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Social Media: Before You Get Started, Get Organized!

Nonprofit Tech for Good

Some common metrics to monitor are website traffic, blog traffic, e-newsletter subscribers, Facebook fans, Twitter followers, online dollars raised, volunteers, and event attendees. It will help you centralize all your efforts and reduce the amount of spam and notification e-mails sent to your work e-mail account. Show her the stats.

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NTC Boston: Brian Reich: Online Fundraising Strategy

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

Online auction anecdote: He shared a story about an organization that had received a donation of toilet paper for an event 12 months before the event. t have toilet paper for the event. Provided some stats on Internet ads, ???even t Spam regulations ??? t spam work. Did it get passed into a spam folder.

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Create the ultimate nonprofit email newsletter

Get Fully Funded

You see, it’s about them and their desire to know what’s going on, not necessarily for you to ask for money, ask them to buy a ticket to your event, and ask them to volunteer (which is too many asks at once!). CAN SPAM laws so you don’t have to worry about it. Endless updates about past events. Lots of stats and facts.

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Nonprofit Technology News for August 2013

Tech Soup

I’ll review some new developments in email technology including Gmail’s new tabbed inbox and how it affects your charity newsletters, and the array of new email filtering services that cut down on email overload. Google Gmail. Chances are that a fair number of your email newsletter subscribers are on Gmail.

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