Archive for the 'marketing' Category

See3 at Chicago Convergence/MGFest09

by Dorothee Royal-Hedinger
Monday, January 26th, 2009

Last week, Michael spoke at the Chicago Convergence at MGFest09 which was held at Columbia College here in Chicago. It was a nice gathering of tech and design people and included speakers from crowdSPRING, Manifest Digital, Spark and The Cocktail.

Here’s the slideshow from Michael’s talk which was videotaped and will soon be available in its entirety on the Chicago Convergence website:

And in case you’re wondering what MGFest09 is, here’s a quick video interview we did with the festival’s co-founder Mason Dixon:


Branding - Keeping the brand consistent while managing different outreach campaigns

by Michael Hoffman
Wednesday, October 8th, 2008

I read a note on Daily Kos this morning about how popular the Obama campaign logo is among advertising people.

The campaign designed the logo that shows hope and optimism but what interested me was how versatile it is. I was thinking about this a lot because we believe in using sub-sites (microsites) and additional URLs for specific campaigns and we always face the issue of branding — how close does our campaign branding have to connect to our main brand? I don’t think there is one right answer to that question, but the nice thing about the Obama logo is how versatile it is for sub-brands. Here’s the example:

Asian Americans & Pacific Islanders
Picture 14.png

African Americans
Picture 15.png

Americans Abroad
Picture 16.png

Americans with Disabilities
Picture 17.png

Arab Americans
Picture 18.png

European & Mediterranean Americans for Obama
Picture 19.png

Environmentalists
http://blog.see3.net/wp-admin/post.php?action=edit&post=512Picture 20.png

First Americans
Picture 21.png

Generation Obama
Picture 22.png

Jewish Americans
Picture 23.png

Kids
Picture 24.png

Latinos
Picture 26.png

Labor
Picture 25.png

LGBT
Picture 27.png

People of Faith
Picture 28.png

Republicans
Picture 29.png

Rural Americans
Picture 30.png

Seniors
Picture 31.png

Small Business
Picture 32.png

Students
Picture 341.png

Sportsmen
Picture 33.png

Veterans & Military Families
Picture 35.png

Women
Picture 36.png

[via barackobama.com/people/]

Report: Nonprofits Have Major Branding Problem in Weak Taglines

by Dorothee Royal-Hedinger
Thursday, September 25th, 2008

Did you know? Taglines are the best way to succinctly convey nonprofits’ value, but 7 in 10 nonprofits rate their taglines as poor or they don’t have one at all.

To remedy this problem, the Getting Attention blog has released a new, free Nonprofit Tagline Report which features in-depth analysis of current practices and a guide to making the most of a tagline (in eight words or less) shaped to responses gathered in a survey of 1,900 nonprofit communicators earlier this year.

From the press release:

Maplewood, NJ – A newly-released report based on survey findings drawn from 1,900 nonprofit communicators shows that most nonprofits don’t have an organizational tagline that works to make their organizations’ value clear, and easy to remember and repeat.

“You might say ‘A tagline is a terrible thing to waste’,” says Nancy Schwartz, communications consultant and author of the report, alluding to the classic UNCF tagline ‘A mind is a terrible thing to waste.’ “A nonprofit organization’s tagline is, next to its name, the marketing message most frequently heard, and the easiest and most effective way to convey its brand,“ says Schwartz, president of Nancy Schwartz & Company (www.nancyschwartz.com) and blogger at Getting Attention (www.gettingattention.org).

“A strong tagline complements an organization’s name to convey its unique value or impact with personality, passion and commitment. Nonprofits that fail to make the most of their taglines are basically throwing that opportunity away,” she says.

Schwartz sees taglines as a key tool in building strong nonprofit brands, which are more important than ever in these times of increased competition for dollars, members, volunteers and other supporters. “Nonprofits can develop a tagline at the organization, program or campaign levels to freshen up their messaging, emphasize their commitment and/or revive tired positioning,” she says.

More key findings from the report:

· Nonprofit taglines that work generally fall into one of four categories, describing an organization’s focus of work; impact or value; core values or spirit; or strategic approach.

· An effective nonprofit tagline:

o Relates to an organization’s name, without repeating it

o Must be easily accessible, memorable and repeatable

o Is specific to that organization

o Runs eight words or less.

o Features verbs.

· The leading reason that nonprofits don’t have taglines is…they never thought of it (33%).

· Human services lead the way in having taglines (75%), with grantmakers just behind.

· Environmental organizations hold up the rear, with only 30% using taglines (while the field is becoming increasingly high-profile, complex and competitive).

Download the report here:
http://www.gettingattention.org/nonprofit_tagline_report.html

Seth Godin on brochures.

by Michael Hoffman
Wednesday, May 21st, 2008

I did a webinar today for about 400 professionals from America’s YMCAs about the web and membership marketing. I will write more about this, but I was reminded of my audience and their questions while reading Seth Godin’s online discussion on the Chronicle of Philanthropy’s web site.

You can see the conversation with Seth here. A highlight for me was the question about brochures. Here’s the full, unedited exchange on that subject:

Question from Tennessee Nonprofit:
Are brochures dead?

Seth Godin:
and buried

What’s in a Number?

by Kelly Luchtman
Friday, April 18th, 2008

What’s your message? It might depend on your number–501(c)3 or 501(c)4 or 527.

Because this is an election year, many of our projects have a political bent. But how much of one? Well, that depends on the type of nonprofit status a client holds. Most of our clients are 501(c)3s, but some are 501(c)4s or 527s. The degree to which they can speak out on political issues or campaigns is determined by their designation. Some of our clients, like the Sierra Club, have all three designations, in which case, their money has to be divided into different funds with c3, c4, or 527 designations, and used appropriately. (There are actually 28 different 501c designations! But we’re only going to talk about three here).

501(c)3s are defined by the IRS as charitable, religious, scientific or educational organizations and mostly consist of public or private foundations such as Red Cross or Habitat for Humanity. The money they use for media is generally to educate viewers about issues or an organization’s mission, with or without a call to action at the end, such as “join us” or “donate now”. Although they can heighten public awareness about certain issues, they aren’t allowed to show political affiliation or urge people to vote for or against a specific candidate. They can only use a small percentage of funds to lobby. They can issue a “Tell Congress you’re fed up” statement, as it is not specific to any candidate, or release a non-partisan report on a politically charged issue such as global warming, but they must stop short of advocating for or against a particular candidate.

What we hear often is that many (c)3s don’t go as far as they can because they worry that if they violate the restrictions, they will lose their nonprofit status.

c4 funds are different. 501(c)4 organizations are described in the IRS code as non-profits that promote social welfare; but unlike a (c)3, a 501(c)4 organization can lobby for specific policy change. Examples of prominent c4s include NARAL Pro Choice America and Moveon.org Civic Action. Here is an example of the difference: A 501(c)3 can tell you how important it is that you use your right to vote, but a c4 can ask you to sign a petition to Congress about a specific piece of legislation. However, c4 money cannot be used in election campaigns on behalf of or against any candidates.

A 527 group (or 527 funds) can influence the nomination, election, appointment or defeat of candidates for public office. 527 money can be used on behalf of or against candidates; for instance, Political Action Committees (PACs) are 527s. Here is where it gets confusing if it isn’t already. A 527 is NOT allowed to coordinate with a specific election campaign. Rather, it must be an “interest group” who is advocating on issues or mobilizing voters. Not surprisingly, sometimes 527s get into trouble for pushing the limits. For example, in the 2004 election cycle, Swift Boat Veterans for Truth was a famous 527 that was eventually accused of coordinating with George Bush’s campaign in its anti-John Kerry ads during the presidential campaign.

Are you confused yet? Well, let me tell you, it can be hairy trying to work out messaging for these various organizations or funds in the video and social media marketing campaigns we undertake on their behalf. But we really enjoy the challenge and are happy to be doing a lot of work this cycle around the critical elections this fall.

Chronicle of Philanthropy - Where will the donors come from?

by Michael Hoffman
Tuesday, April 1st, 2008

I was quoted a bunch in the latest issue of the Chronicle of Philanthropy. The article is about the decline of direct mail and the rise of online prospecting. Four — count ‘em, 4 — of our clients are mentioned in the article. Amnesty International, American Jewish World Service, AVODAH: The Jewish Service Corp and ISIS.

They even linked to the microsite we did for AVODAH, Jews4NewOrleans.org. If you haven’t seen it, go there and donate.

Here’s the article:

From the issue dated April 3, 2008

New Rules of Attraction

As traditional fund-raising methods falter, charities look for new ways to appeal to online donors

By Holly Hall

This week the Nature Conservancy will kick off a campaign to ask online donors to give $1 apiece to help the charity plant a billion trees in Brazil’s rain forest. But conservancy officials have no idea if the electronic drive will meet its goal of raising $1-million.

The Plant a Billion campaign is designed to attract people who have never previously given to the environmental organization. But it could “go gangbusters or be a flop,” says Sue Citro, the charity’s senior manager for digital membership.

For an organization that raises more money than all but a handful of charities, such uncertainty is unusual. But at big charities across the country, fund raisers face that same queasy feeling as they try to figure out a solution to an unsettling reality. Traditional approaches to seeking new donors by mail or telephone are growing less effective and more expensive every year, yet online appeals are not raising enough to replace them.

“Direct mail is on life support,” says Michael Hoffman, chief executive of See3, a Chicago consulting firm that specializes in nonprofit fund raising and communications. “Charities that have relied on direct mail to get new donors have to start thinking about what’s next, or they will wake up one day and find that an aggressive start-up has taken their place.”

Mailings Lose Ground

Plenty of charities still raise most of their contributions with direct mail, but mass mailings are losing their power to attract new supporters. In 2007, the number of new donors who responded to charity mailings dropped by a median of 6.2 percent in a study of 72 of the nation’s biggest charities, on top of another 10.4-percent median drop in 2006.

Online fund raising offers a promising alternative, especially since people who make their first gift to charity online give one and a half times as much as those whose first gift was made by mail, according to Target Analytics, a Boston company that conducted the studies of both online and direct-mail results. Repeat gifts by online donors also tend to be larger.

But persuading donors to give online for the first time is not easy, says Ettore Rossetti, associate director of Internet marketing at Save the Children. The charity has solicited donations from people who signed an online petition to help needy children, but that approach has achieved only “mixed success,” he says.

“Advocacy people tend to be engaged in lending their voice, not necessarily opening their wallet.”

To figure out what approaches will attract first-time donors, many charities are hiring extra staff members to devise and test new ideas, and are upgrading software to analyze the results. Until such solicitations become more lucrative, however, most charities are still spending about as much as they did on direct mail, telemarketing, and other traditional ways of finding new donors.

“I get executive directors all the time who want to abandon direct-mail acquisition completely,” says Jeff Patrick, president of Common Knowledge, a San Francisco company that advises charities on online fund raising and marketing. “Online fund raising will continue to grow, but it will not replace direct mail in five years,” Mr. Patrick predicts. The movement from offline to online giving, he adds, “is an evolution, not a revolution.”

Other fund-raising experts agree that online fund raising has a long way to go before it becomes a successful way to attract new donors.

“This is an extremely confusing period,” says Mark Rovner, president of Sea Change Strategies, a Takoma Park, Md., fund-raising consulting company. “The old ways aren’t working, and the new ways are not clear.”

Still, fund raisers have found some new approaches in recent months that are helping them better attract donors who can eventually become the lifeblood of an organization. Among them:

Make pitches in person. World Vision, the international relief group, asks people who make monthly gifts to “sponsor” a needy child overseas to volunteer to seek donations from other people.

Two and a half years ago, the charity started recruiting people to give presentations about monthly giving to their colleagues at work or church. People who give at least eight presentations a year are named “Child Ambassadors.” Members of the ambassador group, which has grown to 255 people, must apply for the volunteer position and agree to a background check.

Last year, volunteers recruited more than 4,000 new monthly donors.

Vicki Casper, a flight attendant at Southwest Airlines, is World Vision’s most successful recruiter. She has single-handedly persuaded 400 people in the past two years to become monthly donors, including a passenger on a recent flight to Indianapolis. He offered to sponsor a dozen children for at least a year and, as he got off the plane, handed Ms. Casper checks for each child totaling more than $5,000.

If her results don’t attest to Ms. Casper’s dedication, the recorded greeting on her cell phone does: “Hi, this is Vicki Casper, World Vision Child Ambassador, standing as a link between you and the poor and needy of this world.”

With the ambassadors, “we’ve seen big potential,” says Miyon Kautz, World Vision’s national director of volunteers. In fact, she says, the charity has just finished training three new staff members who will recruit ambassadors regionally. The goal for each region: obtaining 1,000 new monthly donors over the next 12 months.

Tap existing online donors. Charities can take a lesson from the “member-get-a-member” drives held by professional societies, says Kevin Whorley, a Bethesda, Md., consultant. After running direct-mail fund raising at Catholic Relief Services for several years, Mr. Whorley now advises associations.

Holding contests and offering prizes or other rewards can improve charities’ ability to get donors engaged in finding new supporters, he says.

As an example, he points to the National Association of Home Builders’ annual membership day, in which local branches compete during the year to see which one can sign up the most new members.

Winners receive modest prizes, such as an upgrade to a better hotel at the association’s annual conference or a fleece jacket, notes Mr. Whorley. The most recent membership day yielded more than 12,000 new members.

“It is fascinating to me how the member-get-a-member thing, which is an old-school technique, gets new traction in this new world of online relationships,” says Mr. Hoffman, the consultant. He is now working with American Jewish World Service, an international relief group, to design an online campaign to persuade the charity’s donors to get involved in finding new supporters.

Mr. Hoffman suggests, based on his research into what makes such campaigns successful for associations, that charities include in their pitches to existing supporters incentives such as the chance to win a trip, a clear description of what difference donors’ participation will make, easy-to-use online tools, and concrete goals for enlisting new donors.

“You can’t just say, ‘Tell your friends about this great organization,’” Mr. Hoffman says. “It is far better to say, ‘Help us recruit 500 new members by June 1 so we can send 5,000 mosquito nets to Africa at the beginning of mosquito season to fight malaria.’”

Couple advocacy projects with online fund raising. The Planned Parenthood Federation of America knew that anti-abortion protesters planned to show up at 10 of the charity’s clinics over 40 days in the fall, so it used the occasion to start “I am Emily X,” an online video diary and blog.

The site featured videotaped statements from Planned Parenthood clinic workers who described the effects of the demonstration on both themselves and patients, some of whom were harassed by the protesters.

Visitors to the site were invited to post comments and messages to the clinics throughout the protest, and they were asked to pledge a small amount of money, anywhere from 5 cents to $10, for each of the 511 protesters Planned Parenthood counted in front of its clinics.

The site, coupled with e-mail appeals about the project, raised $96,531, and more than half of those who gave were new donors, says Tom Subak, Planned Parenthood’s vice president for online services. “We got a phenomenal response.”

Test fund-raising elements of Web sites. Amnesty International is using new software to randomly send online visitors to slightly different versions of a single Web page so it can see which online elements do the most to persuade people to make a donation or visit other parts of the organization’s site.

After two months, Amnesty found a version of its donation page that increased the number of people who made a gift from 35 to 55 percent, says Steve Daigneault, managing director of Internet communications. In the month of December alone, he says, Amnesty raised $128,000 more with the improved donation page; than it would have otherwise. Those returns, he adds, are many times greater than the cost of the software.

Mr. Daigneault is now conducting additional tests to improve the organization’s online action center, where visitors can sign petitions and engage in other forms of advocacy; that part of the site is the main way in which Amnesty collects e-mail addresses of potential donors.

“I don’t think many nonprofits realize how important this is,” he says of the tests. “Once people catch on, it will be huge.”

Get a celebrity to talk up an online appeal. Save the Children recruited 1,800 new donors and generated more than $50,000 with an online campaign that enabled visitors to its Web site to download or send electronic Valentine’s Day cards in exchange for a donation of $1 or more.

But the holiday alone was not enough to make the online greeting cards work for the children’s charity. The key to success, Mr. Rossetti says, was the actress Julianne Moore, who agreed to lend her support to the effort. To that end, she promoted the online cards when she appeared on The View, a popular daytime current-events show aimed at women. The actress has agreed to promote the e-cards again next year.

Do a year-end campaign online. Planned Parenthood has recruited thousands of new donors by sending a series of e-mail messages during the final month of the year. In December, before asking for any money, the charity sent 50,000 people a survey via e-mail to assess their interest in Planned Parenthood programs. That was followed by two other e-mail messages: a holiday greeting and a link to a YouTube video slide show highlighting the charity’s work over the past year. A fourth message asked for a donation.

The monthlong online campaign raised $1.6-million, including more than $500,000 in a single day, December 31. Out of the 8,957 donors, more than 1,200 contributors who gave a total of $246,000 last year were new to the organization.

The online year-end campaign has proven to be “one of our primary recruitment methods,” says Mr. Subak, the charity’s vice president for online services.

Promote online projects in social networks. Internet Sexuality Information Services, an Oakland, Calif., group, initially drew few entries when it asked people age 15 to 30 to enter an online video contest to express their views on sex education.

That began to change after two staff members began combing through social-networking sites, commenting on blogs, searching online news outlets, writing to reporters, and sharing the group’s own news — that it had received the first 10 entries, for example. By the time the deadline for entries passed three months later, the charity had received 70 entries.

While the video contest was not designed to raise money, the publicity efforts are helping the group attract contributions from new donors, says Deb Levine, executive director of the organization.

Three foundations have asked the group to submit proposals, two for six-figure grants. “This is a result of the visibility we generated through the contest and our positioning ourselves as thought leaders online,” she says.

Build a dedicated Web site. Some charities are creating stand-alone Web sites for specific projects, rather than just sending people to find information on one big site. The separate sites can be promoted to potential donors with related interests.

Avodah: the Jewish Service Corps, which involves young people in yearlong public-service projects in Chicago, New York, and Washington, has a new Web site that promotes its plan to start working in New Orleans in September. The charity tested the new site in December, using it to raise $15,000 to match a grant of the same amount contributed by an anonymous donor.

“People went to this site who we wouldn’t have contact with normally,” says Ilanit Gerblich Kalir, Avodah’s associate executive director. She says that the charity is seeking another challenge grant and plans to promote the site more aggressively online in coming months to people who have an interest in New Orleans and relief work.

“This is a low-cost way to get the word out to an audience you would otherwise not reach,” says Ms. Kalir. “We are a very small organization. We don’t have the money to do acquisition with direct mail.”

The Age of YouTube: Using Online Video to Reach the Masses

by Michael Hoffman
Monday, March 24th, 2008

One of my presentations at the Nonprofit Technology Conference (08NTC) was The Age of YouTube: Using Online Video to Reach the Masses.

Here is the session description:

Broadband is finally here and the organizations that are creating compelling and viral video content are reaping the rewards. Those gala dinner videos are no longer enough. Readily available digital video cameras and editing software allow your organization to capture stories and introduce a wider world to your mission. Video content can be seamlessly integrated into your website and provide the compelling hook for fundraising and advocacy. Portable media players enable you to embed your message in hundreds of sites. But, how do you capitalize on the opportunity?
Takeaways:

1. The benefits to using web video
2. Case studies of innovative uses of video
3. How to effectively use video in your e-campaigns

I opened the session looking at the world we live in — the environment nonprofit messages are competing with. Here is the video I showed at the start of the session:


Here is the slide deck I used for the session. Mostly, these are just illustrative of talking points.

Here is are relevant links to the videos we talked about from the session:

The power of video to breakthrough all the clutter. Example: Yes. We. Can.

The dinner video.
Other pieces you can make from a dinner video. (American Jewish World Service Passover Video)

Bread for the World video we showed as an example of something easy you can do with your staff.

Videos from Amnesty International showing both the man-on-the-street technique and how you can use video in an online campaign and how you can make videos with very different tone out of the same source material.

The funny video.
The serious video.

The PSA type video. An example from Chicago Foundation for Women and a very edgy UK one from Greenpeace International.

A documentary-style video from Columbia College Chicago.

Care2 is an online community where you can promote a video and seed your list in order to reach new audiences. If you are interested, you can learn more by calling Clinton O’Brien
Vice President, Business Development
Email: partners[at]earth.care2[dot]com
Phone: 202-785-7308

AOL quietly offers a program of free banners for certain organizations. If you are interested you should call us at See3 and we can tell you more about it.

If I left something out of this list that I mentioned in the session, please let me know with a comment.

Steve Grove’s YouTube for Nonprofits Tip Sheet. (Steve did not make the session at the last minute, but we got his tips. I will ask Steve some of the questions and publish the answers.)

The Basics

• Reach Out. Post videos that get YouTube viewers talking, and then stay in the conversation with comments and video responses.

• Partner Up. Find other organizations on YouTube who complement your mission, and work together to promote each other.

• Keep It Fresh. Put up new videos regularly and keep them short—ideally under 5 minutes.

• Spread Your Message. Share links and the embed code for your videos with supporters so they can help get the word out.

• Be Genuine. We have a wide demographic, so high view counts come from content that’s compelling, rather than what’s “hip.”

Your Channel:

• Design Your Channel. Go to Channel Design, then choose a color scheme to match your logo or other materials, and decide which modules you’d like to display on your public profile.

• Add Banners and URLs. Go to Branding Options, upload your icons and banners, and enter any of the other options you’d like to use.

• Choose Your Top Video. The top video on your channel automatically plays each time someone visits your page—choose it wisely. Update this video regularly to keep it fresh, or keep your most important video there as an introduction.

• Get Donations Flowing. Sign up for Google checkout, then go to your Google Checkout Options, enter your ID and Merchant Key, and choose donation amounts. Once you’ve filled in the information, the button will appear on your public profile and all of your video pages.

Your Content:

• Direct Dialogue. Make videos that create a dialogue about your work and what you’re trying to achieve. Ask questions and solicit video responses.

• Call to Action. Harness the power of user-generated content by asking supporters to submit videos to your cause. Create a group to collect these videos together; find ways to give recognition to the best ones.

• Tell Serial Stories. Engage viewers with a series of videos that tell a story around a specific theme, and keep them coming back for more. Once you’ve created a few episodes, put them into a playlist. This allows you to develop several video narratives targeted at particular demographics.

• Respond to Current Events. Address relevant news stories by posting videos that explain your position. You can then embed them in emails to your supporters—a video message can be more effective than a text-laden email.

• Use Endorsements. Whether they’re from celebrities or people you’ve impacted, it helps to have supporters chiming in about why your work matters.

Networking and Distribution

• Tag and Title Well. Tag and title your videos with relevant keywords—that’s how users will find your content as they navigate YouTube.

• Embed, Embed, Embed. Broadcast your videos over the web by embedding them on your website and encouraging supporters to do the same on theirs.

• Click “Subscribe”. Subscribe to the YouTube channels you’re interested in to stay up-to-date on their content; they may return the favor.

• Engage and Interact. Draw attention to your work by interacting with both allies and adversaries through video responses, text comments, or joint projects/debates.

• Make Web Traffic a Two-Lane Road. Use your video description field and branded banner URL to drive users to your website, and link to your YouTube channel from your website to encourage people to interact with your video content here.

For video production tips, go to: http://youtube.com/video_toolbox

Aspirational Marketing

by Michael Hoffman
Tuesday, February 26th, 2008

Do people see themselves as you see them? This is an important question for anyone trying to market a product or idea or organization. Do you see people as old or young or religious or rich? They might not see themselves that way.

On the IdeaDrivenMarketing.com blog there is a post about a social networking/content sites for Baby Boomers called Eons.com. This site is a failure due to a basic misunderstanding how their target market sees themselves.

What went wrong with their strategy? Let me enumerate the ways:

* The LAST THING Boomers want is to be labeled as such. We don’t want to be viewed as “old.” Ever!
* And neither do so-called “seniors.” (unless they really are seniors, which to me is 75 or 80 plus…John McCain is 72!).
* Creating an age restricted, velvet rope around a label no Boomer wanted in the first place was the dumbest thing a web company could ever do.
* Just as many Boomers don’t welcome that label, you should not assume that a “Millennial” wants to be characterized as such. Nor an African-American, Gay consumer, Hispanic, Gen X’er, etc.
* In fact, forget the labels. Big mistake in marketing.

The last point is the most salient:

Remember, the Toyota Scion and Honda Element were both similarly designed for and marketed to twenty somethings…young people. Guess who bought a ton of them? Boomers in their 40s and 50s! There is a big strategic lesson here for marketers. People are fundamentally aspirational in their buying decisions, and their lives in general (which is one reason why Barack Obama is having such stunning success in his campaign, and not just for the legions of young people who flock to his speeches and his website.) You’ve go to appeal to individuals’ hopes and dreams, not simply the reality of who they are now.

People are fundamentally aspiration in their decisions. Who does your target market aspire to be? Is your organization or campaign helping them become that person?

Thanks to Karen Taggart for the link.

Tag Line: Keeping You Smarter Through Blogging

by Michael Hoffman
Tuesday, December 4th, 2007

Ever think about tag lines?

“The real thing.”

“It’s not just for breakfast anymore.”

“Destroying Tokyo since 1954.”
(From Godzilla, if you couldn’t guess.)

Our tag line at See3 is “Empowering Nonprofits by Powering Their Media”

Nonprofits have tag lines also. Some are descriptive, “The Jewish Service Corp” for AVODAH and Easter Seals “Disability Services”. Columbia University “In the City of New York.” Well, duh.

CFED says “Expanding Economic Opportunity.” It’s good to have a tag line that’s hard to argue with.

The Red Cross could have this tag line “One crisis after another” (Of course they would be talking about their own leadership.)

Consultant Nancy Schwartz is doing some research about nonprofit tag lines. Take the nonprofit tag line survey here and I promise to share with you the results once Nancy has it all put together.

A Vision of Your Target Market

by Daniel Hartman
Wednesday, November 28th, 2007

Most nonprofits are thinking about how to reach younger audiences. Here is an insightful video about their behaviors. Many of you have already seen this video called A Vision of Students Today, added to YouTube over a month ago and now the 94th most discussed video of all time on YouTube with over 6,000 comments. For those who haven’t, I recommend it (be patient through the first 90 seconds of premise).