From NetSquared Vancouver's September 16 meetup.
Are you avoiding the blank page of writing an article, with no idea what to write, and a hundred other things you end up doing instead?
Do you scroll social media for your organization, wishing you had something better to post today?
Creating content doesn’t have to be a headache, it can be fun and easy if we change our mindset and adapt the hacks outlined in this webinar.
This isn’t just the world of content, it’s the world of relationships, audience building, and stewardship online to drive future donations.
But content takes time, so it gets left behind! Sadly though, without YOU creating content, you’re leaving your donors to see nothing but posts about the WE Charity scandal and the latest Kardashian drama!
So if the answer to online presence is more content, the next question is how the heck do you do it?? Nonprofits are so busy. This event will show you HOW to create way more content and reduce the time you spend creating.
With more content you have the chance to connect, learn, improve, and do it all over again.
PS. This video is for everyone in your organization, not just the marketing manager. We can all get involved in content!
Joel Harrison is the founder of ElevateHub.ca (BC impact news and job listings), a social impact podcaster, and marketing consultant for nonprofits and social enterprises. You can find links to everything at https://joelmharrison.com
13. Ask yourself: If my nonprofit didn’t
exist, would this content still work to
advance the same mission?
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14. Method 1: Find Content You
Didn’t Know You Already
Created
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15. Content You’ve Already Created
● Emails (questions you’ve answered)
● Phone Calls (common things you say, explain, or describe)
● Annual Reports (take out pieces to be used on social media or articles)
● Training Manuals
● Speeches or Talks
TASK: Take stock of all the assets you could possibly use for content
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17. 17
VIDEO
Cut Into 3 Segments
Pull the Audio Out for
Podcast
Copy 5 Quotes as Text
for Emails & Tweets
Write a Summary Blog
Post About 1 Idea
Share on Social Media
Channels
Transcribe for Blog Post
Turn Quotes into
Images
Take Pictures During
Recording
Share in Email
TASK: Decide what type of core content you could
create, and then repurpose into its pieces.
19. Compile Micro Content
● Gather up related social media posts of yours and turn it into an article.
● Gather up quotes, or facts/data you've used elsewhere and put them all
into one article summarizing an issue.
● Take a few educational articles on a similar topic and combine a highlight
from each into one article.
● Evolution over Time: Go back to your first first posts, images, or data and
compare it to now.
TASK: Write down the micro content you could compile together into
something bigger?
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21. Partner With Organizations
● Be Interviewed: Have a message or info to share, and find some podcasts
or blogs that have a similar focus. (not an advertisement!)
● Ask your corporate partners to share a quote or image with you and
feature them. They’ll love it, and might do the same for you.
TASK: Research podcasts, events or aligned organizations that are
creating content that could feature you.
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23. Capture Ideas Together
● Creating a lot means capturing a lot
● Having a shared place where people can offload their ideas, links, photos,
and videos means YOU are not wasting your time.
● Provide instructions to keep it organized
○ Folder and Filenames: “2020-09-16 Event Name - Person’s Name”
○ Idea & Link Spreadsheet
TASK: Create a folder and set of instructions for your other team
members to drop their pictures and content ideas into.
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25. Guest Content
● Other team members - get them to document their process, event, or
experience.
● Volunteers, Donors & Participants - Just Ask! Content from their voice is
almost always more impactful than yours.
● Students & New Grads - Opportunity to help a nonprofit & build their
portfolio/network. Look for English majors, or something related
● Having an outline for the articles or photos you’d like to use is a MUST.
TASK: Create a description of the type of article you're looking to have
written and start asking!
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29. Flip the Angles
● Physically! - Take photos from weird or unusual angles. Zoom in, Zoom
out, top down, bottom up.
● Point of View - Write a review of something from an organization
perspective, then a note from the ED, then a quote from a participant
● Topic Framing - Positive vs. Negative / Proactive vs Reactive
TASK: Find a good piece of content you've done in the past, or a good
social post, and try to flip the angle.
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35. Curate Content
● Instead of creating it, you can just find it, share it, compile it
● Particularly effective for email newsletters or e-magazines
● Always give credit, show appreciation for the work
TASK: Find an image, article, or story from an organization you're closely
associated with, and ask if you can share it (with credit/link).
*The idea capturing can be incredibly powerful here. Try to find a program like
Evernote, OneNote, Notion.so, or Google Keep where you can easily clip links
from webpages you find to put into a list. Avoid bookmarks!
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38. Be Curious & Ask
● You don’t have to have all the answers, but you can ask the questions
● Can be done in Stories, Posts, Polls, Surveys, Images, Emails
● Received answers? Now you have content.
TASK: List off 5 questions you could ask your audience on social media,
through a survey/poll, or direct email to try to elicit engagement.
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39. 39
Asked a poll
on a story -
screenshotted
the results for
a post later.
41. Reshare & Republish
● New followers & subscribers won’t go back and look at everything
● Reshare timeless content - educational, data driven, opinion content
● Republish and update content that is old but has new data, info, or
technology to update.
TASK: Go through each of your channels for the past few years note
every piece that is timeless and could be shared or could be updated and
republished.
BONUS: For new email subscribers/donors, create a series of emails that
can point them to your best, timeless content.
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