Presentation to Rockland County Capacity Building Initiative - Cornell Cooperative Extension

Howard Greenstein
Howard GreensteinConsultant em The Harbrooke Group
New Media 202: Implementing
           Social Networks For Non-Profits
                             P R E S E N T E D B Y : H O WA R D G R E E N S T E I N ,
                             PRESIDENT OF THE HARBROOKE GROUP                         




Entire presentation (CC) 2008 Attribute-Share-Alike- Non Commercial
by The Harbrooke Group, Inc. Some Rights Reserved.
Some slides copyrighted by others
Please respect their ownership
Social Media and Social Networks

  Tech tools include:
     YOUR WEBSITE!

     Facebook and MySpace – Social networks

     Flickr and YouTube – Photo and video sharing

     Twitter – Microblogging and information sharing

     Your Blog or a Blogging tool like Wordpress.org, Blogger.com, or
      Typepad.com
     Boards, Forums, local newspaper sites and places where people are
      interested in your cause
Facebook, MySpace and Other
                 Social Communities
                                3

  All intended to bring people together
  People can show their interests, join groups
  Photo and Video Sharing, links, information, invitations
  Applications – allow for games, socializing, spending
  virtual time with friends
Defining Your Goal(s)
Web 2.0 and Social Media




Expression
New Ways to think about
                           Communications




  “We are the authors of each other.” 
     Doc Searls

  “I am who I am because of who we are together.”
     Definition of the Zulu word Ubuntu. 
      (Ubuntu    is also the name of popular variant of the Linux free operating
      system.)
Current, Updated Information

  No one likes a web page that never changes
  Social Media and Social Networks can provide you new
 content – created by your team as well as your
 volunteers and fans
Recruit and Retain

  Recruiting: Having a public place for your constituents to
   share information, comments, photos, events will help
   promote your cause
  Retaining: 
    Social Networks can help facilitate connections among current
     constituents
    By having a site with profiles showing their interests and
     connections, members can make connections where they didn’t
     previously exist. 
    A goal of Social Networking is to help online connections meet in
     person!
Social Networks in Plain English

       
     
     http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6a_KF7TYKVc
What’s really the difference?
                                      10

  Do you need all 3?
     Demographics – MySpace doesn’t seem to have many professional
      groups – but check to see if your fans are there
     LinkedIn good for Mailing Lists and some professional interaction,
      especially job leads
     Facebook more for social interaction, even if it is ‘professional social’
      – more like a Cocktail party
Key Elements of Social Media

  Listening
  Participating
  Creating and Managing your own space
  And of course, set up to measure what you’re doing
     You need to be able to monitor your outcome
Measurement

  What will you measure?
     How many people recruited?

     Constituent satisfaction?

     Views of your blog?

     News mentions (on blogs, in traditional media)

     General satisfaction?

  It is up to you to define, but once defined, it is important
  to measure and judge
WEVote08

  Case Study: For WEtv, a Cable Network
     Public Service Campaign In conjunction with on-air campaign: 
      WE Vote 08
     Facebook app 
         Addedpopular friends with personal notes to encourage adding, even
         though this was “yet another application”
    Blog – got other bloggers to pay attention, some by interviewing
     them for the blog
    Created a Twitter account: @WEVote08
         Reached  out to popular and relevant Twitterati
         In-Person Tweetups in several cities

      Blog Badges
How Do You Measure?

  Measured using Omniture reports to find referrers, blog
  references, measure or approximate their traffic
      Able to see how many badges are being served – like a small ad
       network – and where - Somewhat
  Found references to campaign on other sites, blogs and
   forums using Radian 6 searches and Google searches
  Kept a dashboard for the client to track these mentions,
   sites, tweets, pictures from Flickr accounts
Listening

  First, find out what’s going on out there
  Is anyone talking about you? Positive or Negative, or
  Neutral?
    Where are they talking?
    What’s the community like?

    Can you join it?
Stormhoek Wine + Social Media
Stormhoek Results

  From a $1MM to a $10MM business with Internet
 advertising and word-of-mouth, only.
     http://www.flickr.com/photos/technokitten/47458362/
Participating

  Create a strategy, based on your listening
     What are people talking about?

     What would be your answers? Do you need “official” answers? (Can
      you make them sound non-canned?)
  Join in to be helpful or useful
     If constituents are having a problem, help them solve it
What if Someone says something
                  bad about us?!

  It WILL happen. Will it happen where you can address it?
  If people are talking in a negative way, ask about it
  Don’t be defensive! 
  And don’t sound like you’re towing the company line.
     This is your opportunity to WIN people over
Creating Your Own Space

  Not every group or company has people talking about
  them in other communities
      Sometimes you have to create the space for people to talk about
       you on your own website
  If you build it, they may not come…
     There are no guarantees

     If people are treated poorly in a community they may leave

     Monitoring, empowering discussion leaders can help build a
      community
Listening Tools
                                                21

  A number are listed in the ‘extra slides”
  Google Alerts
     www.Google.com/Alerts

     A way to take a Google search, and have new results emailed to you
      when they’re indexed
     If someone posts on “Charity” and “YourGroupName” and
      “YourCity” you’d get an alert
     If it is a blog or a forum, you could then decide whether or not to
      respond 




CC 2007 Harbrooke Group, Inc. Some Rights                           6/19/09
Reserved.
Participation means

  Joining forums where the discussion is happening
  Answering questions
  Blogging (always a combination of listening and talking)
  Always listening to hear the response to your
  participation
Social Connector Personality

  Organizational Culture Check in – the person who does
   this has to love the Online medium
  Person has to be open to communication
  Receptive to criticism
  A little geeky – willing to try new tools
Enable Your Network (for
       Recruiting)
Since Ancient times, people have told
                stories
Example of someone enabling Storytelling:


  “My” Barack Obama” = Personal page
Enabling your network means

  Letting your story go
  Empowering people to tell it for you
     Content that can be shared

     Messages you want passed on

     Rules or Guidelines about how to share

  Listening for people talking about your story
     And talking back to them
Pay it Forward, First

  Blogger Sean Bohan asked: “Are you paying forward into
   Social Media’s equivalent of a 401k (relationships) by
   being an active participant?
  What are you doing to give back to your community
   online, before you need something from them? 




http://www.seanbohan.com/2008/09/23/outreach-is-networking-for-your-social-media-efforts/
Using Facebook and other
    SN sites effectively
Running a Social Media Site Is Like
                        Hosting an Event
                                         30

  Create a clear purpose
      Inviting the early users 
      Setting the mood
      Picking the people needed to get the party started
      Having someone or a group tasked to help introduce new people
      A basic set of rules or guidelines 
      A “bouncer” to take care of unexpected situations
      A way for attendees to pitch in
      Multiple ways to participate
      Everybody has fun
      References: 
          http://www.commoncraft.com/party
          http://www.slideshare.net/leelefever/online-community-as-party
Community Moderation
                                31

  Self-moderation and self-policing – “report this”
  Tools to manage language and issues
  Reporting on the back end
  Personnel to moderate and manage situations where
  “flaming” or “trolling” may potentially make community
  communications uncomfortable
LinkedIn.com
                             32

  A Professional/Work focused social networking site
  Big draw is the Questions and Answers feature
  Some ability to form groups, but not as developed as
   some of the other networks
  Great place to make connections for future employment,
   to endorse the work of others by recommending them,
   to get recommendations
Difference between Pages and
                        Groups
                                     33
  Pages
                                   Groups
    More like a ‘person’ with                Privacy, can be closed or
     ability to have friends/fans
             secret
    Anyone can post to wall,                 Can use email to
     pictures, etc.
                           communicate with members
    Communicate by “updates”                 Limited to 5000 members (if
     which show on the update                  you want to send mail)
     tab or person’s wall
                    Can limit what is posted
    Can have applications
                   http://www.facebook.com/
    http://www.facebook.com/                  help.php?page=826
     advertising/?pages
What does your FB page look like?

  Facebook 


  What’s the strategy here?
     Easy sharing

     Easy to take action
Facebook Causes

  Enables people to support you and share that support
   message with friends – Whether or not they donate. 
  “…in connected thinking, it means that each one of us is can be more
  than an ATM for our causes.  Causes on FB enables us to tell our own
  world – distinct from the world -  about the issues, campaigns, orgs that
  they are passionate about. We can bring our networks of friends, our
  ingenuity, our passion, our time, our expertise to support causes.  It
  enables lots and lots of people to learn about causes and to share them
  with their friends easily, quickly and inexpensively”   -- Allison Fine.
Causes and Effects

  We found that the Causes Giving Challenge on
  Facebook raised a total of $571,686 from 25,795
  unique donors for 3,936 causes. That’s an
  average gift of just over $20, a very respectable
  amount in the online direct mail world….
  Remember that the overwhelming number of Facebook users are still
   under 25 years old. This is very young for donors, and it is unreasonable to
   expect them to give the number and size gifts of their parents and
   grandparents
  http://afine2.wordpress.com/2009/04/22/wash-post-disses-causes-on-
   facebook/
Causes functionality

  Causes
     A FB Cause does not have to be run by the Non Profit which
      benefits from it
     Can be Verified by Network for Good and allow people to
      contribute to your cause directly. Must be a 501c3 and registered
      with Guidestar
Causes let you pass on your
          passion
Enable your supporters to tell a good
                   story about your cause

  You’re looking to get people to take actions – 
     To connect with each other

     To reach out to potential new members

     To pass on your story to others who will (insert YOUR action here)



  What things do you need on your site, your blog, your FB
  group, to ENABLE your supporters to tell your story for
  you?
Twitter
Presentation to Rockland County Capacity Building Initiative - Cornell Cooperative Extension
Presentation to Rockland County Capacity Building Initiative - Cornell Cooperative Extension
Twitter requires using power tools

  Search.Twitter.com
  TweetDeck.com
  CoTweet (for orgs with a budget)
  TweetLater.com
What, you don’t have one?
                                  Inexpensive Email
  Free or cheap blog or page
  creation sites
                 Campaign software
                                      MyEmma – (Ask Ann Byne!)
    Google Pages
    Blogger
                                  Photo Hosting
    Wordpress.org
                 Flickr.com
                                    PhotoBucket.com
    TypePad.com
                                  Social Networks
                                    Facebook, MySpace, Twitter
  Video Hosting
                                    Make your own: Ning.com,
    YouTube
                                     Kickapps.com
    Magnify.net

    Blip.Tv
Don’t run out of gas…you need a
                           team

  Who will blog?
                       Who creates the content
    Who will edit?
                      and uploads it?
    Who has the final say?
              Who approves it?
    Who’s watching the                  Are there pre-arranged
     comments?
                           answers PR/Management
    When do you escalate?
                                          wants to create for
  Who monitors the social                questions people ask on
  network? 
                              the site?
      Jobs include: Welcoming new
       people, teaching, reminding
       people of rules of etiquette
Your Digital Footprint can grow as
        big as you make it




                http://flickr.com/photos/coppergecko/316162964
Make It look Inviting
Build “outposts” and “passports”

  A wonderful article by Chris Brogan-100 Personal
 Branding Tactics
     http://www.chrisbrogan.com/100-personal-branding-tactics-using-social-media/ 

  Outpost: Feeds of your content that show up in other
 networks, like on Facebook or LinkedIn



  Passport: Accounts on other networks where you can
 find new connections, such as FB, Linked In, E.Factor,
 Flickr, YouTube, etc.
Photo/Video/
Social Networks
                    Content Sharing


             Your Site


 Comments and       Presence in Real
Recommendations           Life
Fundraising on line
Your goal isn’t to get people to join your
                        Facebook group

  YOU ARE NOT TRYING TO GET PEOPLE TO JOIN
   YOUR FB GROUP, your Email list or your blog
  Your goal is Recruiting, or Retention, or Promoting your
   League in the community, Or 

 Fundraising, or…

      However, if they DO join your list, read your blog, become your
       friend, this is good for your overall cause
Start with a Personal invite




Which appeal will you make? 

Logo vs. formal vs. informal? 
Whichever you do, make it PERSONAL.
The best appeals come from

 Someone we know
 Who has a passionate interest in the cause

 Who has provided a specific action that’s
  easy to take without leaving the
  computer
Authentic Stories
                                     54

  Key part of the peer-to-peer phenomenon is authenticity,
   the idea that you’re plugged into something real
  Hands-on, intimate communications – not broadcast
  Creative use of video, writing, messaging, and community
  Action always available – but not always sought




CauseWired Communications LLC
Cause Marketing - The Charity
        Smackdown
Example: the Twestival

  The Twestival history
     In September 2008, a group of Twitterers based in London UK
      decided to organize an event where the local Twitter community
      could socialize offline; meet the faces behind the avatars, enjoy some
      entertainment, have a few drinks and tie this in with a food drive and
      fundraising effort for a local homeless charity.
     The bulk of the event was organized in under two weeks, via Twitter
      and utilized the talents and financial support of the local
      Twittersphere to make this happen.
Flash Mob – Twestival for
      Charity:Water
Presentation to Rockland County Capacity Building Initiative - Cornell Cooperative Extension
Final thoughts
Thank You!
  Howa rd Greenstein

Howa rd @Ha r brooke .com
Howa rdGreenstein.com
Resources

  Beth Kanter’s description of how she won the Parade
  Magazine challenge: 
      http://beth.typepad.com/beths_blog/2008/02/americas-giving.html 
  50 Steps to a Social Media Practice
     http://www.chrisbrogan.com/50-steps-to-establishing-a-consistent-
      social-media-practice/
  All items tagged “NPTech” on Delicious.com
     http://delicious.com/tag/nptech
Sample Blog Search Engines:
                                            62

  Google - http://blogsearch.google.com/
     Google news alerts – to subscribe via email to terms, URLs

  Google Reader – for specific feeds
     A Free Service you can use to track other blogs, or see how your
      own comes across as a feed




CC 2007 Harbrooke Group, Inc. Some Rights                           6/19/09
Reserved.
Feed Readers
                                               63

  Some people like to subscribe to feeds offline or in a
   separate application. Here are two great applications.
  NewsGator - http://www.newsgator.com - makes two
   great applications to track feeds offline; 
  NetNewsWire – for Mac
  Feedemon – for Windows 




CC 2007 Harbrooke Group, Inc. Some Rights                  6/19/09
Reserved.
DON’T SPAM

  Don’t sent out stuff to inappropriate lists
  Don’t subscribe people to lists they don’t want to be on
  Ask permission for this not forgiveness
  Remind your supporters to do the same!
Effective Blogging
What is your Blog For?

  Some people use it to publish articles that make it into
   their newsletters
  Blog is a place for fresh content on relevant topics for
   your league
  Opportunities for both text content and audio/video
   embedded content
Public Blog Strategy

  Intent to attract comments from interested parties –
   easy way to get involved. Polls and other widgets will also
   provide methods for involvement
  Get quoted on other blogs, in news media, passed along
   to potential members or supporters
Content  Tone
                                                68

  Use a Human Voice – blogs are a personal medium. 
  Think about blog posts as a conversation and use a
   conversational tone. 
  Read some of the other blogs in ‘your space’ and get a feel of the
   tone for the community – what works in one, may not work in
   another. 
  Keep it lively and FUN! 
  Be personal, be REAL, be TRUTHFUL, be a LEADER. Use the
   word “I”, instead of “we”. Don’t be corporate.



CC 2007 Harbrooke Group, Inc. Some Rights                       6/19/09
Reserved.
Link intelligently
                                            69

  Linking is part of what makes blogging so viral. 
  Link to other blogs discussing the same topic as you, link
   to related stories on other sites you write for, and most
   importantly link to other network bloggers who are
   blogging on the same topic as you.
  You find them by listening for them!
  Links increase your blog’s SEO
  Story about SU2C and my Blog




CC 2007 Harbrooke Group, Inc. Some Rights                   6/19/09
Reserved.
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Presentation to Rockland County Capacity Building Initiative - Cornell Cooperative Extension

  • 1. New Media 202: Implementing Social Networks For Non-Profits P R E S E N T E D B Y : H O WA R D G R E E N S T E I N , PRESIDENT OF THE HARBROOKE GROUP Entire presentation (CC) 2008 Attribute-Share-Alike- Non Commercial by The Harbrooke Group, Inc. Some Rights Reserved. Some slides copyrighted by others Please respect their ownership
  • 2. Social Media and Social Networks   Tech tools include:   YOUR WEBSITE!   Facebook and MySpace – Social networks   Flickr and YouTube – Photo and video sharing   Twitter – Microblogging and information sharing   Your Blog or a Blogging tool like Wordpress.org, Blogger.com, or Typepad.com   Boards, Forums, local newspaper sites and places where people are interested in your cause
  • 3. Facebook, MySpace and Other Social Communities 3   All intended to bring people together   People can show their interests, join groups   Photo and Video Sharing, links, information, invitations   Applications – allow for games, socializing, spending virtual time with friends
  • 5. Web 2.0 and Social Media Expression
  • 6. New Ways to think about Communications   “We are the authors of each other.”   Doc Searls   “I am who I am because of who we are together.”   Definition of the Zulu word Ubuntu.   (Ubuntu is also the name of popular variant of the Linux free operating system.)
  • 7. Current, Updated Information   No one likes a web page that never changes   Social Media and Social Networks can provide you new content – created by your team as well as your volunteers and fans
  • 8. Recruit and Retain   Recruiting: Having a public place for your constituents to share information, comments, photos, events will help promote your cause   Retaining:   Social Networks can help facilitate connections among current constituents   By having a site with profiles showing their interests and connections, members can make connections where they didn’t previously exist.   A goal of Social Networking is to help online connections meet in person!
  • 9. Social Networks in Plain English   http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6a_KF7TYKVc
  • 10. What’s really the difference? 10   Do you need all 3?   Demographics – MySpace doesn’t seem to have many professional groups – but check to see if your fans are there   LinkedIn good for Mailing Lists and some professional interaction, especially job leads   Facebook more for social interaction, even if it is ‘professional social’ – more like a Cocktail party
  • 11. Key Elements of Social Media   Listening   Participating   Creating and Managing your own space   And of course, set up to measure what you’re doing   You need to be able to monitor your outcome
  • 12. Measurement   What will you measure?   How many people recruited?   Constituent satisfaction?   Views of your blog?   News mentions (on blogs, in traditional media)   General satisfaction?   It is up to you to define, but once defined, it is important to measure and judge
  • 13. WEVote08   Case Study: For WEtv, a Cable Network   Public Service Campaign In conjunction with on-air campaign: WE Vote 08   Facebook app   Addedpopular friends with personal notes to encourage adding, even though this was “yet another application”   Blog – got other bloggers to pay attention, some by interviewing them for the blog   Created a Twitter account: @WEVote08   Reached out to popular and relevant Twitterati   In-Person Tweetups in several cities   Blog Badges
  • 14. How Do You Measure?   Measured using Omniture reports to find referrers, blog references, measure or approximate their traffic   Able to see how many badges are being served – like a small ad network – and where - Somewhat   Found references to campaign on other sites, blogs and forums using Radian 6 searches and Google searches   Kept a dashboard for the client to track these mentions, sites, tweets, pictures from Flickr accounts
  • 15. Listening   First, find out what’s going on out there   Is anyone talking about you? Positive or Negative, or Neutral?   Where are they talking?   What’s the community like?   Can you join it?
  • 16. Stormhoek Wine + Social Media
  • 17. Stormhoek Results   From a $1MM to a $10MM business with Internet advertising and word-of-mouth, only.   http://www.flickr.com/photos/technokitten/47458362/
  • 18. Participating   Create a strategy, based on your listening   What are people talking about?   What would be your answers? Do you need “official” answers? (Can you make them sound non-canned?)   Join in to be helpful or useful   If constituents are having a problem, help them solve it
  • 19. What if Someone says something bad about us?!   It WILL happen. Will it happen where you can address it?   If people are talking in a negative way, ask about it   Don’t be defensive!   And don’t sound like you’re towing the company line.   This is your opportunity to WIN people over
  • 20. Creating Your Own Space   Not every group or company has people talking about them in other communities   Sometimes you have to create the space for people to talk about you on your own website   If you build it, they may not come…   There are no guarantees   If people are treated poorly in a community they may leave   Monitoring, empowering discussion leaders can help build a community
  • 21. Listening Tools 21   A number are listed in the ‘extra slides”   Google Alerts   www.Google.com/Alerts   A way to take a Google search, and have new results emailed to you when they’re indexed   If someone posts on “Charity” and “YourGroupName” and “YourCity” you’d get an alert   If it is a blog or a forum, you could then decide whether or not to respond CC 2007 Harbrooke Group, Inc. Some Rights 6/19/09 Reserved.
  • 22. Participation means   Joining forums where the discussion is happening   Answering questions   Blogging (always a combination of listening and talking)   Always listening to hear the response to your participation
  • 23. Social Connector Personality   Organizational Culture Check in – the person who does this has to love the Online medium   Person has to be open to communication   Receptive to criticism   A little geeky – willing to try new tools
  • 24. Enable Your Network (for Recruiting)
  • 25. Since Ancient times, people have told stories
  • 26. Example of someone enabling Storytelling:   “My” Barack Obama” = Personal page
  • 27. Enabling your network means   Letting your story go   Empowering people to tell it for you   Content that can be shared   Messages you want passed on   Rules or Guidelines about how to share   Listening for people talking about your story   And talking back to them
  • 28. Pay it Forward, First   Blogger Sean Bohan asked: “Are you paying forward into Social Media’s equivalent of a 401k (relationships) by being an active participant?   What are you doing to give back to your community online, before you need something from them? http://www.seanbohan.com/2008/09/23/outreach-is-networking-for-your-social-media-efforts/
  • 29. Using Facebook and other SN sites effectively
  • 30. Running a Social Media Site Is Like Hosting an Event 30   Create a clear purpose   Inviting the early users   Setting the mood   Picking the people needed to get the party started   Having someone or a group tasked to help introduce new people   A basic set of rules or guidelines   A “bouncer” to take care of unexpected situations   A way for attendees to pitch in   Multiple ways to participate   Everybody has fun   References:   http://www.commoncraft.com/party   http://www.slideshare.net/leelefever/online-community-as-party
  • 31. Community Moderation 31   Self-moderation and self-policing – “report this”   Tools to manage language and issues   Reporting on the back end   Personnel to moderate and manage situations where “flaming” or “trolling” may potentially make community communications uncomfortable
  • 32. LinkedIn.com 32   A Professional/Work focused social networking site   Big draw is the Questions and Answers feature   Some ability to form groups, but not as developed as some of the other networks   Great place to make connections for future employment, to endorse the work of others by recommending them, to get recommendations
  • 33. Difference between Pages and Groups 33   Pages   Groups   More like a ‘person’ with   Privacy, can be closed or ability to have friends/fans secret   Anyone can post to wall,   Can use email to pictures, etc. communicate with members   Communicate by “updates”   Limited to 5000 members (if which show on the update you want to send mail) tab or person’s wall   Can limit what is posted   Can have applications   http://www.facebook.com/   http://www.facebook.com/ help.php?page=826 advertising/?pages
  • 34. What does your FB page look like?   Facebook   What’s the strategy here?   Easy sharing   Easy to take action
  • 35. Facebook Causes   Enables people to support you and share that support message with friends – Whether or not they donate.   “…in connected thinking, it means that each one of us is can be more than an ATM for our causes.  Causes on FB enables us to tell our own world – distinct from the world -  about the issues, campaigns, orgs that they are passionate about. We can bring our networks of friends, our ingenuity, our passion, our time, our expertise to support causes.  It enables lots and lots of people to learn about causes and to share them with their friends easily, quickly and inexpensively” -- Allison Fine.
  • 36. Causes and Effects   We found that the Causes Giving Challenge on Facebook raised a total of $571,686 from 25,795 unique donors for 3,936 causes. That’s an average gift of just over $20, a very respectable amount in the online direct mail world….   Remember that the overwhelming number of Facebook users are still under 25 years old. This is very young for donors, and it is unreasonable to expect them to give the number and size gifts of their parents and grandparents   http://afine2.wordpress.com/2009/04/22/wash-post-disses-causes-on- facebook/
  • 37. Causes functionality   Causes   A FB Cause does not have to be run by the Non Profit which benefits from it   Can be Verified by Network for Good and allow people to contribute to your cause directly. Must be a 501c3 and registered with Guidestar
  • 38. Causes let you pass on your passion
  • 39. Enable your supporters to tell a good story about your cause   You’re looking to get people to take actions –   To connect with each other   To reach out to potential new members   To pass on your story to others who will (insert YOUR action here)   What things do you need on your site, your blog, your FB group, to ENABLE your supporters to tell your story for you?
  • 43. Twitter requires using power tools   Search.Twitter.com   TweetDeck.com   CoTweet (for orgs with a budget)   TweetLater.com
  • 44. What, you don’t have one?   Inexpensive Email   Free or cheap blog or page creation sites Campaign software   MyEmma – (Ask Ann Byne!)   Google Pages   Blogger   Photo Hosting   Wordpress.org   Flickr.com   PhotoBucket.com   TypePad.com   Social Networks   Facebook, MySpace, Twitter   Video Hosting   Make your own: Ning.com,   YouTube Kickapps.com   Magnify.net   Blip.Tv
  • 45. Don’t run out of gas…you need a team   Who will blog?   Who creates the content   Who will edit? and uploads it?   Who has the final say?   Who approves it?   Who’s watching the   Are there pre-arranged comments? answers PR/Management   When do you escalate? wants to create for   Who monitors the social questions people ask on network? the site?   Jobs include: Welcoming new people, teaching, reminding people of rules of etiquette
  • 46. Your Digital Footprint can grow as big as you make it http://flickr.com/photos/coppergecko/316162964
  • 47. Make It look Inviting
  • 48. Build “outposts” and “passports”   A wonderful article by Chris Brogan-100 Personal Branding Tactics   http://www.chrisbrogan.com/100-personal-branding-tactics-using-social-media/   Outpost: Feeds of your content that show up in other networks, like on Facebook or LinkedIn   Passport: Accounts on other networks where you can find new connections, such as FB, Linked In, E.Factor, Flickr, YouTube, etc.
  • 49. Photo/Video/ Social Networks Content Sharing Your Site Comments and Presence in Real Recommendations Life
  • 51. Your goal isn’t to get people to join your Facebook group   YOU ARE NOT TRYING TO GET PEOPLE TO JOIN YOUR FB GROUP, your Email list or your blog   Your goal is Recruiting, or Retention, or Promoting your League in the community, Or  Fundraising, or…   However, if they DO join your list, read your blog, become your friend, this is good for your overall cause
  • 52. Start with a Personal invite Which appeal will you make? Logo vs. formal vs. informal? Whichever you do, make it PERSONAL.
  • 53. The best appeals come from  Someone we know  Who has a passionate interest in the cause  Who has provided a specific action that’s easy to take without leaving the computer
  • 54. Authentic Stories 54   Key part of the peer-to-peer phenomenon is authenticity, the idea that you’re plugged into something real   Hands-on, intimate communications – not broadcast   Creative use of video, writing, messaging, and community   Action always available – but not always sought CauseWired Communications LLC
  • 55. Cause Marketing - The Charity Smackdown
  • 56. Example: the Twestival   The Twestival history   In September 2008, a group of Twitterers based in London UK decided to organize an event where the local Twitter community could socialize offline; meet the faces behind the avatars, enjoy some entertainment, have a few drinks and tie this in with a food drive and fundraising effort for a local homeless charity.   The bulk of the event was organized in under two weeks, via Twitter and utilized the talents and financial support of the local Twittersphere to make this happen.
  • 57. Flash Mob – Twestival for Charity:Water
  • 60. Thank You! Howa rd Greenstein Howa rd @Ha r brooke .com Howa rdGreenstein.com
  • 61. Resources   Beth Kanter’s description of how she won the Parade Magazine challenge:   http://beth.typepad.com/beths_blog/2008/02/americas-giving.html   50 Steps to a Social Media Practice   http://www.chrisbrogan.com/50-steps-to-establishing-a-consistent- social-media-practice/   All items tagged “NPTech” on Delicious.com   http://delicious.com/tag/nptech
  • 62. Sample Blog Search Engines: 62   Google - http://blogsearch.google.com/   Google news alerts – to subscribe via email to terms, URLs   Google Reader – for specific feeds   A Free Service you can use to track other blogs, or see how your own comes across as a feed CC 2007 Harbrooke Group, Inc. Some Rights 6/19/09 Reserved.
  • 63. Feed Readers 63   Some people like to subscribe to feeds offline or in a separate application. Here are two great applications.   NewsGator - http://www.newsgator.com - makes two great applications to track feeds offline;   NetNewsWire – for Mac   Feedemon – for Windows CC 2007 Harbrooke Group, Inc. Some Rights 6/19/09 Reserved.
  • 64. DON’T SPAM   Don’t sent out stuff to inappropriate lists   Don’t subscribe people to lists they don’t want to be on   Ask permission for this not forgiveness   Remind your supporters to do the same!
  • 66. What is your Blog For?   Some people use it to publish articles that make it into their newsletters   Blog is a place for fresh content on relevant topics for your league   Opportunities for both text content and audio/video embedded content
  • 67. Public Blog Strategy   Intent to attract comments from interested parties – easy way to get involved. Polls and other widgets will also provide methods for involvement   Get quoted on other blogs, in news media, passed along to potential members or supporters
  • 68. Content Tone 68   Use a Human Voice – blogs are a personal medium.   Think about blog posts as a conversation and use a conversational tone.   Read some of the other blogs in ‘your space’ and get a feel of the tone for the community – what works in one, may not work in another.   Keep it lively and FUN!   Be personal, be REAL, be TRUTHFUL, be a LEADER. Use the word “I”, instead of “we”. Don’t be corporate. CC 2007 Harbrooke Group, Inc. Some Rights 6/19/09 Reserved.
  • 69. Link intelligently 69   Linking is part of what makes blogging so viral.   Link to other blogs discussing the same topic as you, link to related stories on other sites you write for, and most importantly link to other network bloggers who are blogging on the same topic as you.   You find them by listening for them!   Links increase your blog’s SEO   Story about SU2C and my Blog CC 2007 Harbrooke Group, Inc. Some Rights 6/19/09 Reserved.