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#datanerds: Six Steps to Great Graphs and Charts

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

Source: Gemma Correll – I Love Charts. Note from Beth: I just knew that I was going to start obsessing about charts and graphs after my Excel spreadsheet obsessions started. What better way than in Excel. Step 1: Which Chart is Best? If your data adds up to 100%, you might choose a pie chart.

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Association 4.0—A Playbook for Success

.orgSource

To convince you to buy from me, you must believe that I can increase revenue, decrease costs, reduce cycle time, enhance the member experience, and finally, mitigate risk. Leaders must be able to communicate each of those points to both staff and volunteers and to present risk within a cognitive framework.” We changed our entire model.

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Death By PowerPoint? Three Ways to Revive Your Presentations!

Tech Soup

Here's something we all dread: Slide after slide loaded with text that is being "read" by the presenter. But then when we are asked to create a presentation, we fall into the same trap. Here are three ways in which you can keep your presentation alive: First: Balance between presentation and interaction.

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Pecha Kucha

NCE Social Media

Pecha Kucha is a variation on your typical PowerPoint presentation. This Japanese style presentation ( created by a British architect and an Italian architect living in Tokyo ) was created in 2003 but has grown in popularity to be a worldwide mainstream business presentation style. Questions are only asked at the end.

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How to Prepare Donor Data Reports for Your Board Members

Bloomerang

However, most board members aren’t familiar with various fundraising metrics and won’t be able to draw effective conclusions when they’re presented with data without an explanation of what the data shows. . The last thing you want to do is waste their time and bog their donor reports down with unnecessary metrics. .

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Trainer’s Notebook: Facilitating Brainstorming Sessions for Nonprofit Work

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

The ideas can be captured on a flip chart or participants can write them down on sticky notes and post them on a wall. The first time you do it, you ask each person to respond to the idea with the word no, then say their idea. The second time around, you ask participants to respond with yes and. see above). You can set a timer.

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Women Who Tech: Tools and Apps to Energize your Base

Amy Sample Ward

View more presentations from womenwhotech. My slides covered the tools and apps for the back stage side of energizing your community. Since my slides are mostly screen shots, I’ve shared a bit of context below. Then, for each group, create a chart with 4 columns and identify: Their goal: why do they engage with you.

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