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3 Reasons Why Pinterest Is Still Relevant for Nonprofits

Nonprofit Tech for Good

The first question that probably comes to your mind when reading this headline is – “Pinterest? And, according to numerous studies , we now that women at virtually every income level are more likely to give to charity (in some cases, nearly twice as much). You can directly pin your videos from YouTube and your photos from Flickr.

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11 LinkedIn Profile Tips for Nonprofit Professionals

Nonprofit Tech for Good

Include the majority of your work experience and all schools you attended (even study abroad programs). Use a Professional Photo for Your Profile Photo. Some personality is OK, but if you wouldn’t use a photo on the “Staff” page of your nonprofit’s website, then don’t use it on LinkedIn, either. Customize Your Headline.

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How to Convert Your Nonprofit Website Visitor into a Donor

Get Fully Funded

Studies have found that most website visitors leave within 10 seconds, and the vast majority are gone within 20 seconds. . Something in the photos and the language on the page pulled me in and made me care. Don’t lead with a photo from your latest fundraiser. Get the best quality photo you can. It’s not much time.

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Facebook Usage Declines: What Does It Mean for Your Nonprofit’s Digital Strategy?

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

For example, my one colleague replaced her profile photo with a black and white image that states “Away.” Outside of Facebook’s data, Edison Research and Triton Digital conduct and share results from the Infinite Dial study that examines how Americans use social media and other technology. Probably not.

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22 Email Ledes That Always Work!!

M+R

I’ve been a field biologist studying wildlife here for nearly 20 years, and I can tell you: it’s not supposed to be like this. Rip from the headlines The news is urgent, tangible, and real. Climate Has Already Changed, Study Finds, Citing Heat and Floods That’s the headline on today’s New York Times front page.

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The Art of Less As More: Micro Content

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

There many forms of micro-content: tweets, Facebook status updates, curated links, Vine videos, photos, visual quotes, etc. The e-book gives an entertaining historical perspective on micro-content which is not just a product of a networked age. For example, gum wrappers and fortune cookies are micro content.

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Nonprofit Public Relations Strategies That Build Trust and Credibility

Neon CRM

Visuals: Also include images that journalists can use in their pieces about your organization, like logos, key personnel photos, and event pictures. Headline: Create a clear, compelling headline that covers the most important aspect of your message. Your organization should have its own unique slant on the topics you bring up.

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