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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.

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How BeSpeake Clients are Adding Fun to their Virtual Meetings

The MatrixFiles

The attendees loved it and many of them played along by posting answers in the comments. Photo roll. AFPM asks attendees to send in photos of themselves attending the conference from their office or home office. The photos are reviewed and the photos edited to add the attendee name and location.

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Nine Teddy Bear-Approved Tips for Getting Comments On Your Blog

NTEN

Photo: Pune Dracker Everything I know about the editorial process I learned from Teddy Bear Review. Ask open-ended, rather than yes/no questions, to get the most thoughtful, personal responses and open up the room for others. Send them the post ahead of time, so they’re well prepared to make a real value-add comment.

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New Study Highlights What People Like, Comment, and Share on Facebook

Care2

Photos Were the Most Liked and Shared. Zarella’s study had similar results to the Social Media Today study that showed Photos Get the Most "Likes" on Facebook than any other status updates. While photos generated the most “Likes” on Facebook, it only had an estimated 0.25% of engagement.

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Vote and Comment for ALL these Awesome Nonprofit Panels at SXSW!

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

2008 SXSW Panel: Pimp Your Nonprofit Cause photo by Ed Schipul. The final program is selected through a combination of an open submission and voting process. The process has opened – so you can browse and vote for the nonprofit panels you think are worthy of being on the program until September 2, 2011.

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Early guidance on Threads, Meta’s answer to Twitter

M+R

We know from our media advocacy campaigns that Twitter offered a public gathering place for journalists, thought leaders, and influencers to exchange ideas and comment on the news cycle. Posts can be up to 500 characters, and they can include links, photos, or videos up to 5 minutes long. We think Threads can fill that gap.

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

Candid

Find the posts from the last year that had the most likes and comments. Warm them up with polls or easy open-ended questions, like asking what their favorite program or event of yours was over the last year. Make photographs interactive by inviting commenters to add a title to the photograph or by answering a true or false question.