Remove Feeds Remove Fund Remove Map Remove Meme
article thumbnail

How to structure your nonprofit social media plan

Get Fully Funded

An editorial calendar is basically just a content map or a guide that helps you map out your nonprofit’s content (including social media) for the year. Memes, stories, photos – anything that causes a laugh or a smile. Any of these goals can be accomplished with original or shared content, videos, memes, and photos.

article thumbnail

Has the Ice Bucket Challenge Spawned Charity Jacking?

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

Charity Jacking goes one step beyond “Social Media Meme Morphing.” ” A social media meme is an activity, concept, catchphrase or piece of media which spreads, often as mimicry, from person to person via the Internet. Phase 1: Personal Challenges with Cold Water to Raise Money.

Charity 133
professionals

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

5 Keys to Effective Knowledge Transfer for Nonprofits

Wild Apricot

from pitching your cause to donors and funding agencies, to delivering services to members and clients; and from seeking public support and the ear of decision-makers, to collaborating with other organizations in projects of common interest. and more precisely, the effective transfer or exchange of knowledge â?? June 8, 2008 11:03 AM.

article thumbnail

Effective Social Media Planning & Storytelling for Nonprofit Fundraising Success

CauseVox

In a world where billions of people spend hours each day scrolling through their news feeds, social media is ripe for cultivating generosity. By mapping out your content in advance, you ensure a consistent presence on your supporters’ feeds while maximizing the impact of your messaging to align with specific campaign timelines.

article thumbnail

The Real Housewives of Social Media: Cooking up Recipes for Nonprofit Success

NTEN

They built an iGoogle dashboard and fed RSS feeds based on information they were seeking in online social networks. Then, grab the search RSS feed and add it to your iGoogle. We used this technique for DIGG, forums, Twitter, Bing, and Google and then set up various searches along with monitoring of certain Twitter feeds.