The social media plan aims to increase engagement with the Northwest Office of Volunteer Services through improving social media presence. Goals include getting people talking about Volunteer Services, raising awareness of Alternative Spring Break, and partnering with other organizations. Strategies involve sharing stories and multimedia about service, promoting campus events, and measuring engagement through tools like Hootsuite. A sample calendar outlines planned social media content for September and October.
Uploaded is the social media strategy project from project team #2 in course T-MKTG & T-MGMT 490B at Milgard School of Business, University of Washington Tacoma.
Pay to Play-SocialMedia & Advancement 2016Michael Stoner
This white paper explores new challenges for higher ed advancement's use of social media for outreach, engagement, and fundraising. We explored how institutions are using tools for boosting, promoting and advertising their social initiatives as organic reach of posts, tweets, and images has declined. Download at: http://mstnr.me/2g22TNr
Enhancing CSO National Dialogue and Collaboration via Social MediaThink Media Labs
Enhancing CSO National Dialogue and Collaboration via Social Media is a Project Funded Through the Office of MEPI and executed by Think Media Labs. This document is summary presentation of the key messages and action items from the project for the Civil Society.
The goal of this project was to give me an opportunity to think and work strategically on behalf of the Child Advocacy Center and to produce communication materials based on the information and knowledge I built throughout my spring semester about effective communication. This project consists of an organization profile, fact sheet, news release and social media analysis.
Uploaded is the social media strategy project from project team #2 in course T-MKTG & T-MGMT 490B at Milgard School of Business, University of Washington Tacoma.
Pay to Play-SocialMedia & Advancement 2016Michael Stoner
This white paper explores new challenges for higher ed advancement's use of social media for outreach, engagement, and fundraising. We explored how institutions are using tools for boosting, promoting and advertising their social initiatives as organic reach of posts, tweets, and images has declined. Download at: http://mstnr.me/2g22TNr
Enhancing CSO National Dialogue and Collaboration via Social MediaThink Media Labs
Enhancing CSO National Dialogue and Collaboration via Social Media is a Project Funded Through the Office of MEPI and executed by Think Media Labs. This document is summary presentation of the key messages and action items from the project for the Civil Society.
The goal of this project was to give me an opportunity to think and work strategically on behalf of the Child Advocacy Center and to produce communication materials based on the information and knowledge I built throughout my spring semester about effective communication. This project consists of an organization profile, fact sheet, news release and social media analysis.
Strategies to Build Donor Love — How to Create Donor-Centric Communication an...Beth Brodovsky
How can your communication strategy work to show your donors you know and love them? Donors – both present and potential – are special. Every communication is an opportunity to draw donors closer to the heart of your organization. It takes planning, creative thinking and commitment to focus on the donor — but there are a multitude of inexpensive and easy ideas for attracting you donors’ attention.
This presentation will help you examine your organization to find the road-blocks and opportunities in getting your donor’s attention. We’ll explore technology tactics, direct marketing mysteries and creative concepts that assure donors you know and understand their interest in your cause.
Learning Objectives:
Flipping the focus
Telling great stories in new ways
Making communication personal
Managing what gets in your way
How NGOs can use social media to create impactJD Lasica
On Jan. 20, 2012, JD Lasica and Shonali Burke gave the following presentation to assembled NGOs at the United Nations. Campaigns and programs examined include charity: water, Send a Cow, WaterForward, Epic Change, Jolkona, mobile and more.
Social Media Marketing for Non-Profits | University of HoustonMMI Agency
Social media marketing for non-profit organizations. Presented by Guest Speaker Lindsay McClelland at the University of Houston.
Social media is a key factor in the marketing strategy of non-profit organizations. By building a community through social media, brands reach their intended audience and gather donations in a less expensive way than other forms of advertising. The marketer can organize this through knowing your organization, planning ahead, keeping budget in mind, and maintaining relevant partnerships.
This presentation is designed to share tips and techniques on online engagement. Specifically it shares tips on video, websites, social platforms, and direct marketing. Enjoy!!!
Leveraging Social Media To Raise Funds for Nonprofit OrganizationsAbila
The third session in the Web-wise series, you will learn to understand the recent explosion of social media and its application to nonprofit organizations, presented by Dan Gonzalez, Web Manager, Sage Nonprofit Solutions.
Developing a Donor Focused Communication StrategyBrian Barela
Pragmatic tactics within a donor-focused framework to help grassroots fundraisers raise more money, communicate results more effectively, and meaningfully engage donors on the channels they prefer.
ABC Children Hunger Network Employee Survey ResultsABC_CHN
**Disclaimer: This PowerPoint is part of a group project at Seton Hall University that provides information on a fictional organization under hypothetical circumstances. Data contained within this presentation is also fictional.
Strategies to Build Donor Love — How to Create Donor-Centric Communication an...Beth Brodovsky
How can your communication strategy work to show your donors you know and love them? Donors – both present and potential – are special. Every communication is an opportunity to draw donors closer to the heart of your organization. It takes planning, creative thinking and commitment to focus on the donor — but there are a multitude of inexpensive and easy ideas for attracting you donors’ attention.
This presentation will help you examine your organization to find the road-blocks and opportunities in getting your donor’s attention. We’ll explore technology tactics, direct marketing mysteries and creative concepts that assure donors you know and understand their interest in your cause.
Learning Objectives:
Flipping the focus
Telling great stories in new ways
Making communication personal
Managing what gets in your way
How NGOs can use social media to create impactJD Lasica
On Jan. 20, 2012, JD Lasica and Shonali Burke gave the following presentation to assembled NGOs at the United Nations. Campaigns and programs examined include charity: water, Send a Cow, WaterForward, Epic Change, Jolkona, mobile and more.
Social Media Marketing for Non-Profits | University of HoustonMMI Agency
Social media marketing for non-profit organizations. Presented by Guest Speaker Lindsay McClelland at the University of Houston.
Social media is a key factor in the marketing strategy of non-profit organizations. By building a community through social media, brands reach their intended audience and gather donations in a less expensive way than other forms of advertising. The marketer can organize this through knowing your organization, planning ahead, keeping budget in mind, and maintaining relevant partnerships.
This presentation is designed to share tips and techniques on online engagement. Specifically it shares tips on video, websites, social platforms, and direct marketing. Enjoy!!!
Leveraging Social Media To Raise Funds for Nonprofit OrganizationsAbila
The third session in the Web-wise series, you will learn to understand the recent explosion of social media and its application to nonprofit organizations, presented by Dan Gonzalez, Web Manager, Sage Nonprofit Solutions.
Developing a Donor Focused Communication StrategyBrian Barela
Pragmatic tactics within a donor-focused framework to help grassroots fundraisers raise more money, communicate results more effectively, and meaningfully engage donors on the channels they prefer.
ABC Children Hunger Network Employee Survey ResultsABC_CHN
**Disclaimer: This PowerPoint is part of a group project at Seton Hall University that provides information on a fictional organization under hypothetical circumstances. Data contained within this presentation is also fictional.
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(St-Lawrence Alumni Association A Social Media Marketing Plan.docxaryan532920
(
St-Lawrence Alumni Association: A Social Media Marketing Plan
) (
2018
Megan & Yousef
1/6/2018
)
Current Analysis
The St-Lawrence Alumni is an association who try to inform, invest and involve the current and past graduates to give back to their college. In addition, the Alumni Association is in place to keep graduates connected to each other. They are connected to the foundation of the college because, the foundation is also concerned in raising money for the college.
To inform the alumni, the college has numerous ways including the voyager news letter which is printed once a year, they have a job bank for the graduates and they plan reunions to help graduates stay connected. They are always looking for new ways to raise funds for the various projects including the uncommon campaign which is currently in place. Currently they receive funds from annual givers, Major gifts, corporate sponsorships, wills and bequests and much more, all from people in the communities in which the colleges are located. In addition, the alumni association gets involved in the colleges and the communities. They accomplish this by planning events, advisory board, volunteer opportunities, steward ship programs, and more.
Each year, the Alumni Association, raises an average of 1.5 million in donation but every now and then there are long term campaigns. Currently there is a five-year campaign called the Uncommon Campaign which is aimed at raising 11 million within five years. Currently after only 14 months, they have raised nine million mostly from major sponsors and corporations. However, the issue of donating comes back to human nature in which they tend to donate to face to face interactions. This is hard when there is only seven members of the team.
In addition, there are 92,000 alumni that the college is aware of however only 60,000 are included in the database in which we know their name, phone number and address. The other 32,000 are “lost”. That becomes an issue, how to reach these lost alumni for donations. Other issues include, low return on equity for bursaries, how to attract alumni as they tend to stay within their small communities and how they will reach the goal for the Uncommon Campaign.
Therefore, the research below will mainly be focused on how to attract donors, retain alumni and inform alumni of their benefits.
ResearchHow to make a social media marketing plan:
According to Evan LePage’s blog, there are six steps to making a proper marketing plan on social media. The first step is to create SMART goals, objectives and mission statements. These goals are used as benchmarks for measuring the return on investments. In addition, it is easier to modify the plan as it goes around. SMART goals are a great idea because they are specific, measurable, attainable, realistic and timely, this means they can be assessed to see if the campaign is going well.
The second step is to conduct a social media audit. To accomplish th ...
This project focused on positioning and marketing for The Beverly J Martin enrichment program, an after-school elementary program located in the Ithaca area. Lead by Julia Kohn and Emily Dunn, they strategically delegated work to group members and focused their efforts on a social media presence, web presence, brand awareness and promotional materials for staff and parents.
Creating fundraising ideas for the enrichment program to execute
Background: For the Senior Class Project of the Marketing Major, data analysis: My group will be creating a social media strategy for a small business or nonprofit. We chose the United Way of Pierce County (UWPC) where I am currently interning at. To success in this project, we as a team, study UWPC, this includes knowing its mission: statement, organizational structure, and budget for social media.
The subject of our project will ideally be a business that we frequent and draw upon our experience for internal analysis.
Plan: In order to develop a well-thought out social media strategy, it makes sense to have some sort of basis or guideline for strategy development. For this project, we began by reviewing the framework in full, keeping an eye out for what information we need to write our strategy and what decisions we need to make.
Nonprofits have become one of the top users of social media since joining the platforms. However, many choose to pay hundreds, if not thousands for seminars that take away from the donors and the causes they support.
In an industry that thrives on relationships and relationship building, social media marketing is the perfect tool for nonprofit organizations to engage with donors, volunteers, and supporters.
How can social media help your nonprofit achieve its goals? According to a recent study, the top nonprofit communication goals for 2014 are:
Acquiring new donors
Engaging the community
General brand awareness
Retaining current donors
How are you achieving these goals? This informative guide will introduce nonprofits to the importance and best practices in social media to build relationships, reach out to the community, and increase brand awareness for your nonprofit.
An overview of the social media used at the USF Alumni Association and goals for improvement. This was a project I completed for my "Social Media in Mass Communications" course at the University of South Florida in Fall of 2014.
Are you exploring new and innovative ways to build and sustain your community of volunteers? Curious about social media – Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, etc. – and wondering if it could be an effective way to connect with future and current volunteers?
Attend this free webinar to hear Jayne Cravens from Coyote Communications and Erin Barnhart from Effective Altruism discuss tips and strategies for effectively using social media to find, communicate with, and build community among volunteers. This webinar, in recognition of National Volunteer Appreciation Week, is ideal for staff at any nonprofit or library who are interested in exploring how social media and other technologies might be used to strengthen their current volunteer program.
In this webinar you will:
Review best practices for finding and retaining volunteers
Learn how social media can be an effective tool for recruitment and communication
Assess if and how social media might benefit your volunteer program
Discover additional websites and online tools to explore
2. Social Media Plan Mission
The purpose of this social media plan is to create new opportunities for the Northwest Office of
Volunteer Services based on increasing their presence on social media.
Purpose
The Northwest Office of Volunteer Services was created to give Northwest students the opportunity
to serve the community and the university. It offers local opportunities to serve such as BRUSH, Beautifying
Residential House Using Students, and Lobby Day, as well as national and global opportunities through
Alternative Spring Break. Volunteer Services has the goal of reaching Northwest alums and people in the
community, in order to provide scholarships for students wanting to attend Alternative Spring Break. This
goal could be achieved through the use of an effective social media plan.
Organization
Location: 2220 J.W. Jones Union, Northwest Missouri State University
Staff: Director - Amy Nally
Social Media Reach
The mission of the Northwest Office of Volunteer Services is to reach Northwest students and get
them involved in service projects. This falls in line with the office’s social marketing orientation.
Volunteer Services is currently trying to reach students through the use of Facebook and their
university webpage. The Facebook page has only 59 likes and 27 visits. The page does contain some recent
posts; however, each post has no feedback from the target audience. There is a Twitter page for Northwest
Volunteer Services, @NorthwestASB. However the Twitter page only focuses on Alternative Spring Break,
during spring break, which poses a concern when it comes to competitors and raising awareness. The
competitors for Volunteer Services are campus organizations and off campus groups, as detailed in the
Competition section of the plan.
The Northwest Office of Volunteer Services does use traditional media as well as new media forms.
It has a YouTube video called Northwest ASB Emersion 2012, which they add clips to every year, from
Alternative Spring Break. The Northwest Alumni magazine has published some articles about Alternative
Spring break. The office also has an online blog; however, all of these multimedia platforms are not as well
known for Volunteer Services, when compared to competitors. Branching off and utilizing the student radio
station and promoting the blog posts, YouTube video and other articles through social media would help
increase awareness.
Competition
The Northwest Office of Volunteer Services has not only competition on campus, but competition
throughout the community. On campus it is competing with Greek organizations, societies and clubs. Off
campus it is competing with the Humane Society, Ministry Center and other service centered businesses. The
Humane Society and Ministry Center are a source of competition to the Northwest Office of Volunteer
Services because they are providing opportunities to college students, which draws them away from
Volunteer Services. One way to fix this threat is to work with the Ministry Center and Humane Society to
create volunteer activities, which promote them and Volunteer Services.
When it comes to on campus organizations the threat is that people might not look for service
opportunities outside of their organization. For example sororities and fraternities have required philanthropy
3. hours, which they can get through their organization’s national or local philanthropy projects. A way to turn
this into an opportunity is to use their events to get other students involved with Volunteer Services
When it comes to social media and the Northwest Office of Volunteer Services, more is being said
about their competitors than about the office itself. Here is a graph displaying how Volunteer Services
compares with other campus organizations on social media.
This graph shows a comparison between the likes of the Northwest Office of Volunteer
Services Facebook page and organizations on campus. The likes for Volunteer Services is
significantly less than the other organizations; however, through updating content and the use of
engaging content the number of likes can increase.
This graph shows a comparisons of engagement on Facebook between the Northwest
Office of Volunteer services and campus organizations. Engagement on Facebook means how many
people are talking about that organization. Phi Sigma Kappa’s engagement might be higher than the
others because their content includes information about philanthropies which people have shared,
liked and commented on. They also have information regarding other organizations philanthropies
and congratulating them on successes.
0
200
400
600
800
1000
Northwest Office
of Volunteer
Services
Phi Mu Phi Sigma Kappa Sigma Society Student Senate
FacebookLikes
Likes
0
20
40
60
80
100
Northwest Office
of Volunteer
Services
Phi Mu Phi Sigma Kappa Sigma Society Student Senate
Engagment On Facebook
People Talking on Facebook
4. The chart above compares the number of Twitter followers, favorites and Tweets between
Northwest Alternative Spring Break and campus organization’s Twitter accounts. Volunteer Services has
significantly fewer numbers in each category because the account is only used during Spring Break. Simply
using the Twitter account year round could lead to a boost in followers, as well as favorites depending on the
content provided.
Goals & Strategies
Based on the information from our research, our goal for the Northwest Office of Volunteer
Services is to increase the engagement of students by improving the value exchange. Value exchange is what
people get out of the content by viewing it. These three goals should increase the general awareness of the
office and Alternative Spring Break amongst Northwest students. Through these three goals, Volunteer
Service’s overall goal of Alternative Spring Break scholarships could be accomplished in the future.
Goal: To get people talking about Northwest Volunteer Services.
Strategies
1. Get people talking about how they serve
a. Tactic: Each Saturday use the hashtag NW_ServiceSaturday on Twitter. Use it in a tweet
asking Bearcats to show how they serve. Insert in the tweet a picture from Alternative Spring
Break. The starting tweet could say “This is how we serve on Alternative Spring Break. How
do you,” or it could look like this tweet below.
0
100
200
300
400
500
600
700
NW ASB Phi Mu Phi Sigma Kappa Sigma Society Student Senate
Twitter
Followers Favorites Tweets
5. 2. Show examples of how to get involved
a. Tactic: Create a Pinterest board with sections about possible service projects, how to get
involved after college, inspiration and about how giving back affects others. Also a board
should be created about alternative ways to spend Spring Break and how to serve during all
school breaks.
Goal: Bring awareness to Alternative Spring Break
Strategies
1. Bring attention to the stories of students who were involved with Alternative Spring Break.
a. Tactic: Have students who have gone on Alternative Spring Break write a blog post about
how it affected them and then post a link to it on Facebook. You could even use the journal
entries that are already online to do this.
How Alternative Spring Break Affected Me
Bethany A. spent Spring Break 2013 feeding the homeless, in New York
City. Here is her story (insert link to short article by Bethany).
2. Post articles relating to serving the community and tie them back to Alternative Spring Break. For
example, Volunteer Services could post an article on Facebook about the couple who spent their
honeymoon going to each state and then did a community service project in each state.
3. Get more information about Alternative Spring Break out there.
a. Tactic: Take multimedia videos and articles, then embed them in tweets and Facebook
posts to increase the information about Alternative Spring Break, on social media. Also tag
the source of the media in the Tweets. For example tag the Northwest Alumni magazine in
it, if the article was originally published for it.
6. Goal: Partner with other organizations to expand Volunteer Service’s reach.
Purpose: This will lead to increased awareness of Volunteer Services and engagement.
Strategies
1. Partner with organizations in the community to create joint events, eliminating the threat of
competition and creating content to post about online.
a. Tactic: Partner with the Humane Society, Red Cross, or Ministry Center to have an event
which you could promote online beforehand and then post articles related to the event
online. For example, if Volunteer Services partnered with the Humane Society on an event,
they could tweet an article about how working with pets for community service reduces
stress.
2. Tweet and create Facebook posts about other campus organizations events.
a. Tactic: Find out when another organization is doing something on campus and help
promote it.
7. Measurement of Results
After implementing the strategies above with the mission of increasing the awareness and
engagement, it is important to measure the results. There are several different sites available to keep track of
social media data.
1. Hootsuite Pro: Is a website that allows small businesses or organizations to implement
campaigns over multiple platforms, engage audiences and measure the organizations social media
performance. It does cost money; however, a demo could be downloaded, to see if the format
would benefit Volunteer Services or not. Some of the services the site offers are free.
2. SproutSocial: Allows organizations to track the clicks, retweets, shares and favorites on social
media posts. Uses graphs and data to show a representation of audience engagement and social
media trends. It will chart data from each of the organization’s social media platforms.
SproutSocial does have a free 30-day trial period.
3. Buffer: Allows organizations to create tweets or posts ahead of time and then schedule the
release of them. Buffer also has social media data tracker and analyzing options. Singing up for
the account is free and plans are discounted at 50 percent for non-profits.
4. Google Analytics: Is a free option that allows organizations to track social media data
including visitors, duration of visits, engagement, conversations and the social value of the
accounts.
5. Twitter Anayltics: Allows Twitter accounts to monitor the number of Tweets, mentions,
profile visits and followers for free. It has graphs showing how each data group has changed
over a 28 day period. It also has the summary for each previous month which includes what was
the profiles top tweet. This is a free service.
What to Measure
The three goals of this social media plan for the Northwest Office of Volunteer Services are to get
people talking about Volunteer Services, increase the information out there about ASB and partner with other
organizations to increase Volunteer Service’s reach. Below are details of how each goal can be measured for
the effectiveness of implementation.
Goal: To get people talking about Northwest Volunteer Services.
1. Count the number of retweets, followers and favorites for content on Twitter
2. Count the number of shares and likes on Facebook
3. Count the number of Pinterest repins and followers
4. Keep a chart documenting the number of conversations on each social media platform
5. Keep a chart of how many people are talking about volunteer services
Goal: Bring awareness to Alternative Spring Break
1. Keep track of how many people got to the Alternative Spring Break journal after clicking
on links from social media sites
2. Keep track of how many people click on the links for content in the social media posts
8. 3. Keep track of how many people show up to events or show interest in Alternative Spring
Break
Goal: Partner with other organizations to expand Volunteer Service’s reach.
1. Keep track of how many people come to events held by Volunteer Service’s and a partner
organization
Measureable Elements Timeline
When it comes to measuring the effectiveness of the Northwest Office of Volunteer Services social
media plan, it is important to keep a timeline for each goal and the progress desired for it. Here is a proposed
timeline for measuring the progress of each goal related to the measurable elements listed above.
Get people talking about Northwest Volunteer Services
Measurable Element Timeline Goal
Pinterest repins Reach 100 repins in 2 months
Conversations on social media platforms Increase by 25% in 3 months
People talking about Volunteer Services Increase by 10 % in 2 months
Retweets on Twitter Increase by 15% in 3 months
Here is a pictorial example displaying how to find the number of people talking about Northwest Volunteer
Services.
9. Element Jan. Feb. March April May June Total Average
Repins 2 5 8 12 10 9 46 7.66666667
Conversations 0 5 12 14 12 8 51 8.5
People talking about 0 2 8 12 7 4 33 5.5
Retweets 0 6 15 9 6 5 84 6.83333333
Get people talking about Volunteer Services
Above is a sample Excel spreadsheet for displaying the data for the measurable elements about getting people
talking. The spreadsheet could span a year’s worth of time and displays the total and average. Adding in a
column to sort out the peak months for each element could be helpful as well.
Bring awareness to Alternative Spring Break
Measurable Element Timeline Goal
Click on links to ASB journal Increase by 25% in 2 months
Click on links to other content Increase by 25% in 2 months
Facebook page likes and shares Increase by 20% in 3 months
People interested in ASB Increase by 15% in 4 months
Followers and Favorites on Twitter Increase by 15% in 3 months
Pinterest followers Reach 100 followers in 2 months
Element Jan. Feb. March April May June Total Average
Click rate ASB Journal 1 10 12 15 20 13 71 11.8333333
Click rate other content 1 5 8 10 13 15 52 8.66666667
Facebook likes 50 60 75 80 120 100 485 80.8333333
Facebook shares 15 20 26 37 32 28 158 26.3333333
Interested in ASB 20 24 32 34 35 49 194 32.3333333
Twitter Followers 40 45 52 58 65 78 338 56.3333333
Twitter Favorites 20 26 29 56 42 50 223 37.1666667
Pinterest Followeres 0 0 0 10 20 25 55 9.16666667
Bring awareness to Alternative Spring Break
Partner with other organizations to expand Volunteer Service’s reach
Measurable Element Timeline Goal
People showing up to events Increase by 30% in 2 months
Element Jan. Feb. March April May June Total Average
Event Participants 0 0 0 14 10 0 24 4
Partner with other organizations to expand Volunteer Service's reach
10. Social Media Calendar
When it comes to increasing social media engagement and the value exchange, it might help to have a
calendar set up of possible tweets, posts and pins to release. Here is a tentative calendar for September and
October. The calendar does contain information based off of philanthropic campus events from the fall 2014
tri-mester.
September
M T W T F S S
1
Article about ways to
serve while in college
2 3 4
ASB journal
blog post
5
Humane
Society
Training Event
6 7 8
9 10 11 12 13 14 15
NW_Serves tweet
16 17 18 19
Blood Drive
20 21 22
23 24 25 26 27 28
Tweet
about Up
Till Dawn
29
30 31
October
M T W T F S S
1
2 3 4
ASB journal
post
5 6 7 8
9 10 11 12 13 14 15
Service
Saturday
16 17 18 19
Update on Up Till
Dawn Fundraising
20 21 22
23 24 25 26 27 28 29
30 31
Lip Sync
Contest Post
11. These events are just a few possibilities for increasing engagement through an exchange of
information. For example, posting or pinning an article about how to get involved in service projects during
college would allow current and new Northwest students to learn and get connected with the Office of
Volunteer Services. Also tweeting about other organizations events presents information to those who are
not already involved with those organizations, such as Greek life, and presents them with an opportunity to
not only serve but feel like they are a part of the community.