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Social Media 101 TweetChat: Twitter

Tech Soup

TechSoup continued its Social Media Mondays in May with a discussion on Twitter to expand on the resources offered in its Nonprofit Social Media 101 wiki. The second installment of the weekly TweetChat series offered some useful advice on nonprofit Twitter use, a tool that can be difficult to understand for many nonprofit leaders.

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10 New Year’s Resolutions for Nonprofit Social Media Managers

Nonprofit Tech for Good

Ask for your raise first, and then ask for a budget for graphic design work (avatar, Twitter background, YouTube Channel background, Facebook banners, etc.), Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, etc. Before Myspace then Facebook and then Twitter, I was a voracious reader. 10) Track the growth and ROI of your online communities.

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A Couple Really Interesting Social Media, ROI, and Nonprofit Links Worth A Click

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

I've been following him on Twitter and have been following his social media/social change blog but hadn't made it to his company's blog. It's making me think of Gary Haye's Transmedia Storytelling and Co-Creation framework. I've been following him on Twitter and have. Tags: ROI.

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10 Signs Your Small Nonprofit Excels at Social Media

Nonprofit Tech for Good

Twitter requires a time investment that many small nonprofits simply do not have. Small nonprofits can barely invest the time it takes to manage a Facebook Page and Twitter Profile. Storytelling is the buzzword of 2016 – and for good reason. On top of those challenges, Facebook reach has dropped to an abysmal 1%.

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Google+ Best Practices for Nonprofits

Nonprofit Tech for Good

There’s way too much marketing happening on social networking sites and not enough storytelling. To earn return on investment (ROI) from using social networking sites is a skill that requires an instinct for subtlety. “Circling” on Google+ is equivlent to following on Twitter or liking on Facebook.

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Great reads from around the web on April 23rd

Amy Sample Ward

To follow more of the things I find online, you can follow @amysampleward on Twitter (which is just a blog and resource feed), or find me on Delicious (for all kinds of bookmarks). And much less than that (22%) reported that their organization had ever evaluated Return on Investment (ROI) of technology projects or programs."

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Google+ Best Practices for Nonprofits

Nonprofit Tech for Good

There’s way too much marketing happening on social networking sites and not enough storytelling. To earn return on investment (ROI) from using social networking sites is a skill that requires an instinct for subtlety. “Circling” on Google+ is equivlent to following on Twitter or liking on Facebook.

Google 191