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Build excitement before you ask: Rethink your year-end giving social media plan

Candid

And most importantly, get them used to engaging with your content. Here are a few types of content you can add to your social media plan to support your success this giving season. This is a great way to get some easy content ready to share, while also reminding your audience of the amazing things you’ve done over the last year.

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Making Facebook Groups Rock for Nonprofits – Guest Post by Miriam Brosseau

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

Here are some helpful hints to make your Facebook group a truly vibrant platform: Maximizing group features for networking and engagement: Tagging individuals in posts. Facebook is a “picture economy” (whereas Twitter is a “link economy” ); pics are the most engaged content, the most in-demand. Questions and polling.

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What You Can Learn About Cultivating Community from The Lord of the Rings

Tech Soup

So with that in mind, let's explore how you can build this kind of meaningful relationship with your supporters by taking a few hints from the best friends ever, Sam and Frodo in The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring. When you listen first, you know better what your next steps should be to develop that relationship.

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150+ Creative Ways to Show Donors Appreciation

Nonprofit Tech for Good

Audience size, breadth, and depth: If your organization has big lists, lots of traffic to your website or blog or social media pages, or big crowds at events, there are many ways to turn this into a donor benefit. Knowledge: Subject matter expertise, research, polling, case studies. A dedicated blog post about the sponsorship.

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How to structure your nonprofit social media plan

Get Fully Funded

An editorial calendar is basically just a content map or a guide that helps you map out your nonprofit’s content (including social media) for the year. Whether your content is original (you’ve created it yourself) or shared from someone else, the goal is always to get your followers to interact and have a conversation with you.

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Four Reasons Why Nonprofits Should Reconsider Facebook

Nonprofit Tech for Good

I have been in trainings where if I even hint that perhaps Facebook is a little over-rated, then eyes glare, people shift in their seats, and I have recollections of a few people even walking out. They have heavily promoted Facebook on their websites and blogs, at events and conferences. That said, people love Facebook. on Facebook.

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How to Build and Engage Your Community through Your Website

Connection Cafe

Blog – creating content for your community gives you a channel to distribute news and engage. Schaefer wrote in his B2B blogging e-book that people perceive blogs as credible, as they are written by officials. In this way you will receive feedback and you will know how to adapt your content.