The document provides an overview of how nonprofits can utilize social media. It discusses defining social media and establishing objectives before tactics. It recommends starting with platforms where your target audience is present and providing value through engaging content. Key tips include recruiting passionate staff, monitoring conversations, learning from both successes and failures of others, and integrating social media into overall marketing strategies. Measurement of goals is important to determine if objectives are being met.
#GivingTuesday this year will be on December 1, 2015. The movement was started by philanthropists in 2012 as a way to help nonprofits raise money by piggybacking on the energy of the holiday shopping season. #GivingTuesday is always on the first Tuesday after Thanksgiving.
Charities, donors, businesses, and community groups are encouraged to use the hashtag to promote philanthropic giving among friends, family, and co-workers.
In this presentation delivered by Erica Klinger (The Seattle Foundation), Michelle Johnson (Legal Voice) and Sarah MacDonald (Legal Voice), you will learn how to plan the best #GivingTuesday crowdfunding campaign for your organization.
This presentation is hosted by 501 Commons and SeaTech4Good.
Your organization has a facebook page, and you've got a few dozen or maybe a few hundred "fans". You see the notices to "boost" your posts, but every time you have tried it, it didn't work, or you haven't even tried. This Workshop will help you understand and use facebook strategically for your non-profit.
We will walk you through how to look at your "insights"
Offer helpful tips on when to post, how to schedule posts,
Show you where to find what kind of posts get the greatest engagement,
And we'll talk about how and when to boost your site or your posts for maximum value for minimum dollars.
This is a beginners workshop, but will assume that you have managed facebook for a non-profit organization, and are familiar with the interfaces.
About the presenter:
Katherine Cleland owns and operates Cleland Marketing, a small business that develops customized marketing for profit and growth strategies for Small Businesses. She has been creating successful campaigns in Facebook for 12 years for her many clients, and now runs facebook pages for more than a dozen small and medium businesses, including several nonprofits. Cleland Marketing focuses on technology, cleantech, and high tech businesses. She is also an advisor to the University of Washington Comotion CGF program, helping PI's define their marketing strategies.
Ms. Cleland has presented seminars on marketing at the Shoreline Lunch and Learn, Oregon State Austin Family Business Conference, Linn Benton Community College, Corvallis Chamber of Commerce, and The WNHS Micro-business program and the BEC Business Boot camp. She is a relatively recent transplant to Seattle.
Social Media Planning – Now that you’ve got your staff and board excited about social media, what’s next? Like most plans, it starts with a strategy, one that's based on a desire to build relationships. What does a social media plan look like? What are the key elements? Where should you dedicate your time and how can you make most of your efforts? This session will present strategies and tactics you can employ, and will touch on how it all ties into the communications plan you’ve already got.
#GivingTuesday this year will be on December 1, 2015. The movement was started by philanthropists in 2012 as a way to help nonprofits raise money by piggybacking on the energy of the holiday shopping season. #GivingTuesday is always on the first Tuesday after Thanksgiving.
Charities, donors, businesses, and community groups are encouraged to use the hashtag to promote philanthropic giving among friends, family, and co-workers.
In this presentation delivered by Erica Klinger (The Seattle Foundation), Michelle Johnson (Legal Voice) and Sarah MacDonald (Legal Voice), you will learn how to plan the best #GivingTuesday crowdfunding campaign for your organization.
This presentation is hosted by 501 Commons and SeaTech4Good.
Your organization has a facebook page, and you've got a few dozen or maybe a few hundred "fans". You see the notices to "boost" your posts, but every time you have tried it, it didn't work, or you haven't even tried. This Workshop will help you understand and use facebook strategically for your non-profit.
We will walk you through how to look at your "insights"
Offer helpful tips on when to post, how to schedule posts,
Show you where to find what kind of posts get the greatest engagement,
And we'll talk about how and when to boost your site or your posts for maximum value for minimum dollars.
This is a beginners workshop, but will assume that you have managed facebook for a non-profit organization, and are familiar with the interfaces.
About the presenter:
Katherine Cleland owns and operates Cleland Marketing, a small business that develops customized marketing for profit and growth strategies for Small Businesses. She has been creating successful campaigns in Facebook for 12 years for her many clients, and now runs facebook pages for more than a dozen small and medium businesses, including several nonprofits. Cleland Marketing focuses on technology, cleantech, and high tech businesses. She is also an advisor to the University of Washington Comotion CGF program, helping PI's define their marketing strategies.
Ms. Cleland has presented seminars on marketing at the Shoreline Lunch and Learn, Oregon State Austin Family Business Conference, Linn Benton Community College, Corvallis Chamber of Commerce, and The WNHS Micro-business program and the BEC Business Boot camp. She is a relatively recent transplant to Seattle.
Social Media Planning – Now that you’ve got your staff and board excited about social media, what’s next? Like most plans, it starts with a strategy, one that's based on a desire to build relationships. What does a social media plan look like? What are the key elements? Where should you dedicate your time and how can you make most of your efforts? This session will present strategies and tactics you can employ, and will touch on how it all ties into the communications plan you’ve already got.
The first in our Tech Assessment Program for nonprofits, this hands-on workshop focused on moving from strategy-creation to learning social media tactics.
Social Media for Nonprofits Conference 2016 - Assessing & Aligning Resources ...ConnectVA
This interactive session will help you take a step back and determine what’s working and assess your online presence. From interpreting channel analytics to making effective decisions on what content is truly post-worthy, learn how to optimize to make your institution’s social media life easier and more effective.
Social Media for Nonprofits Conference - Foundation Course 2016, Dr. Marcus M...ConnectVA
Dr. Marcus Messner, VCU Social Media Institute
Set the tone for the rest of the day at the Social Media for Nonprofits Conference with this prep course on social media channels and strategy! You will explore the benefits of using each of the major social media networks, how other organizations are marketing with them, and some dos and don’ts of each channel. As a bonus, you will learn more about Pro Bono resources in our community!
Helen Todd, CEO of Sociality Squared, and Chris Thorton, Chief Marketing Officer of Definition 6, spoke about the importance of visual marketing at Social Media Week 2013.
Slides from the Building a Social Media Plan workshop in Calgary & Edmonton, Alberta (November 2009).
Social media can be an incredible tool for your organization, providing you with direct communication channels, access to audience insight, and the ability to reach people all over the world.
But as the proliferation of social media platforms grow, participating can often be overwhelming and confusing. Join us as we take you through how to kick-start your organization's social media action plan.
Social media & strategy for nonprofits: Spirit & PlaceBohlsenPR
Social media training slideshow for partner organizations participating in Spirit & Place Festival, 2011 "The Body"
Strategy and best practices for nonprofits
As part of Agilon's Fall Webinar Series, Ann Oleson, Founder of Converge Consulting presents a case study of one nonprofit's efforts to track Social Media ROI.
The first in our Tech Assessment Program for nonprofits, this hands-on workshop focused on moving from strategy-creation to learning social media tactics.
Social Media for Nonprofits Conference 2016 - Assessing & Aligning Resources ...ConnectVA
This interactive session will help you take a step back and determine what’s working and assess your online presence. From interpreting channel analytics to making effective decisions on what content is truly post-worthy, learn how to optimize to make your institution’s social media life easier and more effective.
Social Media for Nonprofits Conference - Foundation Course 2016, Dr. Marcus M...ConnectVA
Dr. Marcus Messner, VCU Social Media Institute
Set the tone for the rest of the day at the Social Media for Nonprofits Conference with this prep course on social media channels and strategy! You will explore the benefits of using each of the major social media networks, how other organizations are marketing with them, and some dos and don’ts of each channel. As a bonus, you will learn more about Pro Bono resources in our community!
Helen Todd, CEO of Sociality Squared, and Chris Thorton, Chief Marketing Officer of Definition 6, spoke about the importance of visual marketing at Social Media Week 2013.
Slides from the Building a Social Media Plan workshop in Calgary & Edmonton, Alberta (November 2009).
Social media can be an incredible tool for your organization, providing you with direct communication channels, access to audience insight, and the ability to reach people all over the world.
But as the proliferation of social media platforms grow, participating can often be overwhelming and confusing. Join us as we take you through how to kick-start your organization's social media action plan.
Social media & strategy for nonprofits: Spirit & PlaceBohlsenPR
Social media training slideshow for partner organizations participating in Spirit & Place Festival, 2011 "The Body"
Strategy and best practices for nonprofits
As part of Agilon's Fall Webinar Series, Ann Oleson, Founder of Converge Consulting presents a case study of one nonprofit's efforts to track Social Media ROI.
Capitalising on the social media movement - IHRSA European Congress October ...Ray Algar
This is a copy of the combined presentation delivered by Ray Algar, Jon Moody, Gianluca Scazzosi and Rasmus Ingerslev at the IHRSA European Congress held in Barcelona during October 2010
This presentation slide was used for Information and Media Course for the 24th Ship for World Youth Program (http://www.shipforworldyouth.org/), taken place at Yoyogi, Olympic Center, Japan | Jan. 26, 2012
Social Movement, Charachterisitics, Goals, Purposes, Powerless - International Ataturk Alatoo University, International Relations, Political science and Political theory
The basics of social media: what social media is, what social media is not, what social media means, why your business or non profit should care about social media. Presentation given Sept. 2011.
These are slides from a master class I taught at the 2013 NC Philanthropy Conference. The introductory slides are very much social media 101. Later in the presentation we deal with integrating social and digital media into fundraising campaigns. http://www.jenningsco.com
Beyond Facebook: Building a Social Media Strategy for 2018Chris Snider
• How to create great content for any social network
• How to create content that is native to Instagram
• How to use Stories on Instagram, Snapchat, Messenger and/or Facebook
• How to plan and build a Messenger bot
• The top 10 alternatives to Facebook for reaching your customers
• How to extend your reach and get more interactions on Facebook
• What my students are doing on social media - VSCO and Finstagram accounts
How Nonprofits Can Effectively Use Social MediaEileen OBrien
Get an overview of social media marketing and three popular tactics: Twitter, YouTube and Facebook. Learn how some nonprofit organizations have used these tools successfully with limited resources. Get practical advice on how to leverage existing content and the importance of an overall social media strategy.
Writers Workshop 2015 - Joining the Conversation: Fundamentals of Social MediaMelanie Parlette-Stewart
f you are serious writer, having an online social media presence is something that can work to your advantage. You can use social media to market a book, yourself, or an organization. Social media is one of the most important tools we can use for marketing and communication. Learn about popular social media tools such as Facebook, Twitter, Pinterest, YouTube, Instagram, and blogging. This workshop will explore best practices for engagement and getting the conversation going. Other issues covered will include managing risk, analytics, picking the best tools for your strategy, and privacy.
Whether you’re building a community or a personal brand, this workshop will provide you with tips and tools to get you started on developing an effective social media plan.
Social media workshop presentation for hotels and the hospitality industries. This presentation includes an introduction to social media platforms, case studies and examples, best practices, branding considerations, integration tactics and other recommendations. Presented by ChatterBlast Media to the Greater Philadelphia Hotel Association on 12/6/2011. NOTE: This presentation is designed to be explained verbally in-person therefore not all slides have notes or descriptions.
Social media presentation longsight library Nov. 2010JohnKeys
* How to identify & incorporate the most effective options into your marketing plan
* Targeting niche markets
* Ways to use social networks e.g. blogs, YouTube, MySpace, Facebook
* Getting the most out of using social networks
An introduction to how and why childminders can use social media, with a look at Facebook, Pinterest, Twitter and blogging.
This presentation was made to the Devon Association of Childminders in October 2014.
‘वोटर्स विल मस्ट प्रीवेल’ (मतदाताओं को जीतना होगा) अभियान द्वारा जारी हेल्पलाइन नंबर, 4 जून को सुबह 7 बजे से दोपहर 12 बजे तक मतगणना प्रक्रिया में कहीं भी किसी भी तरह के उल्लंघन की रिपोर्ट करने के लिए खुला रहेगा।
हम आग्रह करते हैं कि जो भी सत्ता में आए, वह संविधान का पालन करे, उसकी रक्षा करे और उसे बनाए रखे।" प्रस्ताव में कुल तीन प्रमुख हस्तक्षेप और उनके तंत्र भी प्रस्तुत किए गए। पहला हस्तक्षेप स्वतंत्र मीडिया को प्रोत्साहित करके, वास्तविकता पर आधारित काउंटर नैरेटिव का निर्माण करके और सत्तारूढ़ सरकार द्वारा नियोजित मनोवैज्ञानिक हेरफेर की रणनीति का मुकाबला करके लोगों द्वारा निर्धारित कथा को बनाए रखना और उस पर कार्यकरना था।
role of women and girls in various terror groupssadiakorobi2
Women have three distinct types of involvement: direct involvement in terrorist acts; enabling of others to commit such acts; and facilitating the disengagement of others from violent or extremist groups.
Welcome to the new Mizzima Weekly !
Mizzima Media Group is pleased to announce the relaunch of Mizzima Weekly. Mizzima is dedicated to helping our readers and viewers keep up to date on the latest developments in Myanmar and related to Myanmar by offering analysis and insight into the subjects that matter. Our websites and our social media channels provide readers and viewers with up-to-the-minute and up-to-date news, which we don’t necessarily need to replicate in our Mizzima Weekly magazine. But where we see a gap is in providing more analysis, insight and in-depth coverage of Myanmar, that is of particular interest to a range of readers.
ys jagan mohan reddy political career, Biography.pdfVoterMood
Yeduguri Sandinti Jagan Mohan Reddy, often referred to as Y.S. Jagan Mohan Reddy, is an Indian politician who currently serves as the Chief Minister of the state of Andhra Pradesh. He was born on December 21, 1972, in Pulivendula, Andhra Pradesh, to Yeduguri Sandinti Rajasekhara Reddy (popularly known as YSR), a former Chief Minister of Andhra Pradesh, and Y.S. Vijayamma.
In a May 9, 2024 paper, Juri Opitz from the University of Zurich, along with Shira Wein and Nathan Schneider form Georgetown University, discussed the importance of linguistic expertise in natural language processing (NLP) in an era dominated by large language models (LLMs).
The authors explained that while machine translation (MT) previously relied heavily on linguists, the landscape has shifted. “Linguistics is no longer front and center in the way we build NLP systems,” they said. With the emergence of LLMs, which can generate fluent text without the need for specialized modules to handle grammar or semantic coherence, the need for linguistic expertise in NLP is being questioned.
Future Of Fintech In India | Evolution Of Fintech In IndiaTheUnitedIndian
Navigating the Future of Fintech in India: Insights into how AI, blockchain, and digital payments are driving unprecedented growth in India's fintech industry, redefining financial services and accessibility.
31052024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdfFIRST INDIA
Find Latest India News and Breaking News these days from India on Politics, Business, Entertainment, Technology, Sports, Lifestyle and Coronavirus News in India and the world over that you can't miss. For real time update Visit our social media handle. Read First India NewsPaper in your morning replace. Visit First India.
CLICK:- https://firstindia.co.in/
#First_India_NewsPaper
03062024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdfFIRST INDIA
Find Latest India News and Breaking News these days from India on Politics, Business, Entertainment, Technology, Sports, Lifestyle and Coronavirus News in India and the world over that you can't miss. For real time update Visit our social media handle. Read First India NewsPaper in your morning replace. Visit First India.
CLICK:- https://firstindia.co.in/
#First_India_NewsPaper
01062024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdfFIRST INDIA
Find Latest India News and Breaking News these days from India on Politics, Business, Entertainment, Technology, Sports, Lifestyle and Coronavirus News in India and the world over that you can't miss. For real time update Visit our social media handle. Read First India NewsPaper in your morning replace. Visit First India.
CLICK:- https://firstindia.co.in/
#First_India_NewsPaper
27052024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdfFIRST INDIA
Find Latest India News and Breaking News these days from India on Politics, Business, Entertainment, Technology, Sports, Lifestyle and Coronavirus News in India and the world over that you can't miss. For real time update Visit our social media handle. Read First India NewsPaper in your morning replace. Visit First India.
CLICK:- https://firstindia.co.in/
#First_India_NewsPaper
1. Social Media For
Nonprofits:
Don’t Get Left Behind
April 19, 2012
Eileen O’Brien
@eileenobrien
2. What is Social Media?
• “A social trend in which people
use technologies to get the
things they need from each
other, rather than from
traditional institutions like
corporations”
Groundswell by Charlene Li &
Josh Bernoff
3. Social Media is a Tactic
• Social media is not a strategy but a tactic
• Start with an objective, create a strategy and
determine the best tactics
• Integrate into your overall marketing objectives
• Key to marketing is telling a compelling story
Social media can enable this
4. Is Your Target Audience Using SM?
Source: PewInternet.org
5. How Is Your Target Using SM?
Source: PewInternet.org
6. How Do You Start?
• Recruit the people
within your organization
who are passionate
about social media
• Use it in your own life
and become comfortable
with the technology
• Be selective: start small
and build
7. Monitor Social Media
• Pay attention to what is being said about your
organization
Free Google alerts
Take it private
• Don’t delegate to intern
• Have a crisis communications plan
Be prepared to act quickly using same media
Be nimble
8. Learn from Planned Parenthood
• Komen used SM as another
platform for corporate
announcements
• PP used SM to engage in
continued dialogue with
stakeholders starting well
before the crisis
• Komen’s messaging was
inconsistent, changed course
and tone
Source: Lessons from the Komen Controversy,
SocialMediaToday.com
9. Listen
• Listening may give you insights which will lead the
strategy
• Learn what’s important to your audience
Can you fill a need? How can you add value?
• Check out what the competition is doing
• Pay attention
• Social media has been compared to a cocktail
party
11. Be Thoughtful
• Many social media tools are
free, but they require
resources to create content
and keep them updated
• You can damage your
reputation by starting and
then abandoning social
media projects
• Squat on your name
http://namechk.com
Image courtesy of Striatic on Flickr
12. How Do You Find The Time?
• Integrate into what you
are currently doing
Bring a video to an
interview and post a
teaser on YouTube
• Make a conscious
decision: the time spent
on social media may
mean giving something
else up
Image courtesy of D. Sharon Pruitt on Flickr
13. Use Your Time Wisely
• Measurement is essential
Determine up front how you will measure success
• Did you meet your objective?
More volunteers
Heightened awareness
Donations
Increased event participation
Generated PR
Education on issues
Image courtesy of Jonny Goldstein on Flickr
14. Make It Shareworthy
• Most effective online organizing programs
whether fundraising or advocacy is to
make each of your appeals part of a
campaign
• People give to funds that generate an
emotional response, tell your story
• Articulate in simple terms what you are
trying to do
• Make it urgent, have a deadline
• Make it EASY
17. What’s Twitter?
• A free social networking &
micro-blogging service
that allows users to send
updates or tweets (text-
based posts up to 140
characters long) to anyone
who opts to receive them
• Asks: What’s
happening?
• Per Pew, 13% of American
adults who use the
internet are Twitter users Image courtesy of Robert Scoble on Flickr
19. Types of Accounts
• Organization
100% branded content, don’t follow people or interact
Can be managed by a team, low risk of going off
message
Using interactive tool to push out information, not
establishing relationships
Source: Beth’s Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media
20. Types of Accounts
• Organization With Personality
Employee(s) who tweet are identified & interact with
followers
Makes it personal, builds relationships
May be difficult to scale, succession can be an issue if
person becomes so associated with brand leaves, also
risk of going off message
Source: Beth’s Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media
21. Who To Follow
• Thought leaders and cause enthusiasts
For social media & nonprofits: @kanter, @ntenhross,
@beautifulthangs, @SocialBttrfly, @peterdeitz
• Search on your topics of interest
Look at who others follow
• Take your time
22. How To Get Followers
• Quality over quantity
• When you follow someone send them a tweet
explaining why you are following them
• Search on your area of interest and then answer
questions or respond
“Seek out people you can help and do it!” Wil
Reynolds
• Add yourself to “yellow pages”
http://twellow.com
http://wefollow.com
23. How To Get Followers
• Engage with your
followers, thank them for
support, give them ways
to get involved
• Utilize hashtages
(#word)
• Weekly Chats
Take part in existing ones
or host a Tweetchat
Image courtesy of Christopher Carfi
on Flickr
26. YouTube
• Second largest volume
of searches
• In December 2011
85% of the total U.S.
Internet audience views
online video
182 million U.S. Internet
users viewed 43.5 billion
videos
Source: comScore Image courtesy of Karl Jonsson on Flickr
27. YouTube
• A keyword-tagged video is 50 times more likely
to appear on the 1st page of a Google search
result compared with a traditional web page
according to Forrester Research
• YouTube program for nonprofits
• YouTube Video Volunteers
Can find someone who is willing to use their
equipment and skills to help a nonprofit make a video
28. YouTube Channels
• Free to set up a
YouTube channel
• Centralized place for all
videos, can be branded
& users can subscribe
• Can turn off comments
or use it as another way
to connect
29. How Do You Get Views?
• People have short attention spans, so capture
attention in first 30 second
Keep the whole video short
Have a call to action at the end
Shoot for a computer screen
• Ask for user-generated content
• Tell serial stories which engage viewers & keep
them coming back
• React to current events
• Use endorsements
• Tag & title your videos with relevant keywords
30. How Do You Get Subscribers?
• Subscribe to the YouTube
channels of other
nonprofits, they may do
the same
• Ask people to subscribe
• Share links for your videos
with supporters so they
can help get the word out
Make the embed code
available so people can post
the video on their sites Image courtesy of Todd Huffman on Flickr
32. Facebook
• Nonprofits can create customized pages
• Claim vanity URL
http://www.twitter.com/yournonprofit
• Engage with fans
Comment on their wall posts & help people connect
with others
• Show people how to connect beyond Facebook
Email sign up or drive to website
34. Facebook Stats
• Use the data to understand
what your fans like, don’t
like, what type of content
they interact with the most
and what they share with
their friends
Facebook gives you locale
breakdown and demographic
information
Image courtesy of Sasha Wolff on Flickr
35. How to Get Fans
• Promote via other marketing channels
• Encourage fans to suggest to their friends become
fans
• Run promotion or contest
• Give fans what they want
Be active and add content
70% of all actions on social networks are related to
viewing pictures or viewing other people's profiles
Source: Understanding Users of Social Networks
37. It’s All About Content
• Excellent for search
• Enables thought leadership
• Syndicate content
• Recommend WordPress
• If too time intensive, consider:
Guest blogging
Combining forces
Comment on other blogs
43. Market Social Media
• Integrate the social tactics into the entire
marketing strategy
• Promote social media tactics via all marketing
such as: direct mail, email signature,
newsletters, announce at events
• Leverage your content across various places
Put video on YouTube
Embed it into a blog post
Promote blog post via Twitter, Facebook and LinkedIn
Link to the blog post in an enewsletter
44. Golden Rules
• Social media is all about being human, so have
personality
• Never say anything you wouldn’t say in front of
your mother
• It’s all about building relationships
• Treat others with respect
• Be generous
• Add value
Image courtesy of Jason on Flickr
45. Resources
• ComcastNewMediaExchange.com
• Groundswell
Examples of award winning non-profits
• Beth Kantar
Beth’s Blog: How nonprofits can use social media
• Pew Internet & American Life Project
• Netsquared
• Momentum: Igniting Social Change in the
Connected Age by AllisonFine
Pew Internet & American Life Project is a nonpartisan, nonprofit "fact tank" that provides information on the issues and trends shaping America. They are a wonderful resource for data and statistics and recommend checking out their website. If you look at this table, it makes sense that age is the biggest predictor of social media use. I highlighted in red some of the social media activities.
Pew Internet & American Life Project is a nonpartisan, nonprofit "fact tank" that provides information on the issues and trends shaping America. They are a wonderful resource for data and statistics and recommend checking out their website. If you look at this table, it makes sense that age is the biggest predictor of social media use. I highlighted in red some of the social media activities.
the data shows us that those who have a social media strategy focused on stakeholder engagement, and manage it consistently before a crisis hits, like Planned Parenthood, are poised to navigate the crisis more successfully. Listening and engaging is more important than driving a defensive message. GaggleAMP analyzed posts made to Facebook and Twitter before and during the crisis. They found that Komen used social media as a monologue (just another platform for corporate announcements) while Planned Parenthood used social media to engage in a continuing dialogue with stakeholders, starting well before the crisis. Komen violated the most important rule of social media advocacy – the need to consistently engage stakeholders. It’s the difference between being credible and authentic versus being seen as out of touch and aloof. Another interesting element revealed by the data is that Komen’s poor handling of the initial messaging – not being consistent, changing course, changing tone – apparently helped organize their opposition. Disciplined message delivery through social media is critical to success in overcoming a crisis.
New content and information are required to “feed the beast”
New content and information are required to “feed the beast”
It’s particularly popular with young adults, minorities, and those who live in cities.
You can think of it as an instant message that goes out to lots of people. It can be mundane but it can also be a powerful tool to share information and build relationships. Use Tweedeck or HootSuite
Legal Aide Society
Most visited website in 2010 per Hitwise . Fastest growing group is women over 55 years old