Posts Tagged ‘audience’

Finding your audience – a lesson from the World Cup

June 24th, 2010 by Madeleine Milan

As you may have noticed – thanks in part to people in team jerseys staggering out of bars at 9:30am over the past few weeks – the (soccer) World Cup is taking place at the moment.

Being British, I’m used to watching World Cup matches in big, beery crowds. It’s all part of the fun: there’s nothing quite like the camaraderie you get from watching your over-hyped, overpaid team crash out of the tournament yet again with a large group of sweaty and disappointed strangers.

So as the World Cup approached this year and I realized I might not be able to find such a crowd in New York, I was dejected. “After all,” I thought, “there can’t be that many people in New York who want to go to the pub and bellow at the England soccer team at 10:00am on a weekday.”

As it turned out — I needn’t have worried. There are plenty of people in New York who want to do just that. All I had to do was find them, and with the help of friends and some googling, find them I did.

For nonprofits, finding supporters for your cause might sometimes seem about as difficult as finding British soccer fans in the Big Apple — particularly if your cause is very specific.

But as I’ve seen this week, there’s an audience out there for almost everything, it’s just a question of finding them. One call to a friend led me to meet more  soccer fan friends – asking your existing supporters to forward your latest online campaign could introduce you to many of their like-minded friends and family. A quick Google search led me to a bar full of fans – a quick search of Meet-ups and Facebook groups might reveal new prospects ready and eager to join your cause.

But be careful: finding your audience is only the first step. Just like the England team, if you don’t deliver on the promises that lead new prospects to join your cause (like, oh say, being the best English team in the last 10 years or having a genuine chance at winning this thing), you’ll quickly have a disappointed and potentially rowdy crowd on your hands…

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Reality show takes a page out of “Brandraising”

May 19th, 2010 by Guest Blogger

Guest post from Denise McMahan, founder and publisher of Cause Planet. Read more about Brandraising and other great articles at causeplanet.org.

It hit me last night when I saw a commercial for American Idol. The cast must have read Sarah Durham’s new book called Brandraising. I knew Durham and her New York agency colleagues at Big Duck were hip, but her guidelines for success have even reached pop culture. The parallels are remarkable, so hear me out. This taxonomy will make you realize just how relevant Brandraising is and why you should be reading on for the benefit of your own organization and, at the very least, help add credibility to the time you have invested in watching television.

1. Brandraising:  The overview

Idol: “Decide what kind of performer you want to be, what genre, and stick with it.”

Durham explains that her model starts with the “organizational level,” which makes up the top seven elements of the brandraising pyramid, because they direct all aspects of the organization’s work. These elements are the vision, mission, values, objectives, audiences, positioning and personality. The “identity level” is what most people think of as where the branding takes place. This is where the visual identity and the messaging platform play out. The third and bottom level of the pyramid is the “experiential level,” which consists of the variety of channels through which nonprofits can communicate with their donors, clients and stakeholders, such as print, online, on air, in person and mobile. (A visual of this overview can be viewed at www.josseybass.com/go/sarahdurham, using the password professional.)

The judges on the American idol show repeat the same messages every week in hopes that contestants will latch on to their advice and rise to the competition.  Advice ranges from “Think about who you are and be consistent from week to week,” to “You’ve got a unique look and sound, which makes you a compelling performer.” These remarks by the judges could pass as organizational and identity level advice in Durham’s model where she addresses vision, values, positioning and personality, as well as visual identity and messaging platform.

2. Brandraising: The long view

Idol: “Are you in it to win it?”

Durham emphasizes the importance of the “long view” and how this position can address common barriers and empower nonprofit leaders to weather challenges and act with planning and agility. Drawbacks of the short view that some nonprofits find themselves taking include working reactively, which obviously requires more budget and time. For example, waiting until a piece needs to be developed for a looming deadline means crisis communication and expenditures. Rather than succumb to the accidental branding activities described in chapter two, savvy nonprofits save money and time by regularly monitoring peer organizations, managing information saturation and reinforcing the big idea.

In American Idol, the judges always ask the contestants “Are you in it to win it?” In other words, your focus on the long view or end goal will help you concentrate on the importance of planning and practicing for each performance.

3. Brandraising: Audience-centric communications

Idol: “You finally connected with the audience tonight.”

According to Durham, many organizations make the mistake of becoming self-absorbed in the process of resolving who they are as an organization when crafting messages to their donors. Durham encourages nonprofits to balance navel contemplation with a focus on “audience-centric communications.” When you plan on sending out a direct mail or email campaign, do you know which your audience prefers? Are you tapping into the personal motivations of why people give to your organization? Durham reminds readers that people generally give because they are moved to do so and they know it’s the right thing to do. She challenges readers to recreate that feeling in a donor.

American Idol contestants who are doing well at this late stage in the game can obviously sing well and have great stage presence, but what contributes to that presence is a genuine connection with the audience and responding to how they vote.

4. Brandraising: Prepare for the mobile future

Idol:  “Text a vote for your favorite American Idol”

Durham reminds readers that fundraising by mobile phone is still in its early stages, but it is here to stay. There are enough early success stories by other organizations, as well as examples of people rising up to meet the support needed in the wake of natural disasters, such as the recent one in Haiti. Whether or not your organization is ready to launch a mobile phone campaign, it’s not too early to begin collecting numbers for the future.

According to Telewatcher.com, on average, 33 million people are voting each week this season on the show. In February 2010, Causecast listed eight different numbers you could text to make donations in support of the Chilean earthquake aftermath. We all know that the American Red Cross has raised more than $32 million via text-to-give, and that mobile has proven very useful for emergency situations.  What we didn’t quite know was how it would apply to the rest of the nonprofit world. Communications and strategy agency, Cone, has helped shed a little bit of light on this topic with their two-question online survey. Causecast noticed the following right off of the bat:

  • Text2Give is maturing – 13 percent of respondents donated via text message following the Haiti earthquake, compared to only 6 percent from Cone’s 2009 Consumer New Media Study.
  • 19 percent would rather text a donation to a cause or nonprofit organization than through other means (e.g.,write a check or donate online).
  • 18 percent are now more likely to text a donation to their favorite nonprofit organization if it is an available option.

Thanks for humoring me in this unlikely but useful comparison. If you haven’t read Durham’s Brandraising: How nonprofits raise visibility and money through smart communications, buy the book. It’s terrific. Or, you can read a Page to Practice summary by visiting our store or subscribing to our monthly service, which gives you access to all Page to Practice book summaries.

by Denise McMahan, founder and publisher of CausePlanet.org

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A Tale of Two Fundraisers

February 10th, 2010 by Dan Gunderman

Over a recent weekend, my wife and I attended two grassroots fundraisers for two very different causes.

It was the best of times.

Four words can sum up why the first fundraiser was awesome: Peruvian chicken house party.

Even though we live in the most diverse borough (sorry, Brooklynites: that’s Queens) in the most diverse city in the world (sorry, Boise: that’s New York City), my wife and I have a relatively homogeneous life. So when we had the chance to attend a party thrown by Peruvians, we were all for it. The host was trying to raise money to bring her daughter here from Peru. So she made a traditional Peruvian chicken dinner, which she sold for $10 a plate.

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Twitter: I think I get it. Now what do I tweet?

October 8th, 2009 by Elizabeth Ricca
What do I tweet?

What do I tweet?

A little while ago, we got a question from a client about Twitter. They have the basics down pat: they know the lingo, and they understand the importance of conversation. But they were curious about what kind of content they should tweet, and how to strike the right balance between carrying on conversation and self-promotion.

It’s a good question, and it got me thinking about the kind of content nonprofits might want to share on Twitter on a day-to-day basis, and how an organization can get the most out of microblogging.

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Twitter operas and spudly ducklings | Weekly Roundup

August 14th, 2009 by Elizabeth Ricca
  • As you may have heard, Facebook acquired FriendFeed this week. What’s FriendFeed, you ask, and why does it matter? Get up to speed with this handy primer on how to use the social sharing service.
  • The Royal Opera House has decided to write a new opera, with a storyline created entirely from suggestions sent in by their online community using Twitter. An interesting example of the possibilities (or perhaps the limitations; time will tell) of both Twitter as a tool and crowdsourcing as an opportunity to get people involved. Beth Kanter also shares some thoughts on the how/when/why of crowdsourcing on her blog this week.
  • Wherever you’re communicating, it’s important to keep your audience’s needs and interests in mind. A post on Wild Apricot’s blog reminds that your website needs compelling content—compelling to your site visitors, that is.
  • Blogs and tweets are all well and good, but they should be a balanced part of a complete communications strategy, as a post on Rally the Cause points out.
  • Have you stopped to think about what your nonprofit is getting out of your social media outreach? eJewish Philanthropy blog poses some questions to ask yourself when trying to anticipate and measure the return your nonprofit expects from its social media investments.
  • A small boy in the UK has unearthed a potato that looks just like a rubber duck! Okay, this has nothing to do with nonprofits or communications, but it’s about ducks, so I figure it’s fair game.

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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