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BRIDGET BRANDT DONOR EXPERIENCE 101 WWW.DONOREXPERIENCE101.COM 10+ Marketing Tactics Every Nonprofit Marketer Needs to Know

Top Ten Marketing Tactics for Nonprofit Marketers

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BRIDGET BRANDTD O N O R E X P E R I E N C E 1 0 1

W W W. D O N O R E X P E R I E N C E 1 0 1 . C O M

10+ Marketing Tactics Every Nonprofit Marketer Needs to Know

Why you MIGHT NEED to MARKET!!

Marketing Tactics—Make A Plan

Prepare and Plan

But keep it simple for now

Start from where you are and improve every year

Use the planning guide

#1

Marketing Tactics- Story Time

Tell a Great Story

Inspire them with your passion

Individual stories are best

People give to people

Emotion >> Rationality

Make it timely

#2

Marketing Tactics

Events

Awareness

Online Ads-

Hubspot E-bookhttp://offers.hubspot.com/essential-guide-internet-marketing

#3

Awareness-E-mail Marketing

Tools: Mail Chimp, Constant Contact, Marketo, EloquaTips:1. Double check your subject line. (Headline Analyzer)Avoid spam filters by not including the following characters and terms: RE:, FW:, Hello, Free, Special Offer, Text in ALL CAPS, Exclamation points!!!2. Design for mobile. ExactTarget research has shown that more than half of consumers (53%) use a

smartphone to check email. Format text to increase pixel size for smaller devices. Format images to auto-adjust to the size of the screen instead of a fixed pixel dimension. Consider what’s most relevant

Put your most important information in the upper left. Research proves that the human eye scans email in an “F” pattern.

Plan for blocked images. 60% of email clients block images by default. Test—and test again. The best way to determine whether or not your email design is

effective is to test across multiple email clients. Statistically, 69% of B2B and 27% of B2C subscribers view their email with a preview pane, so look for proper rendering and preview pane views.

Remember—your brilliant email design is only valuable if your subscribers can see it.

http://image.exct.net/lib/fe641570776d02757515/m/2/EN-5ProvenEmailPractices.pdf

#4

Heat Map Examples

Consideration & Advocacy

Blog-

Get buy-in first. Who is going to write and what are they going to write? Tips: Stories about those you serve.

Choose a platform. WordPress is my favorite. How to Setup a WordPress Blog.

Be consistent. You need to post regularly. (Remember the quality over quantity rule.)

Promote your blog.

Add photos and video to your post to keep them more interesting.

#5

Great Blog Example

Purchase#6

#bridgetlbrandt

Tips:

• Use video and

graphics

• Create interaction

• Get donors involved

• One click to donation

or contact

• Give them what they

want!

What do people want to see:

The organization's mission, goals, objectives,

and work.

How it uses donations and contributions.

The donation-killers:

47% were usability problems -site design,

cluttered pages, and confusing workflow.

Amazingly, on 17% of the sites, users couldn't

find where to make a donation.

53% were content issues related to writing for

the Web, including unclear or missing

information and confusing terms.

http://www.nngroup.com/articles/donation-usability/

Purchase-Donor Friendly Websites

Purchase-Does it meet the need?

GraphicsOne click

to Donate

Interaction

Involvement

Purchase

Use an Online

Donation Form:-Abila

-Kimbia-Blackbaud

#7

Use Video to Connect

Most active days are weekdays, peaking

on Wednesdays.

Weekends including Friday had the

highest engagement per view based on

average minutes watched

PowToon-

http://supportbehindthebadge.org/

Tips:• Post on You Tube and your site

• Keep it short

• End with a call to action

Brightcove 2010 Quarterly Survey http://files.brightcove.com/brightcove-whitepaper-online-video-and-media-industry-q2-2010.pdf

Advocacy & Retention#8

Retention- Events

Everything Matters: Every touch point matters. Take nothing for granted. Signage: All elements need to work together, to tell your story. Experience: Turn your event into an experience. What do you want people to

leave with? Storytelling: Invite someone touched by your organization to share their story. Volunteers: Make sure all volunteers are trained. They should all be able to

answer basic questions about the event and mission of the org. Speakers/Entertainment: A notable act or speaker will help draw people to

the event and create buzz about the organization. These too should tie to the purpose of the organization.

VIP: Holding special activities for special guests will make them feel more closely tied to the organization. Make sure these activities are of the highest quality, valuable, entertaining and allow for networking with peers.

Event Themes: Themes for your event can be fun, resist the temptation of going off brand. All events should be aligned with your core brand values and messaging. The theme should never outweigh the prominence of your brand.

Follow-Through: The speed and authenticity of your follow-up activities with your audiences after the event also have a tremendous impact on brand perception. Plan for how to manage contacts and thank-you’s after the event. Audiences should be contacted as close to immediately after the event as possible.

Social Media Integration: Social media activities and audience engagement should be planned for and executed before, during and after the event.

#9

Advocacy#10

Advocacy

Fact: Social Media is booming. Do your research to figure out on which social media channels your

supporters spend the most time. Start with Facebook and Twitter, but you may find your specific audience prefers something else, like LinkedIn, Google+, Pinterest, or Instagram. Meet them where they are; don’t just join to join.

Consider sites with a strategic advantage. Being on Google+ can help your search rankings on Google.

Before you hop on a new site, think about your level of performance and engagement on your current sites. Evaluate whether you have the time and content to truly succeed on each site.

Remember that it’s okay to say goodbye. It’s actually better to leave a social media platform altogether than have a page that’s neglected.

The Essential Guide to Social Media for Nonprofits Published by John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Copyright © 2014 by John Wiley & Sons, Inc

https://www.salsalabs.com/thank-you/social-media-ebook

Advocacy#BONUS

Resources and Examples

Resources

Fiver- Resource for cheap marketing materials

Google is Your Friend

Search for “Nonprofit Marketing Templates,” “thank you card example,” etc. Gets you off the blank page.

Compelling Campaigns

L E T ’ S P U T T H I S K N O W L E D G E T O W O R K

Your Turn!

Conclusion

Take action – Pick one or two ideas and implement

Only YOU can figure out what works for YOUR organization