Nov
2
You may have heard of twitter, the site where people post up to 140 characters about “what they’re doing.” Well actually, if they post about what they’re doing, like “Going to the supermarket” or “Brushing my teeth,” they won’t do to well on twitter. In any case, twitter is one of the hottest social networks right now, and it is generally agreed that it is a great tool for networking and marketing your business.
But how about promoting your non-profit or cause with twitter? Like many things in this age of social media, what works for businesses often works well for non-profits too, and the same is the case for twitter.
How twitter works
Every twitter user sets up a profile, where they get their own URL like www.twitter.com/username. Their profile displays their username, which can actually be different than what appears in their URL, a short blurb with up to 160 characters about who they are, and a display of how many people they’re following, and how many people follow them.
Here’s my personal/business profile on twitter:
As you can see, the main part of the screen displays my username and profile picture, and my latest “tweet” (update) is prominently displayed. Under there are all my previous tweets displayed chronologically. In the right-hand bar is my real name, location, bio, web site, number of followers and following. You can click on the word “followers” or “following” to see who exactly is following me, or who I am following.
You may also notice that my profile page has a unique design, with different colors than the standard twitter page, and my company’s logo displayed on the left. You can create a personalized home page design, which is recommended. It’s not too difficult, and just takes a bit of playing around with, but it’s a good way to expand your branding over to twitter.
When I view my home page, I don’t just see my tweets, but the tweets of everyone I’m following, displayed chronologically, like so:

Here are three quick tips for getting started with twitter:
- Provide useful information in your tweets: Never follow the twitter guide of What are you doing? Instead, post links to useful information in your field of interest, or that you think your follows will enjoy. Also, do not over-promote your cause. People will learn about your cause indirectly by following you and seeing you as an expert in your area.
- How to reply to other twitterers (also known as tweeple): When replying to someone on twitter, use the @ symbol before their username, i.e. @username. They will be able to see that in their @Replies section, which is available in the right-hand bar of their home page. It is important to have conversations with other twitter users to strengthen your network and meet others.
- Think carefully about your bio: Make sure you have a bio in your profile so people can see who you are. Trust plays an important role in the world of social media, so you must give people real, credible information so that they can see you are a real person.
There are many twitter and third-party tools that you can use to enhance your twitter experience. Brian Solis has a great overview at Twitter Tools for Community and Communications Professionals where he has published an amazing looong list of tools you can use to build up your twitter community.
Here are some links to other articles that discuss using twitter for non-profits and social change:
Twitter and NonProfits from Me Like the Interweb – this post discussses how you and your supporters can use twitter, and gives examples of non-profit success with twitter.
Twitter for Nonprofits from The Fundraising Coach – gives reasons why you should consider using twitter, with links to useful resources on the subject
5 Ways to Use Twitter for Good from Stepcase Lifehack – great tips for how to use twitter to get some good stuff going
How Some Non-Profits Use Twitter from Betsy’s Blog – links to some prominent organizations and how they’re using twitter. Good to see same case studies like this.
Twitter and Non-Profits from Zen and the Art of Nonprofit Technology – this post discusses why twitter ain’t for everybody
Twitter’s not for every business or organization, but it’s worth getting to know it so that you can assess whether it will help your non-profit, and if so, how.
amuta 2.0 on twitter!
In honor of this post, amuta 2.0 is now on twitter! Yes, there’s not much there right now. Ok, there’s nothing there, but come follow us, we’ll follow you, and we hope to provide some useful links there to good resources about non-profits and social media. Here’s the link to our profile: http://twitter.com/amuta2point0
Happy twittering (or tweeting, as we say in twitter-world)!
Oct
30
Wandering Jews
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(The following article was originally published in Haaretz, and is republished here with permission of the author)
The weekend after Rosh Hashanah, a TV show called “Shavuah Sof” (“Endweek”) ran a skit in which one of the show’s hosts complained that he had been overloaded with so many “Happy New Year” text messages that his phone continued buzzing for days. “If you really want to wish me a happy new year,” he concluded, “call. Let me hear your voice.”
Only a few years ago, one may still have received a few cards in the mail. But as our electronic address has taken the place of our physical one, expecting cards is expecting too much. Rootlessness – the high-frequency relocating of the present day – has become the norm for many of us, especially those who have been empowered by technology to travel in pursuit of opportunities without the fear of losing touch with those we love.
Few holidays are as reflective of our times, therefore, as the seven days in which we are commanded to sit in booths: Sukkot, the holiday of the ingathering of the autumn harvest, takes on new meaning today, with much of the world open to our temporary residencies, thanks to near-universal acceptance of Jews, and the power of information technologies.
Borders are open to us, and with debit cards, search engines and GPS-enabled maps at our disposal, we can find our way around most anywhere with ease, and pay our way in local currency. All this has increased the mobility of the average member of the first digital generation – especially the highly educated and opportunity-minded we have by the dozen.
What is remarkable is that Jewish culture, too, has been liberated from the restrictions of time and space. “In the past year I’ve traveled to Thailand, Vietnam, Cambodia and the U.K.,” recalls David Abitbol, the Jerusalem-based founder of Jewlicious.com, an engine of young Jewish culture around the world. “I’ve been to Canada, and on both coasts of the United States. In all cases, I based my itineraries on availability of Internet access. I was able to continue working wherever I was.”
From a day-to-day communal point of view, however, the fruits of this change have been varied. “Increased travel has, at least for those Jewishly identified, resulted in more Jews becoming familiar with Jews and Jewish communities abroad,” says Prof. Chaim I. Waxman, a sociologist with the Jewish People Policy Planning Institute. “It has also resulted in some Jews being less personally involved in their home community, because they are increasingly away from it.”
This is a paradoxical effect of the digital age – a nearness when far, but a distance even when close. Yes, the Jews were historically known for wandering. Some traveled in search of opportunity, but the majority did so under threat of persecution. Either way, the wanderings of yesteryear were for a much longer term. Up until a half century ago, when one waved farewell from a ship, it was often with little expectation of seeing those left behind again. Once one arrived in a safe community, one’s life was built around its institutions: A Jew who arrived in Pittsburgh or Petah Tivka could see her grandkids grow up a short ride away, and would dedicate her time and money to building communal institutions.
This is certainly not the case today. Thanks to near-ubiquitous digital access, even when we fly off to Thailand, we’re no more than a Skype call away. And if we find ourselves in Pittsburgh, online social networks enable us to connect more quickly with people we share interests with for a short period of time.
And yet these flash connections rarely are as close as those of yesteryear – leaving us with the challenge, as our society becomes defined by the “first digitals’” frequent choice of “sukkot” over permanent dwellings, of adapting our community institutions for highly mobile members.
Our communal institutions – from the State of Israel to our local federations and synagogues – were built for the static life, distinguishing between “locals,” who are dues-paying members, and “visitors,” a smaller group that temporarily accesses services.
But the relative numbers have flipped, leaving us wondering, as the digital age increases our wandering and the relative numbers of “locals” lessens and “visitors” increases, whom are our physically bound institutions meant to serve? What communal institutions are necessary in a world defined by nomadic wandering?
Some organizations have found innovative ways to meet the new demand. Chabad has created a global network of way-stations where wandering Jews can stop for a bite – a gas station for the Jewish body and soul. These nodes are, ideally, financially supported by locals who are inspired by their impact, with strong international backing. But Chabad’s model does not depend on the obligation of those it serves most directly.
As such, with our world moving toward greater mobility, we might reflect in our temporary dwellings as to how we may better build institutions to address the needs of the near-strangers among us. That is, how do we adapt local institutions to the steady flow of visitors who have no intention of staying put? And can we create global institutions that provide services that aren’t bound by physical limitations?
Two directions may serve as a good springboard for further thought. Our tradition maintains the practice of ushpizin, a hosting of strangers parallel to the ethos of hospitality practiced by Bedouin and other nomadic societies. Second, we may learn from the wisdom of the regalim, the thrice-annual pilgrimages that defined the holidays of ancient Israel, and which inspired a sense of unity in a dispersed population through face-to-face contact. Because, no matter the power of social networking and mobile communication technologies, sometimes a text message isn’t enough to prove how much you care.
Ariel Beery is the founder and co-director of the PresenTense Group, which equips social ventures and communities for the information age.
Oct
12
CharityHappenings.org: the meetup site for the non-profit community
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CharityHappenings.org is an events directory that calls itself “The Official Master Calendar of Non-Profit Events, Galas, and Benefits.” A hefty title to bestow upon oneself, it does seem to live up to the name, if displaying lots of pictures of women in evening gowns is any indication.
[Personal rant: why do people have this need to be part of lush, ridiculously expensive, fashionable parties in order to feel good about donating to causes they supposedly care about? If they really cared, they'd forego the parties and donate all the money from the fashionable food, venue and attire as well. These galas should really be called "Let's party for the poor." End of rant.]
The site says that it offers the non-profit professional community, the philanthropic public and the media with a free, comprehensive and up-to-date calendar of charitable events. On the other end, the site offers event organizers and users a portal to display party pictures enabling charities to publicize the success of past events. And finally, the site offers an extensive directory of venues and suppliers.
You can post your event’s details and photos for free. A listing on the Supplier/Venue directory costs between $100-$225 per year, and ads run from $7500-$20,000 per year.
So break out your party dress, shell out a few thousand bucks on your favorite “look at my generosity” gala event, and maybe your pic will end up on CharityHappenings.org.
Oct
6
10 Ways to Make Your Online Press Room Perform for Your Nonprofit
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To capture a journalist’s attention and answer her questions, a repository of press releases plus some bios and head shots (which comprises the entirety of most nonprofit press rooms), just isn’t enough.
How to ensure you’re providing the timely, meaty information and insight journalists crave, enough to engage and motivate a call or email for a conversation? Every media pro worth her paycheck knows a great online media room means the difference between multiple column inches and a mere mention, if that.
Here’s how to do it:
Online Press Room vs. Media Kit
Online media rooms, and journalists’ expectations of them, have evolved. Many nonprofit organizations now feature “virtual press kits,” but an effective online press room is more than just a media kit.
The last thing you want is for a journalist to hit a wall, and become frustrated or annoyed, when trying to dig into your nonprofit or program online. Here’s the construct to follow to avoid that ugly scenario:
- A press room is the area on your site expressly for the media, although other audiences may be interested in the content. Most of the content here is on the organizational level, rather than specific to a single program, service, location or event.
- A media kit is a set of essential, easy-to-use and downloadable information focused on your organization, or a program, product, leader, service or event.
What to Include in Your Online Press Room
Your online press room should provide what you used to include in your hard-copy press kit, and then some:
- The absolute latest news. Journalists who’ve come to expect the most up-to-the-minute information from your site will seek out your virtual press kit; it’s a matter of consistently fulfilling expectations.Planned Parenthood makes its latest news accessible by topic and by date:
http://www.plannedparenthood.org/media/ - Downloadable photos and graphics to accompany stories.Think leaders and staff, programs in action, product shots and more. Include several versions of your logo, and provide all downloads in high, medium and low resolution.
Take a cue from the American Red Cross which provides clear terms of use and specs for its downloadable images:
http://www.redcross.org/general/0,1082,0_129_,00.html - A directory of your organization’s experts.Make it easy for journalists to get to the expert on the particular subject they are covering. The directory should be searchable by name and topic.
The National Resources Defense Council does a great job with its Expert Finder:
http://www.nrdc.org/media/ - Succinct backgrounders and fact sheets.Make sure the information in your backgrounders is relevant to the latest news you’re pitching, or responding too. Frequently, backgrounders are too generic to fill journalists’ needs.
The Non-Profit Housing Corporation of Northern California provides a pithy snapshot on Bay Area affordable housing issues as a download, plus an experts directory and list of hot stories:
http://www.nonprofithousing.org/about/pressroom/default.aspxHere’s a multi-page version from the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society:
http://www.leukemia-lymphoma.org/attachments/National/br_1182779969.pdf - Up-to-the-minute event calendars and timelines, updated daily if necessary. Make it easy for journalists to get the latest.Nothing is less impressive than an outdated listing. Keep your listing up to date like this one from Sustainable Agriculture Research and Education (SARE).
http://www.sare.org/events/show_events.asp - Guidelines on writing and reporting on your organization’s key topics or issue areas.The UCP’s (formerly United Cerebral Palsy) online press room offers useful interaction and etiquette tips for writing on people with disabilities:
http://www.ucp.org/ucp_generalsub.cfm/1/9/6573 - Audio and/or video clips.Definitely include multimedia if possible, and transcripts for time-starved reporters.
The Sierra Club’s press room offers audio and video clips of the org’s radio and television ads: http://www.sierraclub.org/pressroom/media/
- Awards and RecognitionLet your successes speak for your organization, rather than saying it yourself. ACCION does a good job of this:
http://bbnc.accion.org/NETCOMMUNITY/Document.Doc?id=34 - Recent ClipsClips add credibility, and give the media an idea of what’s already been done (and the gaps they can fill).
Make sure your clips are up-to-date, unlike those in this online pressroom (from 2005):
http://www.nonprofithousing.org/about/pressroom/news/default.aspx - News Feed for Automatic Receipt of Press Room UpdatesMake it easy for those who are interested to get press releases and other news hot off the press via an RSS reader.
The American Cancer Society makes this very easy:
http://www.cancer.org/docroot/MED/MED_10_RSS.asp
Of course, the more relevant information, the better. Resist flooding the press room with useless content. Above all, avoid going overboard with hype or flash. Hyperbole gets you nowhere.
What to Include in Your Program-Specific (or Product, Location, or Event) Media Kit
Pretty much the same big 10 outlined above, sans awards.
Consider adding any or all of these elements:
- Milestones
- History
- Relevant statistics (impact or change generated)
Most importantly, make sure content is current. These kits need to be updated weekly if not daily.
More Tips for Your Online Press Room
- Feature a highly-visible link to your press room on your home page, and on every page throughout the site. Include it in your site’s main menu bar.Press kits on current topics or programs should be highlighted on the home page.
- Include clear contact information for your organization’s primary media contact, and the back- up.
- Offer brief bios of your organization’s leaders and experts, to provide a context for quotes or coverage.
Online Press Rooms that Work
Review these nonprofits’ online press rooms for ways to strengthen your own:
ACCION
http://www.accion.org/NETCOMMUNITY/Page.aspx?pid=229&srcid=293
American Cancer Society
http://www.cancer.org/docroot/MED/med_0.asp
CivilRights.org
http://www.civilrights.org/press_room/index.html
University of Missouri
http://munews.missouri.edu/
But my best advice for what to include in your nonprofit’s online press room? Ask the journalists you work with most frequently what they want. They’re your customers and it’s all about meeting their needs.
© 2002-2008 Nancy E. Schwartz. All rights reserved.
About the Author
Nancy E. Schwartz helps nonprofits succeed through effective marketing and communications. As President of Nancy Schwartz & Company (www.nancyschwartz.com), Nancy and her team provide marketing planning and implementation services to organizations as varied as the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, Center for Asian American Media, and Wake County (NC) Health Services.
Subscribe to her free e-newsletter “Getting Attention”, (http://www.nancyschwartz.com/getting_attention.html) and read her blog at http://www.gettingattention.org for more insights, ideas and great tips on attracting the attention your organization deserves.
Sep
23
An inside look into the web strategies of the Hartman Institute
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Richard Macmanus, founder and editor of Read/Write Web, one of the most successful Web 2.0 business/tech blog/websites, has launched a new series of reviews and articles, titled, Religion and Web Technology.
He is going to write about churches and other religious organizations that use Web 2.0 media well. His first piece is about an Oklahoma church with the website LifeChurch.tv. It’s an interesting read and offers a lot of ideas that can be put to use by amutot – religious or not.
As part of that review, I wrote to him regarding things we are doing here at Shalom Hartman Institute, and which are summarized below. Let this stand as fulfillment of my promise to the Amuta 2.0 folks to recapitulate some of the points in my talk at the conference earlier this month.
Our website includes regular Op-Ed length essays by our leaders and scholars on topics of interest to the Jewish/Israeli worlds. We include “talkbacks” (reader comments) on our articles, some of which draw large responses.
We also stream lectures from our scholars and leaders both onsite and offsite. I have used Blip.tv for full-length videos, YouTube for short ones (we were named 2nd most-viewed Israeli non-profit on YouTube), and Jewish video sites Yideoz.com and JewTube.com for additional distribution (although both sites have their technical issues).
To upgrade the quality of our videos, which had been single-camera-plopped-in-front-of-a-seated-lecturer boring, we hired a professional cameraman this summer who intercut and edited the videos, as well as added intros and credits at the end. We have had interest in these from a Jewish cable TV network in the U.S., as well as have placed these on an online Jewish Internet TV network.
We have done video-enabled distance learning to rabbis, teachers and community leaders in North America for 5+ years via dedicated, non-Internet lines. We are transitioning this fall to online video via Ustream.tv and/or Mogulus.com. Some of our courses are for small groups, so we will keep those streams private for a while before making the recorded videos public.
I started an offsite blog for our site – http://hartmaninstitute.wordpress.com – to allow us to use Hebrew, to enhance search, and to give a less formal view of our activities.
I am working – with some frustrating lack of success – to launch an iTunes podcast audio and video versions – although I suspect the problem is more my lack of understanding than anything else (help appreciated!).
We have purchased URL’s that correspond with the names of some of our leading individuals – donnielhartman.com, and rabbihartman.com (not surprisingly, davidhartman.com was taken), and are building individual sites for them.
We also are working on enhancing the Wikipedia entries others have created.
We are developing a Facebook strategy, as well. I use my FB page (Alan Abbey – please ask to friend) to promote our content and videos, and have created a FB group for a group of North American rabbis studying with us. I regularly place our material on related Jewish/Israeli FB groups, as well as promote through Twitter.
We are weaker than I would like in social networking, however. Our existing audience is older than the standard online audience, and we are slowly making headway.
All this is not to say we are doing the best job in the Jewish world. There are some better funded, and larger organizations with intensive Web operations. We are probably, however, one of the better organized “mainstream” Jewish organizations online (i.e., not Ultra-Orthodox, not “messianic” Jewish, and not “New Age-y”).
I would love it, of course if our Amuta 2.0 users were to look at our ops and review, comment and critique. I could use some advice!
[Update: Read/Write web featured the Hartman Institute as part of its Religion and Web Technology series ]
This post was written by A lan D. Abbey, Internet Director at the Shalom Hartman Institute – http://hartman.org.il/
Sep
14
We all know what it’s like to go to networking events: Hi, How Are You? What Do You Do? Can I Have Your Business Card? Etc.
But collecting and distributing business cards that ultimately get slipped into a drawer is not enough anymore; it is important to create meaningful relationships both online and offline that people remember, even after the business card has been filed.
It’s about being part of a community and joining discussions.
Here are 4 tips that apply to social networking in real life and online.
1. Be real, be yourself
Real life: Think about how you want others to act toward you – with genuine interest, not with glances around the room to see if anybody better is coming along. This takes patience and good listening skills. Make sure that the friendly, not-nervous part of you that everyone loves comes out and shines – yes, you can even make jokes. We’re human, and connect to other humans who captivate us with their personality, not with their business suits and stiff business-like manners.
Online: Revisit your profile and be clear about who you are. Relationships are built on trust. Be aware that both colleagues and personal relationships will probably have access to your profile so make sure to be comfortable with whatever appears there. Try to have as much of a personality as is possible online.
2. Help others – don’t be pushy or sales-y
Real life: Make sure to get to know people’s names so you can introduce them to others if you see a good business match. Connecting people, or offering pearls of wisdom based on your conversations will give you instant fans. On the other hand, be sure to never aggressively push your website or product. People want to connect with you, not buy something.
Online: Listen to the questions being asked in your area of expertise. Can you help? If so, get out there and start offering tips, advice, resources, and anything else you’ve got hidden up your sleeve. Being persistent about offering help will bring you trust and friends, while being persistent about sales and products will only damage your reputation.
3. Prepare and research who will be there
Real Life: Try to find out who is attending and who will be on the panels, and look up some information about them. Think about how flattered you are when someone comes up to you and knows something about what you do or has read something you wrote.
Online: Before becoming part of a new network, get to know the site’s culture, rules, and style before jumping in. It’s often a good idea to “lurk” there a bit to see what types of information is being published, and they styles of conversations taking place.
4. Breaking the traditional networking rules
The line between social networking and real life networking has become a bit blurred. Are you supposed to meet people in real life and then connect online – or can it be the other way around too? Start rethinking how first meeting online and then meeting in real life can create an even more meaningful meetup at an event. Don’t stop the networking at the collection of business cards and the standard “follow up” email or phone call. It’s a social event. Feel free to take pictures or videos of people and then post them online so you can continue your relationship and help jog the ol’ memory if you forget what someone looked like.
Written by Miriam Schwab & Rebecca Markowitz of illuminea
illuminea is an internet marketing firm that helps companies create and optimize their web presence with comprehensive blogging and social media strategies.
Aug
20
So we’re getting closer to the launch breakfast, and we’re excited. We’re especially excited that Jeff Pulver will be there leading us in his world-famous social networking. With the creation of his social networking system, Jeff has managed to bring the world of online social media and networking to the offline, three dimensional world where people actually meet and talk to each other.
The great thing about Jeff’s system is that it gives people the opportunity to benefit from the advantages that each type of networking offers. When networking online, we can quickly get an overview of a person’s interests and personality by looking at their profile, blog posts, tag cloud on their blog, friends, etc. However, no matter how much we communicate online, we can never entirely recreate the experience of talking to a person in real life and verbally communicating.
How does this social networking work?
Below is a video in which Jeff explains how his social networking works, but here’s a quick overview:
You get a little plastic bag.
The bag has stuff in it.
It has a pen, two labels, a label sheet, and mini post-it notes.
Now, here’s what you do:
- You write your name and personal tagline on one label.
- You write your personal tag cloud on the second label. A tag cloud is “a visual depiction of user-generated tags, or simply the word content of a site, used typically to describe the content of web sites. Tags are usually single words and are typically listed alphabetically, and the importance of a tag is shown with font size or color.” (Wikipedia on Tag Clouds). What this means for you is that if you love fishing and do it a lot, you write “fishing” in large text. If you don’t love the color red, you write that in smaller text (or whatever). Etc.
- You use the label sheet for real-time tagging of other people. This means that while you’re talking to someone, write something down about that person on a label and stick it on ‘em. For example, you may find out that they are a blogger, photographer, Dad, or just plain amazing. Write it on a label, and stick it.
- All that’s left are the post-it notes. These are for placing on everyone’s “walls.” I actually don’t quite get this part, since things that are written on people’s walls are things that make sense to actually say with your mouth. But anyways, that’s what it’s for.
The goal? As Jeff says, it’s to break down all the other walls around you. Nice.
Here’s the video. We’ll be testing you:
Jul
27
The world of hi-tech entrepreneurs and innovators in Israel is thriving: between networking events galore, and a high level of social media savvy, many of these people are reaping the benefits of their knowledge in the form of new leads, recruitment, and even investments.
The Israeli non-profit world, on the other hand, has fallen dramatically behind. Many organizations are still using the same methods to promote their causes and increase donations that they were using 20 years ago. This means that they are missing out on the opportunity to diversify their marketing on the web, and reach a population that is steadily losing touch with the Jewish world: the under-30s.
The under-30s are the next generation of decision makers, and it is important that they feel engaged with your world of non-profits if you are to remain sustainable. Yet, they are not going to pay attention to your direct mail pieces written in lofty language. In order to reach them, you must reach them on their terms: in their language, and on their turf.
Advantages of using social media for your non-profit
First of all, what is social media? Social media refers to the new tools and technologies being used on the web that allow people to create online relationships with others. The most prominent example of this is facebook: on facebook, users can “friend” other users, and in this way create their own personal network of people they have selected. These personal networks enable members to see each other’s online activity, like the addition of new photos or videos, new blog posts, new recommended links, and more.
The world of social media has its own culture as well. When communicating online, people expect companies and organizations to be authentic and transparent.
Here are just some of the advantages of participating in the social web for your non-profit:
- Diversify your web presence: people are spending more and more time on social networks every day. This means that they are spending less time on your website. In order to increase your chances of engaging with them, it is important to create good social profiles in the right places, so that people can get to know your organization without actually having visited your site.
- Increase search engine rankings: people are also spending more time searching for information. By creating social profiles in other places on the web, you are creating good incoming links to your site, which can affect your search engine rankings for the better.
- Create passionate “customers” for your non-profit: by talking to people in their language and on an equal level, you can generate increased interest in your non-profit, and even passion. In turn, they may start to spread the word as well.
- Increase donations: Barack Obama raised way more than Hillary Clinton online. He wasn’t afraid to go after many small donors, rather than a few big donors, and his bet paid off. The right social media strategy will drive people to your site, and to your donation form, even for small amounts.
How can I find out more?
If your interest is piqued, you may want to find out more about this subject. One way is to attend our first event on August 31 in Jerusalem, where we will be discussing the use of social media in the non-profit world. Another way is to look at the sidebar of this site, where it says Resources. That section will be constantly updated with new material on the subject, so make sure to check back. And of course, you can snoop around the web yourself to see if you can find anything.
Happy Social Media-ing!












