Web Development Information

Non-Profits: Successful Online Strategies


More and more non-profit organizations are developing websites to help share information about their mission and programs. This involves strategic planning about the best way to present your image and message online. Once your site is up, your organization also has to be ready to keep information current and to maintain consistent outreach activities. If your group is planning a Web site, consider:

1. How does your organization plan to use your site? Is it for marketing your organization, raising funds, providing information, announcing events, attracting volunteers, starting a discussion group, or something else? Answering this question will help you to develop a site that best suits your group's needs.

2. Who is your group trying to reach? Think strategically about the audience you are trying to target. Are they current or potential clients? Are they donors? Volunteers? A particular group in the community? Tailor your website to speak to that audience.

3. What information do you want to include? Some of the components you can incorporate on your site include: your mission, a list of programs and goals, contact information (staff list, e-mail addresses, mailing address, phone and fax numbers, and directions to your organization), list of special events and dates, organizational history, links to other websites, volunteer opportunities, and press releases.

4. If your NPO wants to engage in online fundraising (and you should!), then carefully consider the following: How will online giving be managed internally? What online forms will you use to gather donor information? How will you ensure security for donor information and credit cards? What offline options will donors have who do not want to give online? Which giving options will be included on the site (ex: planned giving, current campaigns, future projects, etc.)?

Once you've decided on your content, speak to a web designer about the "look" of the piece. The impression that you give offline should be carried into your online presence. Your website is an important tool to reinforce your identity, image, and credibility. In addition to text, you can include full-color photography, your logo, and graphic images. Keep the copy simple and include interesting visual images that show the work you are doing in the community and the audiences you serve.

Marketing your site is as important as designing it. There are many ways to promote your website, both online and offline. Most people who visit your site learn about it from printed material, not from looking it up on a search engine.

For offline marketing, add your URL address to business cards, stationery, newsletters, brochures, fax cover sheets, and so on. List your website on any materials that you hand out at conferences, seminars, and workshops. Put it next to your organization's mailing address and phone number. Send out a card or letter to announce the launch of your site and include an article about it in your newsletter. Send press releases to the local newspapers and to professional publications announcing your website. Make sure that your staff, Board, and volunteers know the site address and can discuss the content.

Online, you can register your home page with Web announce sites, directories, and search engines. Send e-mails to other related websites asking for a link. Send an e-mail to your clients, donors, partner organizations, and volunteers with a link to your URL address. Have staff and board members include this link at the end of the e-mails they send. Announce your site on relevant Internet newsgroups and lists - if you participate in these groups on a regular basis, you will help build an online reputation for your organization.

Another important online marketing strategy for non-profits is to list your organization with Internet charity portals. These websites offer a directory of non-profit organizations. Charity portals include CharityNavigator.com, GreaterGood.com, FreeDonation.com, NetworkForGood.org, 4charity.com, and WorkingForChange. Donors often peruse these sites to help them with their research, so it's important to keep your listing up to date.

Internet marketing is a never-ending process. It requires a commitment to send out regular e-mails, keep your site information timely and accurate, update your staff on the latest Internet technologies, and learn about other Internet resources that can benefit your staff and clients. There are countless ways to use your website to bring in and send out new information. As you learn more, you can also use your website as a means to recruit volunteers, raise funds for your current campaign, and encourage activism.

Wendy Gray Maynard is the co-owner of Kinesis. Kinesis specializes in marketing, graphic design, and business writing. Visit http://www.kinesisinc.com for more articles and free marketing wisdom.

Want to harness the power of kinetic marketing? Sign up for Kinesis Quickies, a free bi-monthly marketing e-newsletter: http://www.news.kinesisinc.com


MORE RESOURCES:

A strategic plan for goal setting
Santa Rosa Press Democrat, CA - 16 hours ago
The council has done goal setting, but it seems that there are usually goals focusing on pet projects or pet issues of individuals, but there never has been ...


Goal-setting programs make for more active co-workers
DailyIndia.com, FL - Jan 7, 2009
"They had individual goal setting - a common technique - but they also had group and organizational goal setting, which provided the peer encouragement that ...
Wellness programs benefit from management support Business Insurance
all 4 news articles


Team and a Dream Announces Goal Setting Teleseminar for Web Businesses
PR.com (press release), NY - 5 hours ago
Team and a Dream (www.TeamAndADream.com) is announcing a Teleseminar workshop on January 12, 2009 entitled “Is your Web Business Failing to Capture Clients? ...


Frugal Duchess: Goal-setting
Bellingham Herald, WA - Jan 6, 2009
Goal setting is an annual exercise as we try to whip our home and other fiscal assets into better shape. And so we crunch numbers and try to tone up our ...


Employer-Sponsored Workouts Boost Workers' Health
Washington Post, United States - Jan 6, 2009
Key to the program's success may have been the use of group and organizational goal-setting along with individual goals, because they provide vital peer ...


Missoula officials offer New Year's goal setting tips
KPAX-TV, MT - Jan 2, 2009
Missoula City-County Health officials say the new year is a great time to re-commit to new health goals. Here are some goals they recommend striving for ...


Woman Who Lost 100 Pounds Opens Goal-Setting Social Network
PR.com (press release), NY - Jan 2, 2009
Woman who lost 100 pounds shares how to set and achieve your goals through a new goal-setting social network site whose launch date coincides to help make ...


HealthNews

Goal-Setting Tips for the Whole Family
HealthNews, CA - Dec 29, 2008
Goal setting is an important method of deciding what’s important in your life. Since accomplishing these goals builds self-confidence, goal setting is a ...


Goal setting Pacers eye Fraser Valley berth
South Delta Leader, Canada - Jan 1, 2009
By Philip Raphael - South Delta Leader Weeks into the senior girls basketball season, Delta Secondary head coach Bill Lambert says his team is still in ...


Examiner.com

Goal setting for 2009: book projects
Examiner.com - Dec 29, 2008
by Wendy Attmore, Atlanta Writing Careers Examiner Now’s the time to start mapping out some self-imposed deadlines for your book projects. ...

Goal-Setting - Google News

home | site map | ArticleGecko | A ClashX Production 2006
© 2006