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10 Brilliant Social Media Content Ideas for Nonprofits

Bloomerang

Your social channels should reflect your mission and values. Thank You Post This is at the top of our list because it is extremely important for nonprofit organizations to have an attitude of gratitude. You can thank your supporters weekly with images and videos. Through social media, you can bring your brand persona to life.

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X, Formerly Twitter, Sues Group Calling Out Hate Speech on Platform

Non Profit Quarterly

Image Credit: Jon Tyson on unsplash.com X Corp, the company formerly known as Twitter, sued a nonprofit dedicated to exposing and counteracting digital hate speech which has published research critical of the tech company’s handling of hate speech on its platform.

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Reflections from 12NTC Panel on Data Visualization

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

Click Thru to See Larger Image. This post summarizes how you can use session documentation and reflective practice to improve the content and delivery of your session. I always start a panel with a living assessment of the audience to discover their experience, knowledge, and attitudes about the topic to be presented.

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How Standardize Your Nonprofit’s Social Media Measurement: Use This Grid

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

Click for Larger Image. The story is shared via an intermediary – journalists, bloggers, or influencers: Metrics reflecting the sharing of the message with the target audience. 2: Measuring the Effect on Outcomes is Preferred to Measuring Outputs : Measure your results, not just numbers.

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Grantseeking Basics: Developing a Grant Project

Tech Soup

Outcomes are used to identify a change in behavior, attitude, or knowledge in the people being served by the project. Outcomes usually reflect the long-term impact of a project toward solving a community problem or toward improving the lives of the people served by the project. Image: Courtesy of Shutterstock. Project Outcomes.

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The Great Good Place Book Discussion Part 2: Small Rural Museums as Third Places

Museum 2.0

Reading The Great Good Place provides an opportunity as museum professionals to identify third places in our community, reflect upon our relationship to them, and consider the ways our museum could be a third place for members in the community. Tune in next week for a reflection on the book from another perspective.

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Who is the Audience in Your Head?

Museum 2.0

The construct is suddenly made transparent, the foreign sales estimates go whizzing through my head, followed by an image of some agents in their offices thinking they've got a winner (maybe they're high-fiving??), In those instances I am reacting to the work as a piece of business.