Remove Attitude Remove Culture Remove Language Remove Offline
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Dancefloor and Balcony: What I learned about emergent online collaboration from Eugene Eric Kim

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

The focus of Eugene's work with this network was to better understand its community, the most promising group practices, and have an open discussion that would facilitate learning and interaction among these leaders who were miles apart, spoke different languages, and had Internet access challenges. 1) Everybody is People.

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One Thing Most Nonprofits Stink at (Donor Retention) and How You Can Change It in 2019

Connection Cafe

According to the latest research from Blackbaud’s Charitable Giving Report : The average donor retention rates for first-year offline-only donors is 29%. Speaking your donors’ language — lose the jargon! Building a culture of philanthropy throughout your organization. That’s shocking (and pretty scary).

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How Networked Nonprofit Use Facebook SMARTly

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

1: Create a Facebook culture inside your organization. Networked Nonprofits have a created a Facebook culture inside their organizations. The Mayo Clinic has addressed in its social media policy – many nonprofits have borrowed their language. Promote Facebook through other channels online and offline.

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[VIDEO] The 3 V’s of Virtual Communication

Bloomerang

What’s your body language? The attitude you present is assumed to be the attitude of your organization. So your attitude and your demeanor, they change so often throughout the week. I have to get offline,” you have to wonder, “do they really have something to do?” Great questions, you guys.

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