Remove Analytics Remove Contact Remove Copyright Remove Management
article thumbnail

You Have a Google Grant—Now What? A Guide for Nonprofits

Connection Cafe

If you’ve managed to get the grant for your organization, you deserve a hearty congratulations. From there, your organization has to stay on top of task management to maintain compliance with Google’s standards, make the most of your Google Ad Grant, and jumpstart your organization’s digital marketing efforts. Plan Your Ads.

Grant 61
article thumbnail

Internet Strategy on the Cheap: Tools and Resources

Have Fun - Do Good

Odeo: Free [link] Copyright Free Music Podsafe Music Network. Mac or PC [link] GarageBand: Free with Mac [link] Podcast Hosting Liberated Syndication https://www.libsyn.com. $5-$30 5-$30 based on how many MB's of storage you need.

Skype 40
professionals

Sign Up for our Newsletter

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

article thumbnail

Using Google Analytics to Track a Nonprofit Website (Part 1) - Online Fundraising, Advocacy, and Social Media - frogloop

Care2

a Video! | Main | Care2 Launches Americas Favorite Animal Shelter Contest » Monday Oct 13 2008 Using Google Analytics to Track a Nonprofit Website (Part 1) Monday, October 13, 2008 at 01:21PM | by James OMalley Nonprofits take note: Google Analytics software application has shattered previous barriers to analyzing and optimizing websites.

article thumbnail

Top 8 Social Media Tracking Tools - Online Fundraising, Advocacy, and Social Media - frogloop

Care2

link] HootSuite: Allows you to manage multiple twitter accounts in one place. TweetDeck (www.tweetdeck.com) - An easy way to manage your tweets. Lets you filter by term and user name to manage help manage all the noise. These tools helps in social media tracking and analytics. pretty cool. All rights reserved.

article thumbnail

Grave Work

Non Profit Quarterly

Inequities around who sees and who remains blind have undoubtedly been aggravated by recent innovations in ‘Big Data’, so many of which are perhaps more bluster than reality, with companies like the data analytics consultancy Acxiom confidently promising clients a panoptic ‘360-degree customer view’.

Work 68