article thumbnail

Nonprofit Web Design Process Part 3: Content Strategy

Connection Cafe

Content for your website includes your headlines, body copy, photos, captions, graphics, videos, audio clips, etc. Articulating content priorities for your homepage and other key pages/sections of your web presence. See the end of this post for a linked index of other posts in the series. What’s Next. Stay tuned!

Design 36
article thumbnail

Turn Brand Strategy into an Effective Website

Tech Soup

The ideas and narrative are laid out in a well-articulated strategic brief. identifying content goals and gaps, making sure the content is useful and accessible to everyone, creating a consistent tone and structure, and. For a website, it means. delivering the right content, to the right audience, in the right format.

professionals

Sign Up for our Newsletter

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

article thumbnail

Guide to Refining Prompts & AI Prompts Terms

Whole Whale

Iterative prompt refinement forces clearer articulation of intent and goals upfront, enabling more aligned responses. Rewriting strengthens logic, structure, and transitions. Rewriting strengthens logic, structure, and transitions. Constructive feedback identifies weak points to address through rewriting. You are the editor.

Guide 52
article thumbnail

The One-Look Virus and Immersive Environments for Teaching and Learning

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

danah boyd has a post called " On Being Virtual " (be sure to read the comments) As Kevin Gamble on the SLED list notes, what she seems to be saying is that if you look at the rise of social tech amongst young people, it's not about divorcing the physical social structures to live virtually. My notes are here.

article thumbnail

[VIDEO] How To Lead And Manage In Our New Nonprofit Work Reality

Bloomerang

Steven: Hey, Kishshana, we lost your audio. Flat structures have hidden hierarchy. Oh, no business increased, coaching increased, the amount of change management exercises I had to take organizations through increased. And what I found was that many of. I don’t know why. It doesn’t say you’re muted though. Absolutely.

article thumbnail

Self-Censorship for Museum Professionals

Museum 2.0

You can view (and download ) the slides and audio here, which feature our provocations and the discussion that followed. The audio starts noisy. Few were able to articulate a response policy that wasn't based entirely on the volume of the ire raised. but it gets better. If you do offend, ask yourself—who do you offend and why?

Museum 20