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Here’s How to Raise More Money with Your Next Fundraising Letter

The Fundraising Authority

2 – Letters that Tell a Great Story Raise More. Great fundraising letters tell a story – a compelling story – where the donor is the hero, and working through your non-profit, he or she vanquishes a villain through the power of a donation. Don’t have a story like that for your non-profit? Headlines and sub-headlines.

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Supercharge Giving Tuesday Contributions with an Optimized Donation Page

The Modern Nonprofit

You’ll want to tell a compelling story that breathes life into your cause and paints a vivid picture of the powerful difference every donation makes. This isn’t just about beautiful words—pictures and videos are your allies, bringing the world closer to your cause and adding a human touch to cold stats.

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Build a Non-profit Website that Works [Steal These Ideas!]

Get Fully Funded

All About Your Brand: Logo, Typography, Colors, Photos, and Tone What do you want the look and feel of your site to be? and it is communicated through your logo, typography, colors, photo style, and tone or voice. The fewer words you use the better, but you will need words to tell your story. Next, think about photo quality.

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10 New Year’s Resolutions for Nonprofit Social Media Managers

Nonprofit Tech for Good

and training (HTML, photo-editing, social and mobile media best practices ). All that said, as social media managers, we need to read in order have moments when we are completely immersed in a story using our brains to process words, sentences, story structure, and plot lines – not just soundbites, headlines, tweets, and pins.

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Nonprofit Donor Newsletters | Print or Enews?

Pamela Grow

This change would leave many of our donors (without email addresses) in the dark when it comes to news and feel-good stories about the organization. The stories can be tightened up. In Bonnie’s case, I noted that a story from a parent packed a strong emotional punch, but again, could be trimmed. The photos need captioning.

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Nine Digital Marketing Lessons Nonprofits Can Learn from charity: water

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

They employ numbers throughout their site to make people feel aligned with thousands of others, and they give a face and a voice to those thousands with pictures, videos and written stories. Include photos of the donors or the company logo whenever possible. Identify Brand Evangelists Within Your Organization.

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Four Steps to Write the Right Content on your Nonprofit Blog

NonProfit Hub

Is it primarily educational, or are you using it as a platform to share stories? Think about how you can incorporate these things into your blog: Sharing stories of your nonprofit’s successes and failures. A picture says a thousand words, and it takes a fraction of the time to digest. Captivate with headlines. Beef it Up.

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