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Tidbits

Zen and the Art of Nonprofit Technology

They have released two studies, one on the “wired wealthy&# and another which is a “nonprofit benchmark index&# study – basically providing some benchmarks for organizations to measure themselves against, traffic, email newsletter click through rates, etc. It’s actually a pretty interesting resource, and worth a read.

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What is private? What is public?

Zen and the Art of Nonprofit Technology

A story about Rapleaf in Clickz (a newsletter for online marketers) says this : Rapleaf allows you to quickly and inexpensively find out the social networking footprint of those you’re marketing to. What is public? June 10, 2008 Today, someone on the progressive exchange list asked about a tool called Rapleaf.

Public 100
professionals

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Social Media: What To Do If Your Boss Doesn’t Get It

Nonprofit Tech for Good

In June 2007, I presented my first social media training to a small group of nonprofits in Lowell, MA. Learn how to successfully integrate your website, e-newsletter and “Donate Now” campaigns with social and mobile media. At the time, nonprofits were primarily only using Myspace and YouTube. Get training.

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How to Maximize Impact of Nonprofit Newsletters - Online Fundraising, Advocacy, and Social Media - frogloop

Care2

Here are the quick tips from the report, but make sure to check out the full PDF article to look at all the data behind it. " No matter how much killer content you have, if people arent looking at, its doing you no good. Its worth it!

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Catching up

Zen and the Art of Nonprofit Technology

Sure, I’d love to see more nonprofits move from sending their newsletters out by email, to getting them into an RSS feed, which I can choose to look at, or not. I think that a lot of Web 2.0, particularly RSS and folksonomies, are aspects of Web 2.0 Some of Web 2.0, though is more hype than useful.

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Interview: Kivi Leroux Miller, The Nonprofit Marketing Guide

Amy Sample Ward

In 2007 I started to transition away from consulting for a few clients at a time to more writing, online training, and public speaking, which lets me connect with thousands of nonprofits every year. The book is full of cost-saving and time-saving tips because all of the groups I work with have very limited quantities of both!

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This Week in the Learning Center: Principles to Design By

Tech Soup

This week, the newsletter featured an older TechSoup article, Five Principles to Design By. Guest writer Joshua Porter contributed the article in 2007, but his advice is as fresh and pertinent as ever. These tips aren't only about design: they're about keeping people at the center of your nonprofit's projects, not technology.

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