Remove Audience Remove Conservancy Remove Mind Remove Teen
article thumbnail

48 Top Nonprofit Podcasts in 2023

Whole Whale

Podcasting is an incredible medium that was catapulted into mainstream audiences with the success of Spotify buying top podcasts and growth of podcast companies like Gimlet Media. This renaissance of the medium presents a fantastic opportunity for deeper content to be created and consumed by people interested in the nonprofit world.

Podcast 96
article thumbnail

Attracting New Donors With Content That Serves (And Scales)

Bloomerang

When nonprofits shift their focus to serving rather than soliciting their donor base, it becomes easier to attract like-minded supporters and build lasting relationships. Email allows you to continue to serve your audience with more content over time and introduce your organization and its purpose more deeply.

Content 92
professionals

Sign Up for our Newsletter

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

article thumbnail

4 bbcon Takeaways for Philanthropic Organizations to Power 2019 Planning

Connection Cafe

At bbcon 2018, Blackbaud announced the cloud solution for each of our main audiences, including the Cloud Solution for Companies and the Cloud Solution for Foundations. Keep in mind the following points from speakers Brooke Hansel of Blackbaud, Merrie Beth Nauman of Ocean Conservancy, and Lisa Tacker of Two Ten Footwear Foundation: .

article thumbnail

Notes from The Seven Things Everyone Wants: What Freud and Buddha Understood (and We're Forgetting) about Online Outreach

Have Fun - Do Good

Effective campaigns always keep their audience's needs in mind. Examples * Teen Health Talk engages youth to talk about health issues rather than lectures at them. An Ocean Conservancy member created a Facebook Cause for the organization without telling them. You supported a cause because of how it made you feel."

Darfur 41
article thumbnail

Visitor Voices Book Club: Talking Back

Museum 2.0

Chris Lawrence writes about one group of teens who addressed the Society directly as a "you" embodying white privilege. An early talk-back in that conservation-minded exhibition asked, 'What can you do to help the environment?' The challenge is distributing these programs either to mass audiences or without heavy facilitation.

Voice 20
article thumbnail

Backwards Interview: My Advice for Incorporation of Web 2.0 into Museums

Museum 2.0

Do you want to offer audio or video programming to an international audience for free? If you had one youth educator, would you expect them to develop and run overnights AND scout programs AND teen programs AND toddler programs AND outreach AND… of course not. Start conservative and build from there. Pod or Vodcast.

Museum 20