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Juicy Blogging E-Course: The Art and Play of Blogging

Have Fun - Do Good

During the course, you’ll play with fun assignments on a private blog with your fellow juicy bloggers. You can work privately on your own, or interact with your fellow students in the comments of each lesson’s posts by asking questions, sharing reflections, and posting links to your blog posts for feedback.

Course 40
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Five Steps to Finding ROI

Amy Sample Ward

You also have a volunteer program for middle and high school students to work with the children in after-school time in lieu of child care, but find that the current partners you have in the community don’t work for attracting new volunteers to participate. The benefits? These are both tangible and intangible.

ROI 135
professionals

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Love It: Tumblr Blogs for Nonprofits

Have Fun - Do Good

One of the first Juicy Blogging E-Course assignments I give to my students is to write a blog post that has more images than words. WordPress, Blogger, TypePad), but what excites me about Tumblr for nonprofits is that it's quick, fun and visual. I'm still a huge fan of traditional blogging platforms (e.g.

Typepad 68
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Reflection and Evaluation

Zen and the Art of Nonprofit Technology

Home About Me Subscribe Zen and the Art of Nonprofit Technology Thoughtful and sometimes snarky perspectives on nonprofit technology Reflection and Evaluation March 10, 2008 Michele Martin, one of my fave bloggers, has a great post today on Reflective Practice.

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Meet A Social Butterfly Who Cares About Nonprofits Causes

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

I am a social marketing believer, blogger, researcher, practitioner and enthusiast in the concept of Social marketing for good. Currently, my day job is a graduate student at the University of Missouri's School of Journalism where I will graduate this month. Lorelle on Wordpress by Lorelle VanFossen Tell me a little about you.

Causes 50
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Google Analytics vs Site Meter

Zen and the Art of Nonprofit Technology

They had a link today to a great page: how to dissuade yourself from becoming a blogger. Anyway, being a poor student, and having a few extremely low-traffic sites, I figured I’d stick with Site Meter , which seems to be the best of the free site analysis tools. Lifehacker is great, and shares some of my ethos about technology.

Analytics 100
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10 Steps to Extension Professional 2.0 Remix

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

Guide your students to conversations and resources. Collaboration on student projects or other ways. Bloggers frequently link to and comment on other blogs, creating the type of immediate connection one would have in a conversation. Start by genuinely complimenting the blogger in some way and point out where you do agree.

Remix 50