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How Nonprofits Can Use Instagram for Fundraising

Nonprofit Tech for Good

It will also grant you access to more advanced analytics and improved ad campaign management, as well as enable you to add contact information to your page. Instagram doesn’t let you add links to post captions — meaning that users who click through will always go through the contact info on your page or a link in your bio.

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6 Tips for a Compelling Cryptocurrency Donation Page

Whole Whale

Focus on one CTA: Donate Cryptocurrency Remember that we want to keep the important info at the top of the page (in the first screen seen) to share with the highest number of user Use the headline as a donate CTA with reference to the value proposition of donating cryptocurrency, like children.org . Learn more about utilizing Ad Grants.

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5 Design Techniques That Will Increase the Lifespan of Your Nonprofit’s Website

Nonprofit Tech for Good

Additionally, people who are familiar with your org will know to look there for the most up-to-date info.) . It may be worth documenting these patterns once you notice them, especially if a lot of different people have access to update parts of the site. The contrast will draw the eyes of your site visitors.

Technique 327
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Nonprofit Guide to US Digital Privacy Laws: CCPA, SHIELD

Whole Whale

Data Subject Access Requests (DSARs) Full Guide to DSARs: [link] How should we plan for enforcement as a mid-sized nonprofit? If your privacy page has no contact info for DSAR messages. Updated 2020 cybersecurity tips leaders of orgs should be thinking about for staff.

Law 52
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150+ Creative Ways to Show Donors Appreciation

Nonprofit Tech for Good

It can be helpful to lead a planning process within your own organization that examines your organizational assets and access so you can translate them into benefits. History: Simply being around a long time has some cachet and may mean you have access to historical wisdom, knowledge, and records. It is seen as wasteful overhead.

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Social Media and Technology: What Nonprofits Need To Know

NTEN

For those people and orgs particularly interesting in raising money via social media , Deanna shared a helpful way to think about this: Just like you can’t walk into a bar, say how awesome you are and then ask someone for money… you can’t expect people to give you money, hand over fist, via Facebook and other social media sites.

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Crowdsourcing Your Professional Learning With Social Media: An Example

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

Also, try not to tweet about your own org on an average of more than once every seven or so tweets. I'd argue it makes your organization look open, inclusive, and accessible. Is there a fine line between sending too much that's irrelevant vs. useful information? Quality is more important than quantity.