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[Book Interview] Nonprofit Example of Social Media Excellence: National Wildlife Federation

Nonprofit Tech for Good

While the giants (Facebook, Myspace, Twitter, Flickr and Youtube) are great for outreach and relationship-building, we’ve had surprising successes with StumbleUpon, LinkedIn, Plancast and other sites. We are definitely working more in that direction. We currently use a plethora of online tools to spread the word and talk to people.

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Web 2.0 Part IIa: Social Bookmarking

Zen and the Art of Nonprofit Technology

at 3:02 am Have you tried StumbleUpon for ’stumbling’ upon websites that other like minded people have visited and liked. If there are specific pages that give you trouble, or if you still find the overall site too slow, definitely let us know and we’ll get on that. Its great for lunch hours! 2 marnie webb 09.25.06

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Brooklyn Clicks with the Crowd: What Makes a Smart Mob?

Museum 2.0

In this way, Click is a powerful example of the "venue as content platform" definition of 2.0. The view counts, comments, favorites, most e-mailed, and leader boards of sites we all love (Flickr, Digg, StumbleUpon, NetFlix, The New York Times, etc.) We are just providing the container, the mechanism so it can function.

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Top 8 Social Media Tracking Tools - Online Fundraising, Advocacy, and Social Media - frogloop

Care2

link] It tracks Twitter, Facebook, Myspace, Digg, Delicious, StumbleUpon, LinkedIn. Its definitely worth mentioning in this post. I will definitely be adding some of these to my social media toolbox! July 2, 2009 | Maarten I think a great tracking tool for social media sites is Social Sniffer. August 3, 2009 | yovkov Hi!

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Podcamp Session on Social Media Metrics: Thank You Jeremiah

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

Influence/Authority: Scoble defines this as % of posts that show up on Techmeme, Digg, my Link Blog, Slashdot, StumbleUpon, etc. Each group will have a cheat sheet with the questions one side and the metrics/definitions on the other. Avinash suggested Technorati. This is hard to pin down. Does the number of embeds fit in here?

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