Remove Active Remove Cancer Remove Mobile Remove Teen
article thumbnail

50 Nonprofits Every U.S. Politican Should Follow on Twitter

Nonprofit Tech for Good

They are active in our communities, in our schools, and have valuable knowledge and experience that our nation’s elected officials could learn from and be inspired by, and yet very few U.S. American Cancer Society :: @ AmericanCancer. National Campaign to Prevent Teen and Unplanned Pregnancy :: @ TheNC.

Twitter 246
article thumbnail

10 Online Fundraising Best Practices for Nonprofits

Nonprofit Tech for Good

As a general rule, donations pages should be simple, optimized for mobile giving, and ask for the minimal amount of information required to make a donation and to capture a donor’s contact information. If a nonprofit is not actively promoting thus growing their email list, then there’s a knowledge gap at that organization.

Practice 339
professionals

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Trending Sources

article thumbnail

34 Clever Summer Fundraising Ideas

Whole Whale

We love the New York Public Library’s Anti-Proms , which provide an alternative, safe space regardless of sexuality, gender identity, and any other reason for NYC teens. Charge an entry fee to cover both a fun low-key activity (pub crawl, wine tasting, bowling league) and babysitting services and bring your community together.

Ideas 98
article thumbnail

Igniting the 15NTC stage at lightning speed

NTEN

But they aren’t going to cure cancer, reduce hunger, or improve pre-K education. American teens still send more SMS than any other type of message, and send more SMS than any other age group. Digital Activism? Learn about a new approach connecting new school strategy and old school activism. We need to go deeper.

NTC 36
article thumbnail

Millennials: How to Gain the Loyalty of Younger Generations

Connection Cafe

It might seem scary that the future of the nonprofit sector will soon be in the hands of teens and college graduates who seem to only care about whatever is displayed on the screen of their smartphone or tablet. The Statistics: Generation Y gives 62% through their mobile phones. Generation Y gives 47% through a nonprofit’s website.

article thumbnail

Where are the twenty-something or GEN-Y Bloggers Who Are Writing About Social Change and Nonprofits?

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

I wanted to listen to what was on their minds in general, although I was particularly keen on hearing any discussions or snippets about social change, nonprofits, and activism. The Stupid Cancer Blog is written by Matthew Zachary who founded the social enterprise I'm Too Young for This." Also, Maddie Grant.

Blogger 50