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Cheap and Cheerful Audience Analysis for Nonprofits

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

Flickr Photo by Matthew Field. Give them a name, find a photo of them on a stock photography site and flesh out their biographical details. Note from Beth: One of the most common questions I get at workshops or webinars is, “Should our organization be on XYZ social or mobile platform?” How old are they?

Analysis 105
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Steal these 42 Creative Pinterest Ideas for Nonprofits

Care2

Create categories that reflect what users are looking for. If you're an animal shelter or animal rights organization: Credit to Flickr user: Dennis from Atlanta 1. If you're a church, synagogue, or other religious organization: Credit to Flickr user: evilpeacock 5. Credit to Flickr user: Aberdeen Proving Ground 10.

Ideas 78
professionals

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2007: New Year's Technology Resolutions

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

To stop being a digital slob in terms of my hard drive, tagging habits, flickr photo annotation, blog posts, etc. I'm going to continue to play and reflect and learn about technology tools and how they can be used to support nonprofits and to create instructional material. But maybe I can be fast and neater?

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Arts 2.0: Examples of Arts Organizations Social Media Strategies

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

I was particularly interested in examples using blogs, Twitter, Flickr, Youtube, and Facebook. They're now running a compelling experiment in crowd-sourced exhibition creation and curation via the photography exhibition Click. Why not send us your own photos and join the discussion here at The Great Tate Mod Blog?

Arts 74
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The value of attending Gnomedex: Priceless

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

Thousands of photos in flickr (and really good ones). A couple of personal highlights of the sessions: Photography Tips Kris Krug who is an awesome photographer who gave us great tips on improving our photos. They key takeaway for me is that photos without a story in them are less powerful. Two awesome parties.

Blogher 50
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Is Wikipedia Loves Art Getting "Better"?

Museum 2.0

The museums developed careful rules about what could and couldn't be shot, and how participants could upload their images to Flickr for use by the project. From the institutional perspective, the best way to deliver good participant experiences was to constrain contributions through the Flickr uploading system.

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10 Steps to Extension Professional 2.0 Remix

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

Extension programs use wikis, flickr, blogs, tagging, and other tools to share information and content. A blog with the comments feature enabled allows or sharing photos in flickrs allows Extension program participants to discuss plans and programs. Personal learning and reflection on and about your instructional topic.

Remix 50