Remove Attitude Remove Fun Remove Lecture Remove Mind
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12 Ideas for a Virtual Fundraiser or Online Event

Get Fully Funded

It’s harder to create a fun event when everyone is sitting at home in front of their computer. A few things to keep in mind for any virtual fundraising idea: Choose your technology carefully! Go into the planning stage of your virtual event with a can-do attitude, knowing you can create something fun and meaningful.

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4 Reasons Why Cause Camp Isn’t Your Average Nonprofit Conference

NonProfit Hub

Here, unlike most nonprofit conferences, you’ll find so much more than run-of-the-mill speaker lectures, cheap coffee and goodie bags filled with pencils. During snack breaks, collaboration workshops, breakout sessions and happy hours, you’ll mingle with like-minded attendees and inevitably make some new friends. Fun (like, real fun).

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4 Strategies to Increase Donor Loyalty

Bloomerang

They don’t have to be tangible gifts; offering opportunities to get together with other like-minded folks who share their values is plenty and can be greatly enjoyed and appreciated. People like to engage, and when you enter them into a raffle for a prize (preferably one that is donated), they’re more likely to join the fun.

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How To Think Like An Instructional Designer for Your Nonprofit Trainings

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

I also keep in mind dips in the circadian rhythms for humans that have impact on their ability to pay attention and learn – and I design different types of activities accordingly. Ideally, audience research should be done before you design your workshop or course. Within the modules, I break it down in 15 minute blocks.

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5 Keys to Effective Knowledge Transfer for Nonprofits

Wild Apricot

In defining your target audience, too, keep the intended outcome in mind: Which people are actually in a position to act on your information? an open class discussion, or a traditional front-of-room lecture from your teacher? changes in awareness or attitude) or tangible results (e.g. Have Fun â?¢ Beths Blog. CAE Weblog.

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Should Museums Be Happiness Engines?

Museum 2.0

I'm a huge fan of Jane's and have been writing about her work since the early days of this blog, so I was thrilled to learn that the CFM was bringing in Jane to speak live and then opening up the lecture to a wider audience of about 300 online. Might relate to how to interpret the global happiness findings.

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