This document provides an overview of an online engagement workshop. It discusses frameworks for social media campaigns and case studies. It outlines why campaigns succeed when they have strong story elements, design, and help build a movement. The document then discusses campaign design, assets, timelines, and optimization. Additional resources on campaign best practices and examples are also provided.
Knowing what social media data to track is critical to transforming data into content your community wants, and ultimately building a stronger online community. The presentation looks at the one metric you want to measure, what content to optimize to build community, the data metrics that tell you what you need to know about your community and the content it wants, and how to build a social media community of content contributors and curators. Practical examples support this presentation.
Key Takeaways:
a.) How to use social media metrics to better understand your online and social media communities.
b.) The top cross-channel metrics you need to track for developing and optimizing content for the community.
c.) The right content to engage and deepen online relationships within your social media spaces.
71% of adults online use Facebook, and 52% of Internet users regularly log onto at least two social networks. Why are adults using social networks, and how should brands leverage this interest to develop loyal customers? Learn why social network users follow, fan, and interact with brands, what you need to know to engage them, and some of the best practices in several focused service industries.
How does one navigate personal and professional boundaries in the world of social media, and what does that mean for your leadership? How does the social media buzzword “transparency” translate into “leadership?” This presentation was prepared for for professional educators and lay leaders at the North American Jewish Day School Conference. The presentation reviews how nonprofit and educational executives are using social media, considers uses and strategy for an executive social media presence, and offers a "playbook" for using your own social media voice as an educator.
This session is for professional and lay leaders who have recently engaged in social media, or are considering how to personally use social media in a professional context.
Best practices in online social media fundraisingDebra Askanase
This presentation outlines essential elements of a social media fundraising campaign and basic principles in play, and uses the Tweetsgiving 2009 fundraising case study.
Social Media Branding and Engagement for Nonprofit Arts OrganizationsDebra Askanase
A comprehensive overview of social media for the nonprofit arts organization. This presentation introduces the topics of listening, social media strategy, online fundraising and key social media platforms. The slideshow also offers screenshots of performing arts organizations who blog, utilize Twitter, upload photos and share video, and use Facebook.
Has Social Media Fundraising Finally Arrived? Debra Askanase
Presentation covers three aspects of social media fundraising: fundraising through online fundraising platforms, Facebook fundrasing, native social media fundraising platform, and when you should use each type.
Harness the power of Location Based Marketing and Geosocialand mobile appsDebra Askanase
What does it mean if people “check into” your business online? It means they love you! Location-Based Marketing (LBM) with Geosocial apps is the term for marketing your business using mobile location apps such as Foursquare, SVNGR, Yelp, and Foodspotting. In this workshop, we’ll review the major geosocial mobile applications, smartphone purchase decisions, usage and trends, and and how businesses are harnessing the power of users that love you enough to share it to their social networks.
Transforming Data into Engaging Content to Build CommunityDebra Askanase
Knowing what social media data to track is critical to transforming raw data into content your community wants. The presentation focuses on the key data metrics that tell you what you need to know about the content your community wants, how to optimize it, and and how to build an engaged community around your content. Bonus content: Information on how to create personalized data dashboards using Google Analytics and Facebook Insights.
Learn more about this presentation in the related blog post: http://www.communityorganizer20.com/2012/07/19/content-alchemy-building-community-from-content-data/
Knowing what social media data to track is critical to transforming data into content your community wants, and ultimately building a stronger online community. The presentation looks at the one metric you want to measure, what content to optimize to build community, the data metrics that tell you what you need to know about your community and the content it wants, and how to build a social media community of content contributors and curators. Practical examples support this presentation.
Key Takeaways:
a.) How to use social media metrics to better understand your online and social media communities.
b.) The top cross-channel metrics you need to track for developing and optimizing content for the community.
c.) The right content to engage and deepen online relationships within your social media spaces.
71% of adults online use Facebook, and 52% of Internet users regularly log onto at least two social networks. Why are adults using social networks, and how should brands leverage this interest to develop loyal customers? Learn why social network users follow, fan, and interact with brands, what you need to know to engage them, and some of the best practices in several focused service industries.
How does one navigate personal and professional boundaries in the world of social media, and what does that mean for your leadership? How does the social media buzzword “transparency” translate into “leadership?” This presentation was prepared for for professional educators and lay leaders at the North American Jewish Day School Conference. The presentation reviews how nonprofit and educational executives are using social media, considers uses and strategy for an executive social media presence, and offers a "playbook" for using your own social media voice as an educator.
This session is for professional and lay leaders who have recently engaged in social media, or are considering how to personally use social media in a professional context.
Best practices in online social media fundraisingDebra Askanase
This presentation outlines essential elements of a social media fundraising campaign and basic principles in play, and uses the Tweetsgiving 2009 fundraising case study.
Social Media Branding and Engagement for Nonprofit Arts OrganizationsDebra Askanase
A comprehensive overview of social media for the nonprofit arts organization. This presentation introduces the topics of listening, social media strategy, online fundraising and key social media platforms. The slideshow also offers screenshots of performing arts organizations who blog, utilize Twitter, upload photos and share video, and use Facebook.
Has Social Media Fundraising Finally Arrived? Debra Askanase
Presentation covers three aspects of social media fundraising: fundraising through online fundraising platforms, Facebook fundrasing, native social media fundraising platform, and when you should use each type.
Harness the power of Location Based Marketing and Geosocialand mobile appsDebra Askanase
What does it mean if people “check into” your business online? It means they love you! Location-Based Marketing (LBM) with Geosocial apps is the term for marketing your business using mobile location apps such as Foursquare, SVNGR, Yelp, and Foodspotting. In this workshop, we’ll review the major geosocial mobile applications, smartphone purchase decisions, usage and trends, and and how businesses are harnessing the power of users that love you enough to share it to their social networks.
Transforming Data into Engaging Content to Build CommunityDebra Askanase
Knowing what social media data to track is critical to transforming raw data into content your community wants. The presentation focuses on the key data metrics that tell you what you need to know about the content your community wants, how to optimize it, and and how to build an engaged community around your content. Bonus content: Information on how to create personalized data dashboards using Google Analytics and Facebook Insights.
Learn more about this presentation in the related blog post: http://www.communityorganizer20.com/2012/07/19/content-alchemy-building-community-from-content-data/
Nonprofits that excel in social media communication and engagement also understand that internal social media capacity affects external activities. This presentation covers the four internal assets needed to fully optimize social media as an organization: social media staffing, an internal social culture, budgeting, and a social media policy.
Takeaways:
• Importance of social media policies, and key questions to address
• Social media staffing structure configurations
• Internal social culture self-assessment and key stepping stones to becoming a social organization
• How much does social media really cost?
Digital Storytelling Tools for Nonprofit OrganizationsDebra Askanase
New digital tools are emerging every day, making it easier for your nonprofit to tell its story online. From curation to publishing, if you’re looking to share a story, there’s an app, website or tool that can help you do it. This presentation covers the principles of good storytelling, provide examples of successful nonprofit digital storytelling, and reviews both the popular as well as some of the more unusual-but-useful online storytelling tools including PicMonkey, Visual.ly, ThingLink, Storify, mapping, Dippity, Vine, Animoto, and others.
An overview of how social media is affecting newspapers, journalism, and the news cycle. This slide show highlights some key studies and trends about the role of crowdsourcing in newspaper reporting, the changing relationship between news consumers and reporters, how newspapers are using social media and to what end, how social media is changing the way newspaper audiences consume news, and the role of social media sharing on news consumption.
This Spring, the Multnomah County Library Levy Campaign Committee and consulting firm Winning Mark created and ran a successful place-based advocacy campaign to pass a library-preservation ballot measure. Emphasizing check-ins, recommendations, and making personal connections online, the campaign strategy paid off in a 4:1 win. This presentation walks through the strategy, complete with screenshots, lessons learned, and approach.
Blogging IS a Strategy. Blogging should be relevant, targeted and strategic for your organization, and should move an organization closer towards meeting its goals. This fun, lively presentation highlights how to develop a blogging strategy, with examples of strategic blog posts from several nonprofit organizations.
Best Practices Using Linkedin and Facebook for Youth EntrepreneurshipDebra Askanase
Best practices in using Linkedin, Twitter, and Facebook to promote youth businesses and support mentors. It is based on research interviews with seven member organizations of Youth Business International in seven different countries. A segment from my longer presentation at the YBI Global Forum 2010 in Mexico City.
What can we do now, to prepare for the best GivingTuesday yet? In this presentation, given at the AFP of Mahoning-Shenango County, I highlight what's hot in online giving, the digital giving and mobile trends, and how they inform GivingTuesday. The slide deck includes a successful GivingTuesday case study, and offers a framework for designing your own winning GivingTuesday fundraising or engagement campaign. The deck also includes a framework, campaign ideas, and a path for developing your own GivingTuesday campaign that will move your stakeholders to action.
In the age of information overload, having a social media measurement practice is the key to successful execution of your social strategy. This presentation, presented at Social Media for Nonprofits, covers what data points tell you that your community cares and is willing to take action, a methodology to figuring what data is relevant to your outcomes, where to find the metrics that matter, and why setting up the right metrics can make the difference between knowing that people visited a page on your website, and if your social media actions sent them there.
Empowering Stakeholders to Become Network WeaversDebra Askanase
In this presentation, lean about value of the network weaver, how to foster and support your own network weavers online, a four-part support system for doing so, and the relationship between network weaving and fundraising.
The Social Website walks you through what is a social website, the goals of a social website, the categories and types of social media integration, many examples, and a DIY worksheet. This was presented at the 2011 Nonprofit Technology Conference with Seth Giammanco of Minds on Design Lab. More social website examples at http://getsocial.mod-lab.com, or submit your own.
Overview of personal professional use of social media, professional learning network development, and using social media tools with emphasis on Twitter, Facebook, and LinkedIn.
I had the pleasure to introduce this workshop and play host to three panelists, Emily Dieringer, Sara Mader and Annie Allen, each from a different Wisconsin Co. Public Health Dept. We've posted all our materials and resources at http://technologyinprevention.wikispaces.com/wspc2011
Developing an online fundraising campaign takes time to plan correctly, and must include essential social and planning features. This presentation outlines essential elements of a social media campaign, and uses the Tweetsgiving 2009 as the case study.
Where's the Return on Engagement? Measuring Social Media ROEDebra Askanase
This presentation looks at how to measure real social media engagement, and defines metrics that lead to ROE and metrics that actually measure activism based on ROE. We also look at what social media activities lead to the highest ROE and how to use that information to design your programs and social media implementation. Lastly, the presentation covers three ROE supportive case studies.
What's the secret to designing and executing a successful online engagement campaign? It's all detailed in this presentation, including assets needed to launch and run a successful digital engagement campaign, timelines, elements of engagement campaigns, and two case studies. Throughout, there are checklists to help you prepare and succeed: checklists of organizational readiness, campaign prep, and campaign assets. Included are two case studies of nonprofit digital engagement campaigns: the NYC Elder Abuse Center's 14 Days of Thanks Campaign, and the National Brain Tumor Society's Brain Tumor Awareness Month multifaceted awareness campaign.
Getting the Most out of Linkedin for Nonprofits Debra Askanase
You need to know how to get the most out of Linkedin, and this presentation is full of best practices and examples. Learn how to optimize your personal and company Linkedin profiles, utilize the Groups and Answers features, and about the 10 things you can do to get the most out of Linkedin for you and your organization.
Beyond Awareness: Making Social Media Work for Your CoalitionLaDonna Coy
For community coalitions to move beyond simple awareness raising strategies (push) it is critical that they work through developing a social media presence from which they can expand.
The deck was presented at the Tennessee Advanced School on Addiction, June 23, 2010. <a>Who & What Worksheet</a> <a>Where & How Worksheet</a> <a>Listening Template</a> and I blog <a>here</a>.
Impactful Social Media and Fundraising - The Power of the Network WeaverDebra Askanase
How can you harness social networks and social media to develop your personal network to effectively help your organization and translate your leadership vision online. Become a key part of your organization's social media strategy by helping them reach a much greater audience, and learn about the fundamentals of online fundraising and gain some valuable ideas and strategies to bring back to your communities.
Community Coalitions are finding their way in social media and discovering it really does matter to the success of their communications. Handout: https://www.dropbox.com/s/aqy7fwb0v6fgpxs/DE-SoMe%20Communications%20Matter%20Handout.pdf?dl=0 Delaware Division of Substance Abuse and Mental Health
Secrets of Effective Social Storytelling. Debra Askanase
Stories give context to data and facts. Significantly, stories create emotional connections between you and your audience that can last well beyond the initial contact. Learn how to uncover the stories you already have on hand, look at ways that storytelling can power a fundraising campaign or appeal, review social media tools to tell your story, understand how to make visuals work for your story, and understand the elements of great storytelling.
Understanding What Matters: Social Media Workshop for the Vermont Arts CouncilDebra Askanase
Why does your organization use social media, and is it helping you to accomplishing your goals? This slide deck was used in a presentation with Vermont Arts organizations, and explores the fundamentals of what it takes to meaningfully engage in social media as a nonprofit organization, and use it to move stakeholders to action. It will cover the concepts of Matterness, understanding the online conversation that your stakeholders want to have with you, the importance of personal social media use, how to unleash the hidden capital within your online community by using social media for engagement, ladders of engagement, and critical practices for social media success.
Nonprofits that excel in social media communication and engagement also understand that internal social media capacity affects external activities. This presentation covers the four internal assets needed to fully optimize social media as an organization: social media staffing, an internal social culture, budgeting, and a social media policy.
Takeaways:
• Importance of social media policies, and key questions to address
• Social media staffing structure configurations
• Internal social culture self-assessment and key stepping stones to becoming a social organization
• How much does social media really cost?
Digital Storytelling Tools for Nonprofit OrganizationsDebra Askanase
New digital tools are emerging every day, making it easier for your nonprofit to tell its story online. From curation to publishing, if you’re looking to share a story, there’s an app, website or tool that can help you do it. This presentation covers the principles of good storytelling, provide examples of successful nonprofit digital storytelling, and reviews both the popular as well as some of the more unusual-but-useful online storytelling tools including PicMonkey, Visual.ly, ThingLink, Storify, mapping, Dippity, Vine, Animoto, and others.
An overview of how social media is affecting newspapers, journalism, and the news cycle. This slide show highlights some key studies and trends about the role of crowdsourcing in newspaper reporting, the changing relationship between news consumers and reporters, how newspapers are using social media and to what end, how social media is changing the way newspaper audiences consume news, and the role of social media sharing on news consumption.
This Spring, the Multnomah County Library Levy Campaign Committee and consulting firm Winning Mark created and ran a successful place-based advocacy campaign to pass a library-preservation ballot measure. Emphasizing check-ins, recommendations, and making personal connections online, the campaign strategy paid off in a 4:1 win. This presentation walks through the strategy, complete with screenshots, lessons learned, and approach.
Blogging IS a Strategy. Blogging should be relevant, targeted and strategic for your organization, and should move an organization closer towards meeting its goals. This fun, lively presentation highlights how to develop a blogging strategy, with examples of strategic blog posts from several nonprofit organizations.
Best Practices Using Linkedin and Facebook for Youth EntrepreneurshipDebra Askanase
Best practices in using Linkedin, Twitter, and Facebook to promote youth businesses and support mentors. It is based on research interviews with seven member organizations of Youth Business International in seven different countries. A segment from my longer presentation at the YBI Global Forum 2010 in Mexico City.
What can we do now, to prepare for the best GivingTuesday yet? In this presentation, given at the AFP of Mahoning-Shenango County, I highlight what's hot in online giving, the digital giving and mobile trends, and how they inform GivingTuesday. The slide deck includes a successful GivingTuesday case study, and offers a framework for designing your own winning GivingTuesday fundraising or engagement campaign. The deck also includes a framework, campaign ideas, and a path for developing your own GivingTuesday campaign that will move your stakeholders to action.
In the age of information overload, having a social media measurement practice is the key to successful execution of your social strategy. This presentation, presented at Social Media for Nonprofits, covers what data points tell you that your community cares and is willing to take action, a methodology to figuring what data is relevant to your outcomes, where to find the metrics that matter, and why setting up the right metrics can make the difference between knowing that people visited a page on your website, and if your social media actions sent them there.
Empowering Stakeholders to Become Network WeaversDebra Askanase
In this presentation, lean about value of the network weaver, how to foster and support your own network weavers online, a four-part support system for doing so, and the relationship between network weaving and fundraising.
The Social Website walks you through what is a social website, the goals of a social website, the categories and types of social media integration, many examples, and a DIY worksheet. This was presented at the 2011 Nonprofit Technology Conference with Seth Giammanco of Minds on Design Lab. More social website examples at http://getsocial.mod-lab.com, or submit your own.
Overview of personal professional use of social media, professional learning network development, and using social media tools with emphasis on Twitter, Facebook, and LinkedIn.
I had the pleasure to introduce this workshop and play host to three panelists, Emily Dieringer, Sara Mader and Annie Allen, each from a different Wisconsin Co. Public Health Dept. We've posted all our materials and resources at http://technologyinprevention.wikispaces.com/wspc2011
Developing an online fundraising campaign takes time to plan correctly, and must include essential social and planning features. This presentation outlines essential elements of a social media campaign, and uses the Tweetsgiving 2009 as the case study.
Where's the Return on Engagement? Measuring Social Media ROEDebra Askanase
This presentation looks at how to measure real social media engagement, and defines metrics that lead to ROE and metrics that actually measure activism based on ROE. We also look at what social media activities lead to the highest ROE and how to use that information to design your programs and social media implementation. Lastly, the presentation covers three ROE supportive case studies.
What's the secret to designing and executing a successful online engagement campaign? It's all detailed in this presentation, including assets needed to launch and run a successful digital engagement campaign, timelines, elements of engagement campaigns, and two case studies. Throughout, there are checklists to help you prepare and succeed: checklists of organizational readiness, campaign prep, and campaign assets. Included are two case studies of nonprofit digital engagement campaigns: the NYC Elder Abuse Center's 14 Days of Thanks Campaign, and the National Brain Tumor Society's Brain Tumor Awareness Month multifaceted awareness campaign.
Getting the Most out of Linkedin for Nonprofits Debra Askanase
You need to know how to get the most out of Linkedin, and this presentation is full of best practices and examples. Learn how to optimize your personal and company Linkedin profiles, utilize the Groups and Answers features, and about the 10 things you can do to get the most out of Linkedin for you and your organization.
Beyond Awareness: Making Social Media Work for Your CoalitionLaDonna Coy
For community coalitions to move beyond simple awareness raising strategies (push) it is critical that they work through developing a social media presence from which they can expand.
The deck was presented at the Tennessee Advanced School on Addiction, June 23, 2010. <a>Who & What Worksheet</a> <a>Where & How Worksheet</a> <a>Listening Template</a> and I blog <a>here</a>.
Impactful Social Media and Fundraising - The Power of the Network WeaverDebra Askanase
How can you harness social networks and social media to develop your personal network to effectively help your organization and translate your leadership vision online. Become a key part of your organization's social media strategy by helping them reach a much greater audience, and learn about the fundamentals of online fundraising and gain some valuable ideas and strategies to bring back to your communities.
Community Coalitions are finding their way in social media and discovering it really does matter to the success of their communications. Handout: https://www.dropbox.com/s/aqy7fwb0v6fgpxs/DE-SoMe%20Communications%20Matter%20Handout.pdf?dl=0 Delaware Division of Substance Abuse and Mental Health
Secrets of Effective Social Storytelling. Debra Askanase
Stories give context to data and facts. Significantly, stories create emotional connections between you and your audience that can last well beyond the initial contact. Learn how to uncover the stories you already have on hand, look at ways that storytelling can power a fundraising campaign or appeal, review social media tools to tell your story, understand how to make visuals work for your story, and understand the elements of great storytelling.
Understanding What Matters: Social Media Workshop for the Vermont Arts CouncilDebra Askanase
Why does your organization use social media, and is it helping you to accomplishing your goals? This slide deck was used in a presentation with Vermont Arts organizations, and explores the fundamentals of what it takes to meaningfully engage in social media as a nonprofit organization, and use it to move stakeholders to action. It will cover the concepts of Matterness, understanding the online conversation that your stakeholders want to have with you, the importance of personal social media use, how to unleash the hidden capital within your online community by using social media for engagement, ladders of engagement, and critical practices for social media success.
Online Giving: Trends, Tactics, and Getting Them To The DoorDebra Askanase
New to online giving, or just want an overview? In this presentation, we cover the most recent online giving stats, trends, online donation page and button optimization techniques, and engagement tactics to bring donors to the door. The presentation includes stats on generational giving preferences, mobile giving, crowdfunding, and giving by sector.
Finding The Social In Fundraising: AFP Northern New England Keynote AddressDebra Askanase
Millennials are cultural and technological influencers, and their adoption of technology has fueled the social web, along with everything we do with it, including fundraising. In this keynote presentation, I look at what the development of tech platforms, coupled with the rise of social citizens, tells us about how donors, fundraisers and other stakeholders want to utilize social communication for fundraising. The presentation looks carefully at people, media, and expectations of nonprofit behavior, and how what we do today as nonprofits must be social. Lastly, I consider: what does an organization need to do now, to support social media fundraising as new communications media matures?
Matterness is a way to make people feel known, acknowledged and invited to participate in all your organizational efforts. Passive audiences become active, and passionate supporters then become your best ambassadors. Supporters enthusiastically contribute their knowledge, networks and funds to support your cause. This presentation, given at a Valley Gives 1.5 hr in-person workshop, covers the principles of Matterness to make your people feel acknowledged, empowered and activated using social media, along with examples and a deep case study. Slide deck includes discussion prompts for nonprofits around fundraising and organizational behavior.
Developed in collaboration with Allison Fine, my partner in MatternessConsulting.com
Turning Traditional Donors into Online EvangelistsDebra Askanase
Nonprofit organizations are challenged translating the value of social and digital platforms to their base of traditional donors. "Traditionalists" don’t use social media to support causes online, if they use social media at all. "Mainstreeters" are hesitant to use it to support their causes. This presentation covers: who is a Traditionalist and Mainstreeter, how do they hear about your organization, what are they looking for from you, and a strategy to empower these donors with the knowledge, tools, and resources to use social and digital platforms for your organization.
50 Shades of Social Media: Navigating Policies, Laws, and Ethics Debra Askanase
Do you struggle with what you (and your colleagues) can and should say, or how you should respond to situations using social media? In this presentation for the Nonprofit Technology Conference, we consider real-world situations, walk through five ethical frameworks you may use to resolve social media conundrums, and look at ways to integrate ethical considerations into your social media policies, training, and practices. This presentation also walks through the case study of Phonedog v. Kravitz, a case involving who owns Twitter followers, and social media policy do's, don'ts, and supporting resources.
This presentation was developed and presented at the 2014 Nonprofit Technology Conference by Debra Askanase (Community Organizer 2.0, National Brain Tumor Society), Farra Trompeter (Big Duck), Carly Leinheiser (Perlman and Perlman), and Ashley Lusk (Threespot). The presentation design was created by Threespot.
Stories give context to data and facts. They make the abstract concrete, and create relationships where none existed. Significantly, stories create emotional connections between an organization and its audience that can last well beyond the initial contact. This presentation, given for organizations participating in Valley Gives 2014, highlights
• What makes a good story
• The organizational stories you have right now
• The types of stories that can power your fundraising/crowdfunding campaign
• Social media tools to tell your story
Online engagement campaigns are a test for both the organization and its fans, a learning moment, and a check/balance of how you are crafting meaningful ties with your stakeholders. In this session at #SM4NP Boston, Debra Askanase profiled successful online engagement campaigns, breaking down the essential ingredients of preparation, design, execution and measurement.
Social Media 101: Understanding Social Media Channels, Demographics, and UsageDebra Askanase
When should you use Facebook? Should you create a page, a group, or both? These and other questions will be addressed in this overview of the most popular social media channels for business. It includes a definition of social media, current demographics and use data, an overview of the most popular US social media channels, and how to choose the right platform for your audience.
Digital Marketing Course Week 7: Social Media MarketingAyca Turhan
Seventh week slides of eMarketing Course at Hacettepe University taught by Ayca Turhan.
Topics covered within the presentation include:
Social Media Channels
Virality
Social Media Marketing Strategies
For more please visit: www.aycaturhan.com/man423
This is a series of blogger engagement case studies -- and learnings -- that I shared with the attendees of DMAW's Social Media Day. I focused on Twitter placements, creating good assets like the C-SPAN Convention & Debate Hubs, Save the Children's "Mission: Pneumonia" and Tropicana's "An Orange America" (all of which were concepted by New Media Strategies in conjunction with design / development agency JESS3).
Event: DMAW Social Media Day
Panel: "Blogger PR: The Dos and Don’ts, Success Stories & Pitfalls"
Date: 11.5.09
Host: Direct Marketing Association of Washington (DMAW)
Panelists:
- Leslie Bradshaw, New Media Strategies
- Danielle Brigida, National Wildlife Federation
- Dan Riehl, RiehlWorldView
Social media is a great tool that civil society organizations can use to communicate with their audience, market their services, connect with their networks or improve the way they work and promote their social development agenda. The key features of social media are participation and interaction, connecting people and providing the tools necessary to have a conversation - all important components of NGOs’ day-to-day work. This workshop looks at how the strategic use of social media helps civil society organizations reach new people, adds value to mission-driven work, supports goals to build a movement around a core advocacy issue, improves customer service or programmes, reaches new donors, and raises awareness of a nonprofit brand around the world.
Challenges and Opportunities for Mainstream Enterprise Social Computing Lee Bryant
This is the talk I gave to the Unicom 2008 Social Tools Conference "Beyond Web 2.0" in London, February 2008.
The first minute of audio is missing, so you are spared my introductions ;-)
In this slideshare I will teach you how to start, build and grow your voice online through social media and blogging.
Starting, growing, & connecting your business to a digital audience. After going through this you should understand how to do the following:
1. Build your online business and brand.
2. Grow your following and brand reputation.
3. Connect with your audience to create brand ambassadors.
Learn more here: https://www.johnrampton.com
I gave this presentation to Jeff Bieber's American University COMM 567 class (which is focused on "Communications and Social Change"). The class is in the progress of mapping out a sexual assault awareness/prevention campaign targeted to the American University campus and is having a variety of guest speakers join them on their journey. As someone always interested and previously very active with this issue, the experience could have not been more meaningful. Social Media is absolutely a tool in the tool belt for Social Change.
Creating more relevant, more responsive more value Event-triggered EmailsDave Chaffey
Created for the International Email Marketing Summit, this webcast explains the options for creating more relevant automated emails - one of the biggest missed opportunities in Email marketing. It covers the types of emails and how to optimise them using the CRITICAL framework we use in the Smart Insights Guide to Email Marketing.
Enterprises have moved beyond Sharepoints and intranets; this Webcast takes a closer look at the social-networking tools that enterprises are using (Facebook, Twitter, and wikis, to name a few) to empower employees, disseminate information, and keep tabs on customer requirements and feedback. We look at how these new tools foster collaboration and create new ways to share enterprise data, allowing end users to unlock value and insights that were previously inaccessible.
Jennifer Lindsay is principal of Jennifer Lindsay Digital and is an Emmy-nominated Web strategy consultant. She has demonstrated expertise in connecting with key influencers through utilization of cutting edge social media, SEO, SEM, content strategy, Web 2.0, PR 2.0 and Internet/content management and digital methodologies for major B2B and B2C clients including Microsoft.
Knowing the conversation topics that your community wants to discuss within your online social channels is the first step to developing a successful social media presence. In today’s challenged marketplace, social media offers synagogues the opportunity to solidify support, attract interest, and listen to the needs of the community. This presentation, delivered as the keynote address at the Cantors Assembly 2014, considers the importance of knowing what “the conversation” is that your community wants to have online, and how opening up to the conversation is a key to unlocking the power of online community.
The key elements to look for in any social media analytics, an overview of social media analytics, and specifically Google analytics, Facebook Insights, Facebook ad analytics, and YouTube Insights. Includes examples, and analtyics screenshots.
Evaluating Your Social Media Efforts for OptimizationDebra Askanase
How do you know if your social media systems are working for your organization, or just getting in its way? Or if your social media channels are effective? This presentation offers a methodology for evaluating the success of your social media efforts within each channel as well as how optimized your social media systems are for success. The presentation includes two case studies plus a sample systems self-assessment matrix, a sample online fundraising self-assessment matrix, and a sample social media channel assessment matrix.
Knowing what data matters, and what doesn't, is critical to creating your own social media metrics tracking system. This presentation reviews the basics of Google Analytics, Facebook Insights, and YouTube Insights, and the data you need to track in order to know what your online community wants, develop engaging content, support the community, and meet your goals. The presentation also includes references to several DIY social media metrics dashboards you can use in your business.
Developing Your Social Media Voice and Online LeadershipDebra Askanase
This presentation offers an "online playbook" for how to take your leadership online, and what that might look like personally. Within the presentation are examples, theoretical frameworks, and resources for nonprofit executive directors and other high-level staff who want to use social media personally to further the mission of their organization and translate their leadership online.
Takeaways:
• What is “online leadership”
• How to translate traditional leadership into online leadership
• Create your own personal social media playbook
Redefining Community Leadership for an Online WorldDebra Askanase
In the age of social media, developing your own social media community is a given, but what does it mean to develop community leadership? Is it possible to share leadership with your online community? This presentation explores how organizations, and particularly schools, can foster online community leaders within social media spaces, and to what mutual benefit. The presentation includes: how to identify online leaders, what value an online leader brings to a school, how to work with online leaders, and what a strong social media community might brings to your school. The presentation also offers a basic strategy for developing and working with their online leaders, and for what purpose.
Streamlining Nonprofit Organizations: It's All About the CloudDebra Askanase
This presentation looks at what cloud computing is, reports on how nonprofit organizations are using the Cloud, factors for success, how to evaluate cloud technology solutions, and developing a tech plan. Includes two nonprofit case studies and a survey of cloud tools for enhancing organizational efficiencies.
Exploring Factors Affecting the Success of TVET-Industry Partnership: A Case ...AJHSSR Journal
ABSTRACT: The purpose of this study was to explore factors affecting the success of TVET-industry
partnerships. A case study design of the qualitative research method was used to achieve this objective. For the
study, one polytechnic college of Oromia regional state, and two industries were purposively selected. From the
sample polytechnic college and industries, a total of 17 sample respondents were selected. Out of 17
respondents, 10 respondents were selected using the snowball sampling method, and the rest 7 respondents were
selected using the purposive sampling technique. The qualitative data were collected through an in-depth
interview and document analysis. The data were analyzed using thematic approaches. The findings revealed that
TVET-industry partnerships were found weak. Lack of key stakeholder‟s awareness shortage of improved
training equipment and machines in polytechnic colleges, absence of trainee health insurance policy, lack of
incentive mechanisms for private industries, lack of employer industries involvement in designing and
developing occupational standards, and preparation of curriculum were some of the impediments of TVETindustry partnership. Based on the findings it was recommended that the Oromia TVET bureau in collaboration
with other relevant concerned regional authorities and TVET colleges, set new strategies for creating strong
awareness for industries, companies, and other relevant stakeholders on the purpose and advantages of
implementing successful TVET-industry partnership. Finally, the Oromia regional government in collaboration
with the TVET bureau needs to create policy-supported incentive strategies such as giving occasional privileges
of duty-free import, tax reduction, and regional government recognition awards based on the level of partnership
contribution to TVET institutions in promoting TVET-industry partnership.
KEY WORDS: employability skills, industries, and partnership
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Enhance your social media strategy with the best digital marketing agency in Kolkata. This PPT covers 7 essential tips for effective social media marketing, offering practical advice and actionable insights to help you boost engagement, reach your target audience, and grow your online presence.
Multilingual SEO Services | Multilingual Keyword Research | Filosemadisonsmith478075
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How social media marketing helps businesses in 2024.pdfpramodkumar2310
Social media marketing refers to the process of utilizing social media platforms to promote products, services, or brands. It involves creating and sharing valuable content, engaging with followers, analyzing data, and running targeted advertising campaigns.
www.nidmindia.com
Social media refers to online platforms and tools that enable users to create, share, and exchange information, ideas, and content in virtual communities and networks. These platforms have revolutionized the way people communicate, interact, and consume information. Here are some key aspects and descriptions of social media:
Grow Your Reddit Community Fast.........SocioCosmos
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“To be integrated is to feel secure, to feel connected.” The views and experi...AJHSSR Journal
ABSTRACT: Although a significant amount of literature exists on Morocco's migration policies and their
successes and failures since their implementation in 2014, there is limited research on the integration of subSaharan African children into schools. This paperis part of a Ph.D. research project that aims to fill this gap. It
reports the main findings of a study conducted with migrant children enrolled in two public schools in Rabat,
Morocco, exploring how integration is defined by the children themselves and identifying the obstacles that they
have encountered thus far. The following paper uses an inductive approach and primarily focuses on the
relationships of children with their teachers and peers as a key aspect of integration for students with a migration
background. The study has led to several crucial findings. It emphasizes the significance of speaking Colloquial
Moroccan Arabic (Darija) and being part of a community for effective integration. Moreover, it reveals that the
use of Modern Standard Arabic as the language of instruction in schools is a source of frustration for students,
indicating the need for language policy reform. The study underlines the importanceof considering the
children‟s agency when being integrated into mainstream public schools.
.
KEYWORDS: migration, education, integration, sub-Saharan African children, public school
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Non-Financial Information and Firm Risk Non-Financial Information and Firm RiskAJHSSR Journal
ABSTRACT: This research aims to examine how ESG disclosure and risk disclosure affect the total risk of
companies. Using cross section data from 355 companies listed in Indonesia Stock Exchange, data regarding
ESG disclosure and risk was collected. In this research, ESG and risk disclosures are measured based on content
analysis using GRI 4 guidelines for ESG disclosures and COSO ERM for risk disclosures. Using multiple
regression, it is concluded that only risk disclosure can reduce the company's total risk, while ESG disclosure
cannot affect the company's total risk. This shows that only risk disclosure is relevant in determining a
company's total risk.
KEYWORDS: ESG disclosure, risk disclosure, firm risk
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The Challenges of Good Governance and Project Implementation in Nigeria: A Re...AJHSSR Journal
ABSTRACT : This study reveals that systemic corruption and other factors including poor leadership,
leadership recruitment processes, ethnic and regional politics, tribalism and mediocrity, poor planning, and
variation of project design have been the causative factors that undermine projects implementation in postindependence African states, particularly in Nigeria. The study, thus, argued that successive governments of
African states, using Nigeria as a case study, have been deeply engrossed in this obnoxious practice that has
undermined infrastructure sector development as well as enthroned impoverishment and mass poverty in these
African countries. This study, therefore, is posed to examine the similarities in causative factors, effects and
consequences of corruption and how it affects governance, projects implementation and national growth. To
achieve this, the study adopted historical research design which is qualitative and explorative in nature. The
study among others suggests that the governments of developing countries should shun corruption and other
forms of obnoxious practices in order to operate effective and efficient systems that promote good governance
and ensure there is adequate projects implementation which are the attributes of a responsible government and
good leadership. Policy makers should also prioritize policy objectives and competence to ensure that policies
are fully implemented within stipulated time frame.
KEYWORDS: Developing Countries, Nigeria, Government, Project Implementation, Project Failure
The Challenges of Good Governance and Project Implementation in Nigeria: A Re...
Designing Effective Online Engagement Campaigns
1. Discovering If Like Equals Love:
Understanding and Testing
Online Engagement
#15NTCislikelove
www.flickr.com/photos/53114928@N02/12239196283/
2. @LimeRedStudio
Director of Strategic Design, LimeRed
Studio
Ask me about:
Music & Media, cultural diversity, design,
web development, storytelling, nonprofits
@askdebra
Digital Engagement Strategist,
Community Organizer 2.0
Ask me about:
Finding one’s voice, community
organizing, nonprofits, living abroad
3. Today’s Workshop
• Online Engagement Campaigns
– Frameworks
– Preparation
– Case study
• Develop your own engagement campaign
idea (small group discussion)
• Optimize an engagement campaign
(small group discussion)
• Regroup and discuss
4. What is a Social Media Campaign?
https://www.flickr.com/photos/seanrnicholson/6450168613/in/photostream/
7. Why Campaigns Succeed
Story Elements
– Emotional connection
– A good story & narrative arc
– Visual medium & memes
8. Why Campaigns Succeed
Design
– Easy to participate
– Identified and primed group of
participants
– Specific ask
– Limited time frame
– Seamless sharing integrations
18. Campaign
Design
Checklist
Research the concept and evaluate support
Identify the audience
Set campaign goals
Assess internal assets and staff capacity
Design the campaign
Select social media channels and assets to be leveraged
Create a campaign timeline
Content and asset development
Supporter/fan development
Technological elements
Create a campaign champions group
Evaluation
Post-campaign engagement strategy
24. Campaign
Assets
(“stuff”)
Email address acquisition assets
– Sign-up forms and people/interest data
collection
Database
– Does it connect with your forms?
– Can it segment new contacts?
Graphic design and images
– SM channel customization
– Promotional images for the campaign
– Promotions during the campaign
– Photographic images
Microsite/website/web page
– Customization ability, real-time
customization possibility
Fundraising integration
Real-time campaign metrics tracking
Software/hardware specific to the campaign
39. National Brain Tumor Society
May 2014
http://www.braintumor.org/BTAM
Evaluate
and refine
Move
community
to action
Test new
frameworks
Foundation
building
40. Goals
Increase engagement and activism with org social media
channels
Acquire new email addresses
Test frameworks:
– Video chat
– Offer ideas
– Give an email address
Grow social media spaces, especially Twitter and Facebook
41. Assets
Highly engaged national Facebook page (facebook.org/braintumors)
13 statewide Facebook pages, national Twitter account, large email list, blog, State Lead
Advocates
Robust mailing list
In-house design and web dev capacity
Tools: Sprout Social, Hashtag, Mention, Zoom (for the Community Chat)
Downloadable publication: Frankly Speaking About Cancer: Brain Tumors
43. Head to the Hill Advocacy Day
FB Event as Conversation
Convener
Actively used in
Head to the Hill FB event
44. InfoSnaps
Create Shareable Graphics
Good reach & engagement; drove to
website
Share to educate and
build brand awareness
Lead to website
http://www.braintumor.org/join-the-fight/brain-tumor-awareness-month/infosnaps.html
45. Gated Material for Download 377 downloaded Frankly Speaking
Online Community Chat
Video Community Chat
39 first-ever participants; Focus:
Frankly Speaking
Community-building element
Live video chat forum with
various presenters and
knowledge
experts.
http://braintumor.org/communitychat
46. #BTVoice
Online Campaign
Submit advice through #BTVoice;
share and support
Registration Forms
Community Chat and BTAM; BTVoice
submit by email
http://www.braintumor.org/btvoice
47.
48. Why Campaigns Fail
You don’t set a realistic goal
Not setting a timeline for major campaign development points
Single channel approach or wrong channels
Not having the right measurement system in place or being
able to measure success
Undeveloped social spaces
Not reaching out to most engaged social media fans ahead
of time
Bad or not enough planning and research
50. Optimizing Your Presence
Ad Hoc & Struggling
failing infrastructure,
time & budget go
towards work-
arounds
Planned &
Functioning
basic systems in
place, keep the
lights, leadership
makes decisions
based on
efficiencies with
little/no staff input
Institutionalized &
Operating
stable
infrastructure, basic
policies and
practices,
leadership consults
with staff before
making decisions
Evaluated &
Leading
innovators,
recognized tech is
an investment,
strategic planning
involves all
53. Resources/Additional Information
Case Studies Wrap-Ups:
– Blog post wrap up of 14 Days of Thanks: http://nyceac.com/elder-justice-dispatch-thank-you-
for-making-14-days-thanks-a-success/
– Blog post wrap-up of #BTAM:
blog.braintumor.org/head-hill-btvoice-btam-recap/
Online Campaigns:
– Telling the Right Story for Online Campaigns: http://www.slideshare.net/lsgrodeska/telling-
the-right-story-for-your-online-campaign-22830254
– Building a Ladder of Engagement in Online Campaigns:
http://www.slideshare.net/newmediaclay/the-ladd
– Best Practices to Build a Multichannel Campaign Plan:
http://www.slideshare.net/womenwhotech/mulitchannelcampaigns-interactionforum
– Social media campaigns and practices: http://communityorganizer20.com/category/social-
media-campaign/
54. Pre-campaign (1-3 months out)
Research
– Concept
– Similar campaigns
– Potential partners
– Influencers
– Most engaged supporters/potential social media champions
– Internal capacity
– Software/apps/tools needed
Campaign Design
– Goals
– Channels
– Activities
– Metrics
– Interactivity/engagement
– Assets
55. Pre-campaign (1-3 months out)
Asset & Content Development
– Social media channel customization
– Graphic image and photo image design/dev
– Website home page
– Microsite/web page content
– Email calendar
– Write blog posts and social media updates
– Develop editorial calendar
– Survey or other evaluation tools
– Blogger outreach
56. Pre-campaign (1-3 months out)
Supporters/Fans
– ID Influencers/bloggers/mentions/most engaged
– Pulse out social media messages to test idea & recruit
participants
– Recruit social media champions
– ID partner orgs that will support your campaign
– Develop a social media “champions” group
– Test support for the idea amongst stakeholders
57. Post-Campaign:
Marketing Activities
Evaluate
– Send survey or other evaluation tools
– Internal post-event evaluation
• Mad, sad, glad feedback
– Ask champions for feedback
– Did it meet the campaign goals?
– Review metrics
Lead nurturing and loyalty development
– Post-campaign email
• What was accomplished + nurturing content
– Ask them to do something else
Story Elements
Emotional connection
A good story
Visual medium
Design
Easy to participate
Identified and primed group of supporters
Specific ask
Limited time frame
Seamless sharing integrations
Movement-building
Campaign is connected to a larger cause
Story Elements
Emotional connection
A good story
Visual medium
Design
Easy to participate
Identified and primed group of supporters
Specific ask
Limited time frame
Seamless sharing integrations
Movement-building
Campaign is connected to a larger cause
Story Elements
Emotional connection
A good story
Visual medium
Design
Easy to participate
Identified and primed group of supporters
Specific ask
Limited time frame
Seamless sharing integrations
Movement-building
Campaign is connected to a larger cause
Story Elements
Emotional connection
A good story
Visual medium
Design
Easy to participate
Identified and primed group of supporters
Specific ask
Limited time frame
Seamless sharing integrations
Movement-building
Campaign is connected to a larger cause
A is the org goals. B is what the audience is interested in (or their goals, needs, etc.) What's in the middle is generally where THE conversation topic is going to be.
Change images here for “audiences”
Change images here for “audiences”
Maybe break this apart? As images?
Two types of campaigns:
Annual
Responsive Campaign
(only four new co-sponsors had signed-on in the previous five months)