Call Today: 1-888-323-5001

FAQ's | Blog | Support

News and Updates from our Blog

Did You Know?
  • 77% of potential members will visit your website77% of potential members visit your website before they visit in person
    No better reason than to have a professional
    website that attracts visitors and provides detailed information and tools
  • Click for more informationYounger Audiences Want & Demand Modern Website Tools
    Today's youth have grown up using many online
    tools and they expect your churches website to
    have these. You're covered with us.
  • Click for more informationYou Will Save Time & Money
    Dealing With 1 Vendor

    We're that 1 Vendor. We not only do websites but email marketing, email accounts, telco services,
    offer free support and much more.
How Not For Profits Can Succeed Online - Social Networking
July 20, 2010 @ 2:29 PM by:

Social Networking has become extremely popular for one primary reason…  People want to connect.  Social networking sites have given people the ability to exchange ideas and information with other like minded individuals.   They can gather in large or small groups and virtually brainstorm, network, share and gain insights.   The question becomes, how do you harness this activity to benefit your organization?

Jump in with both feet:

When you join a social network, create a profile – but don’t just stop there.  Start a group or join other existing groups.   Sites like Facebook have groups – these groups give people who have a common interest a place to enter into discussions, share links, videos and photos and even promote new ideas.  Finding a group of people who would be interested in your cause is a simple matter of searching.  Let’s say you are looking for a group of people who are interested in helping victims of domestic violence, do a search on domestic violence and check out the groups that come up.  Try these searches:  Museums, Animal Safety, Diabetes.  If a group doesn’t exist that suits your needs… start one!

Do not discount MySpace.  Check out the the MySpace Impact Awards (http://www.myspace.com/impactawards).  The Impact Rewards honor organizations who work to create a positive difference in the world.  It may not win you donation dollars, but it will go a long way to creating trust and recognition in the online community.  The only thing you are required to do is set up a MySpace page for your organization and share your message.

Interact with the people you connect with on a regular basis.  Set aside a fixed amount on time on a daily or weekly basis to log in, check out your profile and share with others.  This is about building relationships.  I doubt that you would walk up to a stranger on the street and ask for support or money.  The same holds true for your online connections.  Let people get to know you and your organization and the trust will come.

Set your organization up to receive donations:

This may seem obvious, but in fact many Not for Profits don’t do this.  Both Facebook and MySpace have charity contribution widgets.  Facebook has Causes and MySpace has teamed up with PayPal to create donation widgets (PayPal account is required).  However, I should note that statistically, the donation amount is smaller ($10 or so) but it is from more people.   This is known as the Long Tail of Fundraising.  You get your message out – it reaches more people who give less but it spreads out (like a tail) over a longer period of time.  In addition ebay has Ebay Giving Works which allows people who are already auctioning items to donate a % to your organization.  Smaller sites like  Network for Good focus on gathering people who are looking to incorporate philanthropy into their lives.

Post Your Events and Invite Connections:

Facebook and MySpace both have public calendars for you to advertise your events on.  Google has one as well.  The advantage is the calendars get indexed in the search engines – just one more way for people to find your web site.

Share… Share… Share and don’t forget your web site:

All roads lead to Rome.  In everything you do your main goal is to get people back to your web site.

Set up a blog on your web site and link it to your Facebook, MySpace, Twitter and Google accounts.  This allows you to work once and spread the word in multiple places.  There are automated software programs such as twitterfeed (www.twitterfeed.com)  that send your post to twitter.  You can set up your Facebook account to have the status automatically update with your Twitter account.  In addition you can use the Blog Networks or Blog RSS Feeder Applications to automatically import blog posts into your Facebook profile.  I also use Ping.fm to blast out announcements to my Twitter, Facebook, MySpace and LinkedIn status lines.

Let’s assume you have 100 friends on LinkedIn or Facebook.  You send your message out to those 100 people.  Those 100 people then send it to their friends, say another 1000 people.  Those are 1000 people that you would have not been able to otherwise reach.  That is what Social Networking is about.  It will take an investment of time and energy to have it pay off, but it will pay off.

Keep Your Eye on the Conversation:

With the rewards comes some risk:

Reputation Management: Once you unleash the social networking beast, it can be hard to rein in.  You have to keep on top of what is being said about your organization.  Setting up news and blog alerts in Google and Yahoo is a very smart idea  (http://www.google.com/alerts  http://alerts.yahoo.com/).  You can track what is being said on twitter through twitter monitoring tools such as twitter scoop ( http://www.twitscoop.com/)  and other software available online

Not all bad press is bad. If something is constructively critical of your organization, you have an opportunity to correct it.  You can rebut or make right the complaint without hiding it and actually win the trust of those “watching”.

Message Dilution: An organization’s message and purpose can get diluted in the Social Networking arena.  I akin this phenomenon to playing telephone – when the message passes through many mouths and ears, it can be altered.   The reality is, on the web, people are having conversations without the organization or corporation being involved.  This means that you will not always have control over what is being said – and you know what, that’s ok.  Releasing some of the control is not necessarily a bad thing.

More ways to Share Your Stories:

Itunes can be used the same way as blogs for Podcasts and YouTube and Google Video for Video Feeds (all free).


0 comments

Add a Comment (all fields required)
Name
Email
Comment
 
To help limit spam please enter in the word that you see above

We are proud to offer professional church and ministry website solutions, that are affordable, easy to use and help provide your church with the ability to keep your members upo to date with what's going on with your church. Besides church and ministry websites, we also offer your church a wide range of other useful products and services including, email marketing, website optimization, business class email, telco services, graphics design and yes FREE support. We're basically striving to become the #1 source for church and ministry websites on the web. We in essence will be your one stop shop. One Call. One Relationship. Zero Headaches.

That's our motto and it's proven to be a great solution for today's churches and ministries who are looking for completely affordable ways to get their ministry online. So if you're looking for your church to get a new professional website, or you need email marketing, or possibly telco services. We're your source and we're here to help.
Call today: 1-888-323-5001 and talk to us, we're happy to help.