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Social Media for Nonprofits – Making an Impact

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Presentation on theme: "Social Media for Nonprofits – Making an Impact"— Presentation transcript:

1 Social Media for Nonprofits – Making an Impact
Emily L. Phelps

2 Value of Social Media 47% of Americans learn about causes via social media and online channels 56% of those that support nonprofits on social confirm that compelling storytelling is what motivates them to take action 55% of those who engage with nonprofits via social media have been inspired to take further action

3 Platforms for Nonprofits
Use Facebook to let your audience get to know your organization House organizational video content to share Curate topics surrounding issues that touch your organization in real-time Syndicate content and use to impact search

4 Using Social to Support Nonprofits
Fundraising Awareness Advocacy Listening Recruitment

5 Social Media Best Practices

6 Content Is Key Who is your audience? What is your story?
What sets you apart? How can you add value to your audience?

7 Be Conversational

8 The 80/20 Rule 80% of content should be about your audience
Conversations Trend information Valuable insights 20% of content should promote specific organizational calls to action

9 Best Practices Quick Hits Make it visual Plan ahead
Quality over quantity LISTEN – Don’t just broadcast Be interactive Be inclusive

10 Social Media Pitfalls to Avoid
Do not be overly promotional Don’t ignore your audience Do NOT delete user posts even if they are negative Deleting spam is OKAY Do not ignore grammar – proofread before you post!

11 Platform Tips

12 Facebook Tips Rich content with pictures or video get more attention
Engage in two-way conversation Pose a question Request feedback Use as a fundraising tool but be strategic and engaging Be human

13 Twitter Tips Try to keep tweets to characters to allow for retweeting Research and identify your #hashtags Hashtags allow Twitter users to tap into a Twitter-wide conversation No more than 2 hashtags/tweet Use links (Bitly) and visuals to enhance your content Create private lists to organize your followers

14 Analytics

15 Measure for Success “If it can’t be measured, it didn’t happen.”
Organic vs. Paid Reach

16 Analytics – What to Measure
Vanity metrics are a start # of Followers/Fans # of Likes/Favorites Web views Actionable metrics mean more Active users Share of voice Sentiment analysis NOTE: All metrics should be tied to an organizational goal

17 Free Online Resources Management HootSuite Bitly Google Alerts Feedly
Measurement Social Mention Google Analytics Tweet Reach

18 Case Studies

19 Successful Nonprofit Social Campaigns
ASL/Pete Frates – #IceBucketChallenge UNICEF - Call to Action CPC – Peer-to-Peer Water Is Life - #FirstWorldProblems

20 Questions?

21 Thank you! Emily L. Phelps, Dell SecureWorks Social Media Manager


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