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How to structure your nonprofit social media plan

Get Fully Funded

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. Many people scroll their social feeds and don’t turn the sound on. Engagement through thank-yous, polls, contests, or highlighting a volunteer or project.

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150+ Creative Ways to Show Donors Appreciation

Nonprofit Tech for Good

Does your organization stream live on Instagram, YouTube, Vimeo, or Facebook? These can be formatted as zoom backgrounds, sharable tiles/images/memes online, a Facebook cover image, or something small they can place in their electronic signature. Does your organization have a podcast or radio show for promotion? Touch the work.

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50 (More) Social Media Tactics for Nonprofits

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

Chad graciously agreed to write up a guest post — and start a meme asking nonprofit and social media folks to add their favorite social media tactic in the comments below or using the hashtag #50smt and aggregated here. If you think this will be an issue, simply write out a “commenting policy” on the info tab of your Facebook page.

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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.