campaigns like End Malaria. On April 25, each $10 donation tweeted to Malaria No More to help distribute life saving bed nets to those in need was matched by the Case Foundation (The campaign raised over $36,000)
- So, what if you're not fortunate enough to be on Twitter's radar? Then, do your homework! There is a form that you can submit on the site to share how your organization is using Twitter.
- The site mentions a special version of the new Promoted Tweets program ""Tweets for Good"" - be sure to sign-up for a chance to get involved.
"
Tools like Twitterfeed will automatically send you blog posts to your Twitter and Facebook accounts via RSS
This is a great way to ensure all your content gets to Twitter
For organizations with a small staff, this is a real time saver.
Also provides real-time stats on traffic and use.
Be careful though – make sure you content is hitting Twitter at the time you want.
"- There are many tools that can help you identify your top influencers from free apps to more advanced tools like Vocus or Radian6.
- They are designed to help you rank your top Twitter advocates and bloggers by the number of followers, retweets, blog comments and activity volume.
- You may discover new influencers in your network that you should get to know better, or simply identify what subjects are resonating with your top supporters"
"- Believe it or not, not everyone will see every tweet you beautifully craft - and it's just getting noisier and nosier in the Twitterverse as everyone's parents are joining the party.
-There is nothing wrong with giving them a ""heads-up"" or in Twitter-speak, a dm or tag (@reply at the end of the tweet) to make sure it gets on their radar
- It's equivilant to a pitch in PR - press releases don't sell stories
- As in PR, use this tactic wisely - don't spam your influencers, or you will likely work against you"
Visible Tweets is a visualization of Twitter messages designed for display in public spaces.
This is great for events, presentations, or meetings.
For people who are tweeting about you, this is a cool way to show off their contribution.
These animations are mesmerizing, and are a great way to turn on new people to Twitter.
"- There are tons of tools that can help you organize a Twitter chat, but our favorite is TweetChat
- Here's how it works: Login to TweetChat with your Twitter credentials and enter the hashtag for the chat
- This will direct you to a TweetChat room where you can converse in real-time (the feed auto-updates)
- The hashtag will be automatically added to each of your tweets.
- You can use the ""User Control"" area to feature people you like or to block spammers.
- When you scroll down the page, ""Smart Pausing"" activates so the page it will not refresh, helping you avoid replying to the wrong person.
"
paper.li organizes links shared on Twitter into an easy to read newspaper-style format. Newspapers can be created for any Twitter user, list or #tag.
A great way to stay on top of all that is shared by the people you follow - even if you are not connected 24/7!
This is a great link to send out to your followers, and doesnn’t require any work on your behalf to produce.
Be careful though, the content can at times get off topic because it is not curated.
- After creating it, watch it for a few days before you share it.
"- There are a couple of ways to promote your landing pages and calls-to-action in YouTube videos
- A lot of sites use ""pre-roll"" or a short video ad before content is played. Overlays are an improvement that allows viewers to get right to the content.
- YouTube overlays allow you to specify a ""call-to-action"" for viewers, helping generate engaged, well-targeted traffic for your website.
- Through YouTube's nonprofit program, nonprofits can include a campaign-specific headline, ad text, and a destination url that will appear whenever someone watches your video.
- This is designed to increase conversions - all of which can be tracked through YouTube insight
"
Customize when and where on the screen the link appears. Drive traffic to a donation page, registration page, blogpost you're referring to, etc.
Michael Hoffman of See3 called this a game changing feature for nonprofits – and I agree!
You can customize when and where these links appear in your video.
Nonprofits can only link to a donation page or sign up page
- Regular YouTube users can only link to other YouTube pages
- This is a great way to engage your networks by asking them to share photos of their support of your issue - in this case, through a special group established on Flickr
- You can do this a number of ways, but many organizations have asked their supporters to upload photos holding a sign with a specific message on it
- In this case, Oxfam America launched a photo petition in support of a campaign aimed at empowering Ethiopian coffee farmers.
- They wanted coffee industry leaders to sign an agreement that recognizes Ethiopia's right to control the use of its coffee brand names.
- As part of the campaign, 578 photos were uploaded to the "Starbucks Photo Petition" Group on Oxfam's Flickr account.
- People took pictures of themselves with signs saying "I support Ethiopian Coffee Farmers."
- The overall campaign was a success and Starbucks and Ethiopia finalized a trademark agreement, ending their dispute and bringing both sides together in partnership to help Ethiopian farmers.
Creative Commons is a great way to increase the reach of your photos by using an alternative copyright.
Creative Commons allows you to set rights to things like: Attribution, Non-Comomercial, No Derivative
- This means people can use your photo with a credit to you, as long as they aren’t making money or changing it.
- These attributes can be fine tuned to suite your needs.
This will allow bloggers, presenters, media, etc to use your photo freely, which may drive more attention and traffic to your cause.
"- This one's easy and the reason for doing it is simple - brand integrity and accuracy
- All you have to do is enter the name of your organization, its address and Twitter handle
- Add the Tags “nonprofit” and “nonprofit organization” and “charity”, as well as any other Tags relevant to your organization and its mission (human rights, environment, peace, etc.).
- Add the city and state of your organization as a Tag. It doesn’t make a difference in searches on the website version of Foursquare, but it does in the iPhone App version!"
Like other social networks, Foursquare loves helping nonprofits meet their missions.
If you ask them nicely, they may help you setup a branded page at foursquare.com
This is what NWF did for their Wildlife Watch program.
They leave tips at key areas around the country that feature wildlife.
When foursquare users checkin nearby these locations, they will get a message from NWF.
This reinforces their mission to promote wildlife, and give supporters the VIP treatment.
Notice the branding at the top of the page – you can’t do this on normal Foursquare pages.
"- The Brooklyn Museum does a great job of leveraging social media to engage their networks
- They were one of the first nonprofits to create a custom badge, in partnership with Foursquare
- To get The BK Art Star badge, all you have to do is check-in to the Museum location on Foursquare 3 times
- Your avatar will then be integrated into the Museum's online community page
- Right now, there are no clear guidelines for nonprofits on creating badges outside of purchasing them (which is pricey), but many have written about how the badging system is being reworked, so let's hope that means good things for nonprofits!"
This is one of the best ways a nonprofit can use Foursquare, especially if you have something advocating for.
Tips are short messages left at locations that Foursquare users see when they checkin.
One of my favorite local nonprofits is The Charleston Parks Conservancy.,
It is their mission to promote the use of amazing parks throughout the city.
Their tips point users to nearby parks, and mention why they are great.
This helps them meet their mission by driving more people to parks, who will hopefully then help preserve them.
"- Foursquare for Universities was designed to encourage students to explore their campuses
- Right now, schools using this program include Syracuse, Harvard, Stanford, and Texas A&M
- (May be Foursquare's attempt to follow the Facebook model)
- Universities are encourages to setup a University Page on Foursquare where they can broadcast announcements
- Another way universities can engage their students is by sharing tips, directing students to campus venues or events and providing more information on academic buildings, dining halls, residence halls, and historic landmarks around the university.
- Finally, users can unlock Foursquare's new university badges like the Campus Munchies and Bookworm Bender badges"
Special offers in Foursquare are a great way for businesses to deliver coupons to users who checkin at their stores.
But nonprofits are finding uses for these as well, especially Arts & Cultural organizations.
The Vancouver Police Museum offers people who checkin a 25% discount at the gift shop.
Not only does this make their social media users feel more special, but it drives more traffic to their gift shop.
"- Earthjustice, a non-profit public interest law firm, has blanketed San Francisco BART stations with posters that instruct riders to check in to the “Earthjustice ad” on Foursquare to help the firm raise money to support its wildlife protection initiatives.
- For each Earthjustice ad checkin, a company donor donated $10 to the cause in question — in this case, “unsafe oil drilling.”
-Another example of this was the ""Check-In for Charity"" at SXSW.Every time people checked in on Foursquare in Austin, Microsoft and PayPal donated $0.25 toward Save the Children up to $15,000.
- This is a great way to engage corporations in a cause-marketing campaign targeted at a younger demographic"
The Facebook like button is one of the best features to roll out in recent years.
It allows you to put like buttons on your website and blog that allows visitsors to recommend your content.
When they click the button, it appears on their profile page – which will encourage others to visit the page.
It also can show site visitors which friends have already liked the content, which may increase their chances of reading it and liking it themselves.
Mashable did a study which showed that these buttons increase traffic to blogs by 50% almost instantly.
"- To Mama With Love was a collaborative online art project to honor ""mamas"" around the globe and to raise money for one mama's dream to provide a home for children in Africa. ($17k was raised - enough to build a home for 17 children)
- The campaign was launched by Epic Change - a group that holds the annual Tweetsgivivng campaign
- Central to the campaign was leveraging social networks
- The To Mama With Love webpage did a great job of pulling in all that activity into one central place by using video, a Twitter box and a Facebook activity plug-in.
- This is just one example of Facebook's social-plugins that are designed to pull the Facebook experience onto your site. Everyone is familiar with the ""Like box"", but there are many other unique plug-ins including recommendation boxes and comment boxes.
- Best part? You just need to add one line of HTML
"
For social media managers and executives who worry about inappropriate comments on their Facebook walls.
Including a commenting policy on your Info tab will set the expectations for your community’s behavior.
This also gives you a simple justification for removing content that is undesirable.
The Humane Society does this well, and has to use it often.
- While they need it most, all nonprofits should do this.
If you don’t have calls to action on your Facebook page your missing a huge opportunity!
By using the FBML application, you can create custom tabs that feature programs and calls to action.
The Best Friends Animal Society do this affectively with their “Adopt!” tab.
- This tab not only look great, but features animals that are looking for homes.
You can do things like:
- Sign up
- Volunteer
- Donate
- Register
If you’re nonprofit has a supporter base that loves to share stories, check out Facebook Stories.
This is a Facebook app developed with Involver, and does a great job of putting supporters stories directly on your page.
The Red Cross does a great job with this with their Stories about Natural Disasters page.
It allows fans to post content directly to that page in a easily readable format.
It includes Geo-tagging and can drive a lot of traffic to your page via the feeds of people who participate.
"- Similar to claiming your location on Foursquare, it is very easy to claim your location on Facebook
- Not just anyone can claim a page. You have to submit the right paperwork to Facebook for approval. (There is a link that says ""is this your business?""
- Aside from basic information like the name, URL, and address of the business, the Claim Place page also asks for the Federal EIN (Employee Identification Number), and requires that you upload a scan of official documents.
- Doing so will allows you to publish content on news feeds of those users that have checked into your place.
- You are also able to edit the address, business hours, profile picture, contact information, and other settings such as designating admins authorized to alter the Places page.
- Lastly, you can advertise your place"
Share via wall post or message.
On the bottom left of every Facebook page you’ll see a “Share” button.
This is a simple, effective way to get your fans to share your page with their friends.
Once a month, put a wall post up that encourages your fans to do this.
- Faced with massive cuts in state funding that threatened to close 220 California state parks, the California State Parks Foundation (CSPF) launched a multichannel effort to raise awareness and advocate the issue.
- The “Friend Get a Friend” campaign launched on Facebook via an update to 517 fans – “This year’s cuts are ten times as bad, so we need ten times the fans on Facebook.”
- With just two updates on Facebook (and smart cross-promotion through other channels), CSPF's fanbase grew from 517 to 33,000 in just two weeks, creating a proof point for keeping the parks open, helping them meet their “promote awareness” goal and gaining some valuable mainstream media coverage. They now have close to 60,000 fans.
"
Some visitors need a little extra incentive to click on event links.
By easily displaying whether they are free, ticketed, or require registration can help this.
Especially if they are free.
Simply add something like [FREE] to the title will show them on your main page what to expect.
This will drive more traffic to your free events.
- Why? The average size of an in-house community is fifty percent higher than that of an equivalent Facebook® community. You have more control over privacy settings and branding, and with certain tools, (like Blackbaud Social, in this case.) You have access to the user data for broader cultivation. You can also provide an affinity-based community or a private place for sensitive discussions, as in the case of The Reeve Foundation, whose community is based around providing support and a forum for discussion around living with paralysis.
Social media isn’t just for your supporters – it’s for your staff too!
Yammer is basically a private version of Twitter for your organization.
- only people with yourorg.org email addresses can join.
It works just like Twitter with status updates, tags, etc.
It’s a great way to share program ideas, successes, and news.
It’s also very useful for crowdsourcing.
"- G-Team campaigns range from ridiculous flashmobs to fundraisers that benefit local community organizations. Every G-Team campaign connects you with enough people to achieve something awesome that you couldn’t have done alone. A nonprofit can suggest a campaign on the G-team website by applying for a sponsorship. (Right now, piloting in Chicago and ""coming to a city near you."")
- More ""real"" Groupon example - Groupon for acquisition - The Charleston Museum offered 50% off museum membership. 325 purchased (in one day!)
- Causeon. Same concept as Groupon, but Causeon offers up to 20% of its revenues to causes.
"
Crowdsourcing is a great way to use social media to get input from your supporters.
The Obama administration famously used Google Moderator at Change.gov to bring in ideas from citizens.
Users can submit ideas, then other users can vote up or down the content.
- The best ideas then rise to the top.
This is a great way to get your community together for good.
Other tools include UserVoice, Pligg, and Crispy Ideas.
"- The SC Aquarium launched a multi-channel campaign to promote the opening of an albino gator exhibition
- There are less than 50 albino alligators in the wild
- To raise awareness for the exhibition, the Aquarium placed 50 Albino alligator stickers with QR codes around Charleston
- QR codes (or quick response codes) are like barcodes and can be read by QR scanners (free apps via smartphones) Links can be embedded so users can easily navigate to a site.
- Users were encouraged to log their ""sightings"" by scanning the QR code and entering them on the campaign landing page.
- The more gators people found, the more points they received, with the winner earning a special up-close visit with the alligator
"
If you’ve got a ton of social media activity, using a platform to help monitor the chatter is a good idea.
Tools like Radian6 and Vocus do this well.
Radian will collect social media mentions from across many platforms, and bring them into one place for analysis.
This allows you to identify trends, sentiment, influencers, and more.
Radian6 also offers discounts for nonprofits, so definitely check them out.
"- The best place to provide real-time updates to enhance communications is in your online press room
- The American Red Cross did a great job with this in their Red Cross Disaster Online Newsroom
- They built it on Wordpress for the ease of publishing and for SEO
- They taught volunteers how to use it
- With RSS capability, journalists and constituents can subscribe to tags and categories that interest them
- Incorporated Flickr photos
- Incorporated Utterli to allow field workers and volunteers to share text, pictures, audio, and even video via their mobile phones
- Another great way to enhance your online news rooms is to incorporate incoming RSS feeds for dynamic content and Twitter and Facebook feeds for real-time activity updates in a centralized location."
Alternative giving is a great way to turn awesome supporters into awesome fundraisers.
Heifer International has used this model for years – Give a gift as a gift.
Facebook Causes takes this to another level, and helps you ask your friends for donations instead of gifts.
Nonprofits are begging to do this more for birthdays, weddings, graduations, etc – all enhanced by social media.
"- Save the Children took three of the UK’s top mummy bloggers to Bangladesh to see first hand and raise awareness of the scale of child mortality in developing countries. The mums have already created a storm in the digital world talking about #blogladesh- over 10 million people have read and/or retweeted their blogs and tweets.
- This is just a really smart way to engage your on-topic influencers in support of a greater cause"
Blog commenting tools like Disqus
- There has been a lot of criticism about giving contests - primarily because the community fatigue that they can cause.
- Plus, in "fundraising contests" the average nonprofit has no power against the massive lists that some of the top nonprofits have
- That said, there is a lot of money being given away through contests like Pepsi Refresh and JustMeans cause marketing "grants" and some contests offer matching grants or widespread consolation prizes.
- Look closely at the positives and negatives - and timing of your participation
- Geoff Livingston wrote a very insightful post on Mashable that provides some guidelines to consider - before you move forward with a contest, it is a good idea to ask yourself the following questions:
Do you have a realistic chance of being successful in the contest?
Do you have the necessary time and resources to engage intensively in the contest to maximize the chances of winning?
Will the campaign help build a new set of donors?
Will participating in a contest strengthen capacity to integrate social media tools and networks into overall strategy?
What kind of publicity will be generated from the application? Is there strong alignment between the contest’s brand and your own?
Does the contest align with your values, mission and goals?
Will participation add to or detract from potential donor fatigue?
Can your organization give up and share control?
If your non-profit wins, can you implement any funding or other offering from the contest with your current infrastructure?
If not, can your organization scale to meet the demands a winning opportunity brings?
"- At Mashable's Social Good Summit last month, Chris Hughes (on the team that supported the launch of Facebook) hailed his new project, Jumo as a centralized platform that ""makes it easy to find, follow, and support nonprofits."" A prescriptive social network of sorts.
- He said that Jumo is launching later this year and will integrate with Facebook
- This is one to keep on your radar - at the very least, go to Jumo,com and sign-up for updates and Like them on Facebook"
"- Not everyone qualifies for an entry in Wikipedia. Your organization must be ""notable"" or as defined by Wikipedia, it has been the subject of significant coverage in reliable, independent secondary sources that are verifiable.
- If you meet that criterion, then you can setup a page focused on your organization, not your programs
- Let others write about you - it is not a problem for you to write your own page, but you have to make sure the reliable references are there and that you are writing about something bigger than a program you just launched.
- Another resource to check out (if your organization's work supports any of the UN Millennium Development Goals) is Umovement. - Umovement is a global grassroots movement to accelerate the achievement of the goals and is like a Wikipedia for nonprofits (minus the strict noteriety clause.)"
LinkedIn is a great place for nonprofits to setup groups, but also to show their expertise and help people
LinkedIn Answers allows users to answer open questions to the community.
By searching keywords related to your cause you can find questions that you can answer.
- terms like animal welfare, sustainability, pregnancy, men’s health, etc.
Other platforms include Facebook Questions and Quora
"- Like many other social networks, LinkedIn has a special program and learning center for nonprofits
- Some of the ways LinkedIn seeks to help nonprofits leverage the platform are around using advanced search to find experts, partners, or corporations that may be prospective sponsors.
- It also provides guidance for how to use questions to solicit feedback and receive advice
- It guides you through how to start a LinkedIn Group, and encourage your organization to join so each member becomes an ambassador for your organization with a badge on his or her profile.
"
http://www.slideshare.net/event/2010-nonprofit-technology-conference :: SlideShare is the world's largest community for sharing presentations. You can…
* upload & share your presentations (ppt, pptx, odp, pdf, keynote)
* embed on blogs & websites
* use Leadshare & AdShare to generate customer leads
* create branded channels for your company/product
* create a webinar by linking slides with audio
* embed YouTube videos into presentations
And now SlideShare also supports all documents formats (doc, docx, odt, Apple iWork). And it's completely free.