Remove Articulate Remove Attitude Remove Method Remove Roles
article thumbnail

The Importance of the Thank You: Creating an Attitude of Gratitude

NonProfit Hub

We need to foster an attitude of gratitude and create a culture of thanking our donors. To create an attitude of gratitude , consider the good ole’ fashioned 5Ws and an H: Who is involved in each step of the thank you process? Thank them first and recognize their gifts and role as huge supporters of your organization.

article thumbnail

Creating Buy-In for a Data Culture at Your Nonprofit

Tech Soup

Don't create all new goals — explain how the change in methods will contribute towards the objectives you have always had. This begins with the CEO or president, who needs to articulate what she or he sees as the fundamental importance of dedicating staff time towards these goals. But you can also make it fun!

Culture 36
professionals

Sign Up for our Newsletter

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

article thumbnail

Four Tips to Help Nonprofit Marketing Departments Create a Culture of Philanthropy

Connection Cafe

This activity helps you articulate why a culture of philanthropy is important, your values, and the way you work. Use Human-Centered Design Methods to Help Everyone Understand the Donor’s Experience with Your Organization. Here are some additional resources on how to use other design-thinking methods.

Culture 47
article thumbnail

How Can Nonprofits Switch to a Data-Driven Culture?

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

There are no systems in place, no dashboards or simple collection method. Culture is an organization’s operating patterns of behavior, activities, and attitudes, influenced by a shared set of values and beliefs that characterize the way people work together. Dormant: At this stage, the organization does not know where to start.

Culture 115
article thumbnail

Notes from the Future: Reflections on the IMLS Meeting on Museums and Libraries in the 21st Century

Museum 2.0

How do you measure and articulate the value of museums and libraries? This attitude is often self-serving: it’s also a practical problem for those who actually want to create change. If it’s not open to the public, I don’t care if it’s a book or a fossil—the methods of interpretation and audience engagement are fundamentally different.

Library 20