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10 Blogging Best Practices for Nonprofits

Nonprofit Tech for Good

Fresh, timely content is more vital to the success of your nonprofit’s digital campaigns than it has ever been. The first blogging platform, Blogger , launched in 1999 and it signaled the birth of the Social Web. For the first time, readers could comment and share their opinions publicly on a piece of online content.

Practice 352
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Lame spam of the day: Raw spam merge text

Robert Weiner

Some newbie spammer posted a message on my site that shows the contents of their spam merge database. I recognize so many snippets that have appeared in my spam folder over the years. { {I have|I’ve} been {surfing|browsing} online more than {three|3|2|4} hours today, yet I never found any interesting article like yours. {In

Spam 131
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Useful Hacks, Tricks & Tips for WordPress Users: Part 2

Byte Technology

Here’s Part 2, with another seven highly effective tools, shortcuts and work-arounds that can you save you time and aggravation as you welcome new and repeat visitors and users. Leveraging the use of comments makes it easier for site owners to engage with their visitors and provide the sort of content that draws attention.

WordPress 100
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Getting on The List

NetWits

Spam email from a stranger. New review in the Times of a restaurant you happen to be going to tonight. Comment on a blog post you wrote three days ago. New post by your favorite blogger, delivered via RSS. Three or four recommendations from trusted colleagues, each with the same link. A trending topic on Twitter.

Reddit 152
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Lessons Learned From A Twitterthon

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

She and I have have linked to each other’s blog posts and commented on each others posts over the past three years. Our goal this time around is—you guessed it—10,000 people giving $10 each on 10/10/10. When it was time for 09/09/09, I didn’t have to scramble to find RTers or bloggers; they were there.

Lesson 97
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Ten Things Nonprofits May Not Know About MySpace [But I Wish They Did]

Nonprofit Tech for Good

At it’s heyday, a few hours a day sending friend requests and posting wall comments on MySpace profiles quickly resulted in large, thriving online communities. For the last two years we’ve been bombarded with articles from bloggers and the mainstream media that MySpace is dead. MySpace was designed to be a marketing tool.

Myspace 190
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Live Blogging ONG Web 2.0 Conference in Romania sponsored by the Soros Foundation in Bucharest

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

We need to make the time to blog after hours. Doing a blog involves additional time and energy and some of us won't have this time available. He covered the following platforms: Blogs: It is more than a web site, built by one person or a small community or group of bloggers. There 10-15 bloggers - a wide range of ages.

Romania 50