Posts Tagged ‘advertising’

Join the call for Facebook Ad Grants | Weekly Roundup

March 5th, 2010 by Elizabeth Ricca

A weekly roundup of interesting reads from the online world of nonprofit communications. Check out my Delicious bookmarks or follow me on Twitter for more noteworthy links.

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In the mood for buzz | Weekly Roundup

February 12th, 2010 by Elizabeth Ricca
  • In case you haven’t heard, there’s a new social network in town. Is Buzz a Twitter-killer? Should Facebook be running scared? No one knows (although some people think they do). While you’re watching the drama unfold, make sure your nonprofit has claimed a Gmail address and that you’ve set up your Google profile.
  • Happy sixth birthday, Facebook. My, you’re awfully big for your age. Check out this very interesting information visualization from Muhammad Saleem depicting Facebook’s growth (did you know that about 200 million people log into Facebook every day? That’s about 2/3 the size of the U.S. population).
  • All this data is making Facebook ads sound pret-ty appealing right about now. If you’ve considered factoring a Facebook ad campaign into your fundraising or advocacy efforts, this detailed how-to from Nonprofit Tech 2.0 is a must-read.
  • Kaitlin LaCasse at Idealware shares examples of a few nonprofits who’ve set up online “dashboards” to monitor progress toward key goals (fundraising, memberships, you name it). Fun with online tools can be practical, too!
  • Your organization has it’s social media game face on. But is your executive director ready to tweet? Beth Kanter shares some examples of EDs and CEOs who blog or tweet, as well as some tips to help you decide when it’s time to push your executive leadership into the deep end of the social media pool.

A weekly roundup of interesting reads from the online world of nonprofit communications. Check out my Delicious bookmarks for more noteworthy links.

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Pretty sneaky, sis!

November 11th, 2009 by Sarah Durham

If the phrase, “pretty sneaky, sis” means anything to you, chances are you’re 35 or older and watched some amount of children’s television during the late 1970s or early 1980s. The line is in the last 5 seconds of a 30-second TV spot for Connect Four, a kid’s game that’s a variation on checkers (but 4 across).

If you watch the commercial today, it’s wholly unremarkable. In fact, you’d be hard-pressed to recall it a few minutes later if you’d never seen it. But for those of us who grow up watching TV during this era, the ad’s trite dialogue is seared into our memory. Why? Because during the 1970s and 80s you could count the number of TV stations on your fingers even faster than you could adjust your rabbit ear antennas, and that commercial played constantly. (In fact, I bought Connect Four recently as a gift for a kid- and I could hear that line of bad dialogue echoing in my ears as I clicked ‘purchase’ online.)

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Information is everywhere

August 4th, 2009 by Sarah Durham

If you enter the subway near Port Authority you might just pass through this. Yes, that’s right: H&M is advertising on the little spinning turnstile you have to push through to enter the subway.

Turnstile at Port Authority

Turnstile at Port Authority

Years ago, I read that the average American receives thousands of marketing messages every blooming day. I tried to find the exact source of that stat and found several references, ranging from 3,000 to 5,000 messages daily. This was, incidentally, back in the days before Facebook, Twitter, and other social media reshaped our communication habits. If I had to make an educated guess, I’d say that the average American receives at least 3,000 marketing messages daily, but the average wired American or urban American may be receiving closer to 10,000.

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