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19 Easy Fundraiser Ideas Your Nonprofit Can Try Today

Neon CRM

Pet Fundraisers Host events like dog walks, pet parades, dog washes, or pet costume contests and charge admission/entry fees. Educational Workshops Offer low-cost workshops or classes on topics relevant to your cause, with the funds coming from class fees. If your trivia night is a success, you can make it a recurring event.

Ideas 52
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Art, Social Change & Young Women Bloggers

Have Fun - Do Good

While writing my mentor post last Sunday I got to thinking about how artists use art for social change and accumulated a bunch of links for related projects, programs and organizations that I thought I'd share: Change Me: The Power of Imagery to Create Change. art activism social change You can put the info.

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End-of-Year Event Fundraising

The Modern Nonprofit

Hold a contest with rewards for Best Dressed or Best Background. PHOTOGRAPHY: BFA.COM 2. You can make it a contest with prizes, or you can use this time to cook to feed the hungry together or make holiday cards for kids in shelters. You might even direct-mail pretty recipe cards to add a special physical touch!

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End-of-Year Event Fundraising in 2021

The Modern Nonprofit

Hold a contest with rewards for Best Dressed or Best Background. PHOTOGRAPHY: BFA.COM. You can make it a contest with prizes, or you can use this time to cook to feed the hungry together or make holiday cards for kids in shelters. TUTORING ART. Many of us would jump at the chance to get dressed to the nines again!

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Interview with Brooklyn Museum's Shelley Bernstein

Museum 2.0

They just finished a YouTube video contest. The real show in the museum was a series of canvasses showing tags--graffiti--and the curator and education department installed a wall in the middle of the gallery so that visitors could tag (we provided colored pencils, and people brought their own markers and stickers).

Museum 27
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Why Click! is My Hero (What Museum Innovation Looks Like)

Museum 2.0

the crowd-curated photo exhibition now open at the Brooklyn Museum of Art. As James comments in the attached podcast (scroll down), Shelley’s team did something that he thought was “too hard” to do in his work—tackle the effect of crowds on the subjective question of art evaluation. Because Click! isn’t a standard exhibition.

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