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8 Actionable steps for any nonprofit RFP

EveryAction

An RFP, or a request for proposals, is a process disguised as a document. While an RFP may look like a regular document with a list of things to do and brainstorm, an effective one breaks down a project (usually a big one) into parts and set out dates and milestones to get that project done. Share your ideal outcome. Key takeaways.

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Image Beats Text: Good for Museums, Tough for Me

Museum 2.0

I suspect that there are many more museum professionals who are ready and eager to share photographs or videos documenting their work than are ready to write about it. Most of the professional networks I belong to online operate using the most antiquated of text-based tools: the listserv.

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professionals

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Nonprofit Blogging and Social Networking Policies: Examples?

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

Now, I swear I remember seeing something from Easter Seals or another nonprofit on a listserv that mentioned either social networking policy or blogging policy. Share your knowledge, your passions and your personality in your posts by writing about what you know. I mentioned a link from IBM via Elsua (Luis Suarez). Write What You Know.

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The Jing Project: Embed Screencasts Into Conversation

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

Some possible uses: I put this out on the SalesForce Nonprofit Practitioners listserv. I'm working on a screencast and it might be excellent way to do research or share implicit geek shoudlder-to-shoulder knowledge across the Internet. documents, and is forward compatible, so it should work for years to come.

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ExhibitFiles: Interviews with Initiators Jim Spadaccini and Wendy Pollock

Museum 2.0

The artifacts are reaccessioned, the labels (hopefully) recycled, but what happens to the knowledge? If we were scientists, we'd have documentation of each experiment, each publishable result, each improved-upon discovery. But exhibit design is transient and its documentation spotty. Enter ExhibitFiles.

NSF 20
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10 Steps to Extension Professional 2.0 Remix

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

Your first blog could even document your learnings and reflections about Web.20! You can think of it as having 24/7 access to another users filing cabinet, but each user's collection of bookmarks helps to build an rich knowledge network. Think of wikis of a good tool to collect information or knowledge. The power of Del.icio.us

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[VIDEO] Building a Better Grants Strategy Post-COVID

Bloomerang

And I think another important component is knowledge. You could even do it in Excel or Word document, but just a way to look at this. And so do you have that sort of squared away on the roles and responsibilities and the processes? . But it is a great planning tool and exercise. You have the whiteboard that you can map them out.

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