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Listen Up: A New, National RFP Offers Nonprofits and Funders Tools to Survey Clients

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

Are you and your colleagues eager to improve and expand your capacity to listen to the people you seek to help, and to make the right changes in response? L4G is dedicated to building the practice of listening to the people we seek to help. Through its new RFP, Shared Insight will be offering up to 75 Listen for Good grants this year.

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Want To Be a Leader? Get to Know Yourself

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Or that you secretly hate networking but force yourself to show up because that’s what leaders do. Be an Active Listener A group of advisors is an invaluable career resource. That synergy won’t happen unless you come to the table prepared to listen. Become an active listener by practicing these skills. Listen actively.

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How to Maintain Relevance and Revenue in Today’s Economy

Association Analytics

Other options to consider are social and community listening. Social listening is when you search social media channels for mentions of your association, products, events, hashtags, or even your industry at large. The same can happen by listening to conversations in your online community. Where are you repeating your efforts?

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Visionlink is Celebrating National 211 Day!

VisionLink

Driving those numbers are the professionals who keep their information about community services up to date, who listen with a practiced ear, and who respond with an effectiveness that should make everyone proud. We are humanitarians driven to build better connections for communities like yours.

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Association 4.0—A Playbook for Success

.orgSource

Many of the characteristics we identified are the same skills that entrepreneurs use to grow start-up ventures. So is listening deeply to the market and using MVPs to recalibrate. Doing more listening can also generate ideas for products and services.” Stepping up to Association 4.0 Incremental innovation is smart.

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How to gather high-quality nonprofit client feedback

Candid

Follow-up questions might ask about specific aspects of the service or clients’ interactions with the nonprofit. For example, if you ask clients to rate how satisfied they are with your services on a scale of 0 to 10, see if the average rating is going up or down over time. or “What could we be doing better?”

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Step-by-Step: How To Set Up A Nonprofit Listening Post (Twitter - Part 1)

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

Photo by Andy Field I think Chris Brogan said that the secret to Twitter is listening (or search), not blasting your message out. The other day a commenter asked me if I could write something that offered some practical how to listening tips as well as applying it. What do you need to listen for and why? I'm paraphrasing.

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