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Social Web and Altruism Nick Booth, high fibre podcasting blog, points us to some fascinating brain research that has discovered the part of the brain responsible for altruism and he links it to why nonprofits should be using the social web to advance their missions. 20 practices.
If researchers are writing about topics like sentiment analysis, facial recognition, the categorization of gender, race, or politics, they have to consult with Google’s PR team and legal advisors who will look over their work and suggest changes. But for many, including employees at Google, these objections rang false.
After sitting the problem, we re-framed the question as : “How can we shift mindsets (org/ind) around self care so that stakeholders (staff/leadership/board) believe it serves the organization’s mission?” Scarcity captures the mind. The mind orients automatically, powerfully, toward unfulfilled needs.
First, believe deeply – in your heart and then in your brain – that donors matter. P ut together an all-org donor listening team—Ask for help then show the WIIFM of donor feedback via tangible examples. Rachel Muir , CFRE, Nonprofit Consultant, Speaker & Trainer. Joyaux , ACFRE, Joyaux Associates.
First, believe deeply – in your heart and then in your brain – that donors matter. P ut together an all-org donor listening team—Ask for help then show the WIIFM of donor feedback via tangible examples. Rachel Muir , CFRE, Nonprofit Consultant, Speaker & Trainer. Joyaux , ACFRE, Joyaux Associates.
Sit in a circle and share ideas and resources, while the "presenters" are facilitators instead of providers of one-way brain dumps via PowerPoint. It's a nice mix as you have someone from a larger org, someone from a smaller org, and a consultant-type. I love it. I was thinking more of internal challenges.
Sit in a circle and share ideas and resources, while the "presenters" are facilitators instead of providers of one-way brain dumps via PowerPoint. It's a nice mix as you have someone from a larger org, someone from a smaller org, and a consultant-type. . I love it. I was thinking more of internal challenges.
And I operate a grants and fundraising consulting business, and we support nonprofits all over the country, started off primarily with those in the DMV area but it’s expanded since then. Rachel: I was working in management consulting during the ARRA funding of 2009. So, as Steven shared, we can share a little bit more about me.
I’ll never forget the story of a now consultant, but executive director when we talked about like, “Well, what did you do for support or for help when you did this job?” But three months is a little too long for that human brain to imagine. You can really imagine eight weeks well in your human brain. .
For this edition of the Hubcast, we’re talking with Tony Martignetti, a New York-based nonprofit consultant. That’s who I have in mind as I pick the brains of experts every single week and planned giving has certainly been among the topics we’ve talked about.
And a little shout out to our colleague Tina Cincotti who’s a lovely consultant based in Boston, Tina created this. ” So we have in our brains, the amygdala, the fear center, where you have flight, fright, and freeze as the emotional reactions to things that’s scare you. Next slide, please, Kevin. .
Speak to the part of the brain that controls action-taking. In this short piece, Tony speaks with fundraising consultants, John Lepp and Kimberly MacKenzie about the importance of refocusing your message to be more donor-centric. Tell stories. Evoke emotion. Ready for this?
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