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10 Threads & X Best Practices for Nonprofits

Nonprofit Tech for Good

You can upload up to 10 photos to a thread. Before you follow any account, ensure that your profile is complete with (1) a well-designed profile photo and header image; (2) a bio that communicates your organization’s mission; and (3) a link to your website. Upload powerful photos and videos. You can add polls to post.

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10 Twitter Best Practices for Nonprofits

Nonprofit Tech for Good

Before you follow any account, ensure that your profile is complete with (1) a well-designed profile photo and header image; (2) a bio that expresses clearly your organization’s mission; and (3) a link to your website. Don’t be a photo tag spammer either! Upload powerful photos and videos. Like mentions and replies.

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11 LinkedIn Group Management Best Practices for Nonprofits

Nonprofit Tech for Good

By default, logging in regularly to approve new members also makes you a better group manager, because while you are logged in, you should also be participating in discussions and managing spam. Requiring approval to join forces you to be engaged in your group on a regular basis and take responsibility for monitoring spam.

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10 LinkedIn Best Practices for Nonprofits

Nonprofit Tech for Good

Upload your avatar/logo (250 x 250), a cover photo(1128 x 191), add a description and website URL, your company/organization size, industry, and city and country. Habitat for Humanity focuses on periodically posting curated content relevant to the cause of homelessness and housing. Curated content relevant to your mission.

Linkedin 361
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Using a CMS to Make Your Website Social

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

A good CMS should also include a built-in Spam filter to keep obviously unrelated content from cluttering your comments sections. Letting them subscribe to your site content through RSS feeds or email can help them ensure they’re getting the most-update information from your organization with ease and convenience.

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So you want a Facebook Fan Page for Your Nonprofit? Here's the Scoop!

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

Worst thing you can do with a page is dump an RSS feed into the Page - won't be as successful. When you start to write in the "write something" you get options to add links, photos, videos - post things that are beyond promotion content. It's intended to prevent spam. This is very powerful viral marketing.

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

Nonprofit Tech for Good

As far as ads and Spam, that just a part of MySpace and the price to pay for having a social networking site with very little rules or censorship. The well-known Causes App popular on Facebook was dumped on MySpace. It was not a big loss and Causes’ reason for dropping MySpace for “lack of activity&# makes sense.

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