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Who’s Responsible for A Nonprofit’s Culture of Philanthropy?

Bloomerang

Sure, you’ll raise some money. But you’ll leave even more money on the table. Because everyone is impacted by your ability to raise money. Which means you must help others overcome the “ money taboo.” We’ve been trained in our society that it’s not polite to talk about money. And your attitude will be contagious.

Culture 122
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Craft the Perfect Tagline for Your Organization

NonProfit Hub

To generate ideas for a tagline, start by asking yourselves a few questions to see if the answers point to a solution: Why should people donate money to your organization? Nike’s “Just do it” says nothing about shoes or apparel—it simply expresses an attitude. A bank shouldn’t use the word “bank” or even “money” in its tagline.

professionals

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[VIDEO] Raising More Money By Asking (And Answering) Better Questions

Bloomerang

We’re here to talk about “Raising More Money By Asking and Answering Better Questions.” And the better you get at the whole suite of donor engagement, the more money you’re going to raise. And that gets you, again, much more money in the long run. . Well, good afternoon, everybody.

Money 104
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Grantseeking Basics: Developing a Grant Project

Tech Soup

Outcomes are used to identify a change in behavior, attitude, or knowledge in the people being served by the project. Outcomes usually reflect the long-term impact of a project toward solving a community problem or toward improving the lives of the people served by the project. Project Outcomes. Objectives. Evaluation Plan.

Grant 63
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Here’s Your Chance – A Message to All New Graduates in Philanthropy

Achieve

That is the truly remarkable and purposeful life you will lead. It usually ends with, “You know what, I think he makes money by telling people things that involves giving.”. But really, these are just labels and don’t truly reflect the work I do. I mean, it’s dominated by old money, primarily from old white guys.”.

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How Nonprofits Can Tackle a Marathon

NonProfit Hub

Naturally, my mind drifted to life at Nonprofit Hub and my own experiences with nonprofits and how they related to my training and the race itself. As I slowly recover to walking without a hobble, here are some lessons I learned from running a marathon that you can apply to your nonprofit life. Challenge Yourself. Why run a marathon?

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Dancefloor and Balcony: What I learned about emergent online collaboration from Eugene Eric Kim

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

The intent of the exercise (besides getting us to move around) was to help reflect and learn about self-organizing group collaboration. The instructions for the exercise are: Get in a circle. We had some rich learnings in the reflection of what happened in the group. His slides and my notes and reflections follow.