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Tag: Nonprofit

  • From Awareness to Loyalty: Understanding the Journey of Nonprofit Supporters and How to Engage Them

    From Awareness to Loyalty: Understanding the Journey of Nonprofit Supporters and How to Engage Them

    As a nonprofit grows and gains new members, volunteers, and donors, you’ll start to recognize core differences in how different groups of people act and react to marketing materials. A devoted volunteer might take a much more favorable view of your campaigns than someone that hasn’t heard of your organization before, for example.

    It is essential that nonprofits understand how to communicate with these different stages in order to better market to them. At its most basic, nonprofits need to master the rule of seven before moving on to later-stage customer relationships. In this article, we’ll guide nonprofits through the different stages of the customer journey, demonstrating exactly how they should engage their supporters throughout their ongoing familiarization. 

    What is the Nonprofit Customer Journey?

    As a person becomes more familiar with your nonprofit, the extent to which they support, engage, and help market for your cause will shift. Of course, people that have only just stumbled across your nonprofit aren’t going to have the level of support and loyalty that a long-term donor has.

    In order to create better marketing materials and communications, nonprofits need to know how to relate to donors across all levels of their customer journey. Typically, this journey is split into three core sections:

    • Awareness
    • Consideration and Donation
    • Time Donation

    Awareness

    Marketing for nonprofits always starts with the awareness stage. This is the first point of contact between an organization and the potential donor. At this stage, they don’t have a stake in your nonprofit and are have only come across either a marketing post, a blog, or some other piece of content that you’ve put out into the world.

    When marketing to people within the awareness stage, you should focus on showing the real-world positives that your nonprofit creates. Whether you use finished projects that you’ve terminated in the past or materials which demonstrate the good you’re delivering, these should be your front line of marketing.

    The awareness stage is about increasing recognition and ensuring that people remember the good you’ve done when they see your name. You’re not asking for donations, nor are you trying to get these people to join your nonprofit. This stage, as its title suggests, is all about building awareness.

    Consideration and Donation

    During the consideration stage, people are familiar with your nonprofit and what good you do in the world. At this point, you can move into quantified marketing that shows what their donation would actively result in.

    Using quantified statistics, you could demonstrate that their donation of $10 would have a certain real-world impact. Showing how they can be a part of the good that they encounter in the awareness stage will help urge people to donate to your nonprofit.

    Donations are typically the first stage of involving members of a nonprofit. At this stage, the time and frequency of a recurring donation will dictate how you manage your connections going forward. As a person donates more of their money over a longer period to your cause, their natural relationship with you will build.

    It’s important to show your gratitude over time, ensuring that those that move from consideration to donation feel valued for their contributions.

    Time Donor (Volunteers)

    The final stage, which is often overlooked within the world of nonprofit marketing, is the relationship between your organization and its most valuable assets – those that offer their time. The vast majority of nonprofits are able to continue running due to the hours of free labor that volunteers will offer.

    Those that are willing to donate their own time are incredibly impactful to your organization. While donating money is one thing, these hourly shifts ensure the longevity of your nonprofit and help you scale toward new horizons.

    When dealing with people that are volunteers, your marketing should be extremely personalized. You’re no longer dealing with a potential mass of new donors. Each one of these people has given up hours of their life to help achieve your vision.

    Your marketing communications here should never focus on donations, and should be entirely grateful. Focus on the good that they’ve achieved, and how you are – together – building toward a better future.

    Don’t underestimate the importance of volunteers in your nonprofit. 

    Why Is Shaping Communication so Important?

    Communication does not have the same effect on every single person. On the contrary, each and every person will react differently to messaging they encounter. When it comes to the nonprofit industry, using the wrong communication style can be disastrous – impacting both new and established donors.

    Changing the focus of your marketing campaigns to match the current stage that a customer is in allows for a much greater degree of personalization. Customer segmentation and personalization are the backbones of the marketing industry, with over 70% of all consumers expecting a high degree of personalized content.

    Altering a nonprofit’s marketing materials will ensure that different groups react more positively to your communications:

    • New Contacts – If you ask people in the awareness stage for donations, you’re instantly slamming the door on that person and making them feel uncomfortable. Understanding that your tone will shift over time will allow you to market appropriately to newer audiences.
    • Established Donors – If you patronize established donors with materials aimed at new people, you’ll start to chip away at their loyalty. Personalize your voice to ensure that it’s more thankful, full of gratitude, and highlights how appreciative you are for all their help.

    Understanding how to alter your marketing materials for these different stages will lead to a higher uptake with new clients and increased loyalty with older connections. Ultimately, this is a total win-win for your nonprofit.

    Final Thoughts

    For nonprofits to achieve success across the customer journey, they need to understand the unique perspectives, behaviors, and styles of communication that work for each archetypal supporter. By altering marketing tactics and tones across these three main stages, a nonprofit is able to engage its audience to a greater extent.

    As they do this, nonprofits will rapidly find that their marketing materials stretch further, gain more interactions, and help streamline the development of customer relationships across the entire donor lifecycle. 

  • Facebook Launches ‘Donate Now’ Call-To-Action Button

    Facebook Launches ‘Donate Now’ Call-To-Action Button

    Facebook announced the launch of a new call-to-action button for pages that enable users to give them money. This one is “Donate Now,” and is obviously aimed at nonprofits.

    Facebook said in a post on the Facebook for Business Page:

    We are excited to introduce a new “Donate Now” call-to-action option on both link ads and Pages. Now, it’s easier than ever for nonprofits to connect with people who care about their causes and encourage them to contribute through the website of their choice.

    To be clear, you actually have to identify your page as a nonprofit to have access to the button.

    donate-now

    “Every day, people use Facebook to raise awareness and support for causes they care about and to motivate others to do the same,” a Facebook spokesperson says. “We’re inspired by how much good comes from these connections, so we’ve added ‘Donate Now’ calls-to-action on Pages and link ads to make those connections easier than ever.”

    The button joins others announced late last year including Book Now, Contact Us, Use App, Play Game, Shop Now, Sign Up and Watch Video.

    Image via Facebook

  • Google Showcases Government, Nonprofit & Business Maps With New Gallery

    Google has launched a new Google Maps Gallery aimed at making mapping data from governments, nonprofits and businesses more accessible to the public.

    Organizations can share and publish their maps online via Google Maps Engine, and have them appear in the gallery.

    A Google spokesperson tells WebProNews, “Maps included in the Gallery make it it seamless for citizens and stakeholders to access diverse mapping data, such as locations of municipal construction projects, historic battlefields, population density statistics, deforestation changes and up-to-date emergency evacuation routes. Maps in the Gallery will be available in Google Earth, through the Maps Gallery website and in searches on major search engines, including Google.com.”

    “Maps Gallery works like an interactive, digital atlas where anyone can search for and find rich, compelling maps,” says product manager Jordan Breckenridge in a blog post. “Maps included in the Gallery can be viewed in Google Earth and are discoverable through major search engines, making it seamless for citizens and stakeholders to access diverse mapping data, such as locations of municipal construction projects, historic city plans, population statistics, deforestation changes and up-to-date emergency evacuation routes. Organizations using Maps Gallery can communicate critical information, build awareness and inform the public at-large.”

    Current partners include: National Geographic Soceity, World Bank Group, U.S. Geological Survey, Florida Emergency Mangagement and City of Edmonton. It should quickly grow, however, as it’s now open to organizations with “content for the public good.”

    Image via Google

  • Roger Goodell, NFL Commissioner, Made A Lot Of Money In 2012

    In news that should make opponents of the NFL even more furious, it has been revealed that Roger Goodell, the commissioner of the NFL, is pulling in money by the millions.

    People continue to criticize the league for the amount of money that it generates, and how it has become a spectacle for the viewers, while Goodell is now a prime example of that.

    Roger Goodell makes more than people might think, and in 2012, he was paid a total of $44.2 million. The high total makes him among the best-paid executives in the country and perhaps the highest-paid leader of a nonprofit organization.

    The idea that the NFL is a nonprofit is also a fact that many people argue about, and find it hard to accept that a league that generates such a large amount of money while still being considered a nonprofit.

    Nonprofit status is typically given to the groups that deliver services that are unable to be provided by the private-sector companies, which is clearly stretched by the NFL.

    The news of Roger Goodell’s high pay angered Ken Berger especially. Berger is the president and chief executive of Charity Navigator, the nation’s largest charity evaluator. Speaking on Goodell and the NFL, he said “The idea that a person becomes a multimillionaire running a nonprofit that is supposed to provide a service that can’t be provided by the market is absurd. The notion that every taxpayer is subsidizing an organization whose leader is making $30 million or more is a waste.”

    The high pay for an NFL executive starts to seem even more absurd when thinking about the types of things that the NFL continues to make money on, such as the large amount of fines that have been issued to players in recent years.

    People are being fined for normal things such as hard hits on defenseless players, but a number of unnecessary things such as wearing the wrong type of cleats, and taunting, are also receiving fines.

    The cheerleaders are also hardly being paid for the work that they do, and the cheerleaders for the Oakland Raiders made this known when bringing about a lawsuit toward their team for their unfair wages. While they are not paid out of his salary, it does not reflect well on the league that he runs when lawsuits like this one take place.

    Most of Roger Goodell’s compensation comes from the annual dues that each team pays to cover the league’s operating expenses, including salaries. However, some of it also comes from NFL Ventures, a for-profit subsidiary that handles the league’s marketing, media, and other businesses.

    Image via Wikimedia Commons

  • Saving Endangered Animals Discussed At Google

    Peter Knights, Executive Director and co-founder of WildAid, recently participated in an “At Google” talk to discuss efforts to save endangered wildlife.

    Knights was interviewed by Diane Solinger, manager of GooglersGive, at the YouTube campus. Knight discusses how the organization turned to the advertising world to forward its initiative, and uses high quality public service announcements.

    “WildAid works to end the illegal wildlife trade in our lifetimes by reducing demand for endangered wildlife products and providing comprehensive marine protection,” Google says in the video’s description. “Working closely with leading media outlets, government leaders, and on-screen celebrities around the globe, WildAid promotes its message: When the buying stops, the killing can too.”

    More At Google talks here.

  • Google Launches Global Impact Awards

    Google announced the launch of the Global Impact Awards today. These are designed to support organizations “using technology and innovative approaches to tackle some of the toughest human challenges,” Google says.

    “From real-time sensors that monitor clean water to DNA barcoding that stops wildlife trafficking, our first round of awards provides $23 million to seven organizations changing the world,” Google’s “Director of Giving,” Jacquelline Fuller says.

    Winners are: charity: water, Consortium for the Barcode of Life, DonorsChoose.org, Equal Opportunity Schools, Geena Davis Institute on Gender in Media, GiveDirectly, and World Wildlife Fund. More on each of these here.

    The company says it has supported organizations with over $100 million in grants, $1 billion in technology, and 50,000 hours of Googler volunteering this year.

  • People In Haiti Read #FirstWorldProblems Tweets

    Ad Agency DDB New York has teamed up with nonprofit WATERisLIFE to take advantage of all those #FirstWorldProblems tweets and spread an actual message: Your “first world problem” aren’t problems.

    The effort has led to a bunch of videos of Haitian villagers reading aloud #FirstWorldProblems tweets, which the agency is then tweeting back at the authors of the tweets.

    This video pretty much sums up the effort:

    Here are some of the direct response videos being tweeted at Twitter users:

    Plenty more where those came from here.

    Business Insider shares some interesting comments from the ad exec behind the campaign, who says, “We totally understand the irony of it. People are doing it as a joke. It leads to a desensitization around the issue.”

    [via FastCoCreate]

  • YouTube Aims To Help Nonprofit Orgs

    YouTube announced a big initiative on their blog today, structured to help nonprofits. Next Cause is aimed at using online video to help organizations involved in charitable projects around the world.

    From Youtube:

    We’re excited to share the latest addition to the Next Creator family of programs: YouTube Next Cause for nonprofits.

    YouTube Next Cause is designed to help organizations that are already changing the world better use online video to drive action. At a one-day summit in San Francisco on April 2, selected participants will get access to everything from training in YouTube fundamentals, to promotion and community engagement tips, to one-on-one consulting sessions to grow their YouTube presence.

    We’ve always sought to make YouTube a platform for nonprofits to broadcast their messages. And we’ve seen amazing things happen when the YouTube community comes together in support of great causes [see video below]. With 4 billion views a day, we want to make sure nonprofits have the tools they need to reach the global audience on YouTube and turn video views into donations, volunteerism and awareness.

    Applications for YouTube Next Cause are due on February 27, 2012 at 11:59PM PT, and the selected nonprofits will be announced on March 5. This program is open to organizations that are part of the YouTube Nonprofit Program (full eligibility requirements). You can apply online at: http://goo.gl/ODbI6.

    Check out what nonprofits are doing on YouTube at youtube.com/nonprofits. And tune in around March 5 to learn more about some of the great nonprofit organizations chosen and what they’re doing to change the world!

    In this video, Justine Ezarik talks about one of the projects promoted on YouTube last year, Charity Water.

  • ROAR Brings Affordable Mobile Apps to Churches And Nonprofits

    Ever since Apple launched their App Store alongside the iPhone 3G in 2008, mobile apps have been an increasingly important platform for brands of all kinds. With the addition of similar app marketplaces for Android, Nokia, BlackBerry, and Windows Phone, it has become increasingly important for certain kinds of companies and organizations to have their own mobile apps. Unfortunately, though, smaller companies, nonprofit organizations, and churches have had difficulty getting into the mobile app space, due to the expense of developing their own apps.

    One developer is seeking to change that. ROAR has announced their new mobile development platform, designed to allow organizations of various kinds to create and host their own applications for a modest fee. The program allows customers to bring their online presence – on Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, etc. – into one place, and display it on a customized interface.

    Churches and nonprofits can get a customized app iOS app from ROAR for $250, or iOS and Android apps for $500, with a hosting fee of $30 for one app or $50 for both.

    Is this the kind of thing you might use for your organization? Let us know what you think in the comments.

    [Source: ROAR]

  • Wikimedia Foundation Breaks Record With Fundraising Campaign

    The Wikimedia Foundation, which runs Wikipedia, has wrapped up its annual fund raising campaign, breaking a record with $20 million raised from over a million donors in “nearly every country in the world”.

    It appears those big banners at the top of Wikipedia, which have been ridiculed a few times, have been a success.

    The ridicule was mostly over the layout, where a user could look at a page for something like “bitch” or “rapist” and see the word appear right under a big photo of co-founder Jimmy Wales or various volunteers. It became something of a meme, though some were much more light-hearted.

    “Our model is working fantastically well,” said Sue Gardner, Executive Director of the Wikimedia Foundation. “Ordinary people use Wikipedia and they like it, so they chip in some cash so it will continue to thrive. That maintains our independence and lets us focus solely on providing a useful public service. I am so grateful to our donors for making that possible. I promise them we will use their money carefully and well.”

    The campaign has indeed been Wikimedia’s most successful ever. On top of that, it’s part of a streak that has seen donations rise every year since campaigns began in 2003. Since 2008, the number of donors has increased ten-fold, and the total dollar amount raised in the campaign has risen to over $20 million from $4.5 million.

    Wikimedia’s sites attract over 470 million people each month, and is the only major site supported by donations rather than ads, the foundation says.

    The money from this campaign will go to servers and other hardware, development of new site functionality, expansion of mobile services, legal defense, and support for volunteers (there aree over 100,000 of them).

    The foundation’s total 2011-12 planned spending is $28.3 million.

    Wikipedia itself has over 20 million articles in 282 languages. It will celebrate its 11th anniversary on January 15.

  • Yahoo and Ad Council Launch “Create for a Cause” Contest

    Yahoo and the Ad Council have announced the launch of the 2010 "Create for a Cause" contest. The competition looks to highlight the best and most creative in non-profit-focused digital advertising.   

    "Now in its second year, the competition is open to all non-profit campaigns, and the winner will see its creative displayed on the highly trafficked Yahoo! login page, visited by one in ten Americans each day," a representative for Yahoo tells WebProNews. "Entries will be accepted beginning October 11, going through December 3."

    This year, all agencies are invited to submit entries, including those not affiliated directly with the Ad Council. This wasn’t the case before. 

    Create for a Cause"Some of the most innovative digital campaigns being developed today are done on behalf of nonprofit organizations and causes," says Mitch Spolan, VP of Yahoo’s North American field sales. "’Create for a Cause’ offers the opportunity to build exposure for the most worthy causes in ways that can uniquely be achieved through the digital canvas."

    "Create for a Cause is a wonderful opportunity to showcase the pro bono commitment of the advertising industry and their talent in developing compelling digital creative," says Barbara Shimaitis, SVP of Interactive Services at the Ad Council. "We are grateful to Yahoo! for helping spearhead this contest and donating premier placement for the winning campaign."

    The winning campaign will be announced January 5, 2011.