Remove Brain Remove Disaster Remove Fun Remove Map
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14+ Excellent Nonprofit Annual Reports

Whole Whale

We love how Girls Who Code built an interactive map of the U.S. org combines a lot of the elements we love from the reports above: Fun colors to keep the reader engaged, interactiveness, and a sticky table of contents that follows the reader as they scroll down the page. The annual report from 350.org International Rescue Committee.

Report 85
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The Networked NGO in India

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

After we create a shared network based on individual’s knowledge and skills, we move to the organizational network maps. Participants create a poster of their networks, view other the network maps of others, and then do a debrief. It Isn’t Enough To Tell People About Best Practices: Hands-On, Brains-On.

India 102
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The Networked NGO in Pakistan

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

Having this network map on the wall during the whole training, let us as the trainers acknowledge the expertise and knowledge in the room. This exercise is very useful because after participants create their maps, they’re taped on the wall, and participants give feedback using sticky notes. Make It Fun, Celebrate.

Pakistan 111
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Use This 2024 Nonprofit Calendar to Plan Your Content Strategy

Neon CRM

That’s why you have to plan ahead: A robust content plan will save you time—and brain space—and help you produce great nonprofit content while also tackling the rest of your mile-long to-do list. It Ensures Continuity in a Worst-Case Scenario A content plan serves as insurance against disaster. So first, plan your strategy.

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If we’d had Twitter on 9/11

Connection Cafe

Now we are friends on Google Maps, and I can see his dot throughout his evening commute. And so I’m hoping that community leaders won’t dismiss social media as “just for fun” or optional. Most of the time, I do think of social media as fun. A place to listen & learn, and share what I can contribute.

Twitter 36