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21 stupid things that nonprofit marketers can stop doing, including bad attitudes, approaches, strategies, and tactics. Delivered as a live webinar on June 27, 2013 and available as a recording after July 2, 2013 at http://www.NonprofitMarketingGuide.com under "Freebies." Also see the Twitter stream with #npcommstupid and share your ideas there!
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21 Stupid Things Nonprofit Marketers Can Stop Doing! #npcommstupid
Kivi Leroux Miller Nonprofit Marketing Guide.com
Presented as a live webinar at NonprofitMarketingGuide.com on June 27, 2013
Want to Hear the Commentary That Goes With the List?
Listen to the Recorded Webinar to Get Kivi’s Commentary and to See Which Stupid
Things Other Nonprofits Admit to Doing.
Visit www.NonprofitMarketingGuide.com and Look Under “Freebies” in the Menu after
July 2, 2013.
Free registration required.
2- or 3- Year Comm Plans Who knows what will work best for you by then!
INSTEAD: Plan seriously six months at a time, and more broadly 18 months at a time.
Outreach or awareness campaigns to the general public You don’t have that kind of money to waste!
INSTEAD: Focus on the groups or types of people likely to lean your way. Create for them.
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Asking for “help” or “support” No one knows what you really want them to do!
INSTEAD: Get very specific about your calls to action and limit them to a few – or just one – at a time.
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Listening to people who truly don’t know what they are talking about. Someone’s opinion should never outrank your professional experience and data.
“Facebook is full of pedophiles. I’m just saying, we shouldn’t be associated with that kind of filth.”
INSTEAD: Politely nod or change the subject and do what you know is right.
Letting lawyers or accountants dictate your marketing. Your tolerance for risk should always be higher than theirs.
INSTEAD: Listen to their advice and then make a judgment call about the level of risk.
Going with what you, or your ED, or your board would respond to. You are not the kind of people you are trying to reach!
INSTEAD: Match your marketing to the communities you are trying to reach, even if it doesn’t look and sound as clean and pretty as you’d like.
Getting too fancy and heady with your rebranding. If you have to explain your name, tagline and logo before anyone understands what you do, your branding sucks.
INSTEAD: Use plain English and easily understood imagery and metaphors
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Referring to your org and staff in the third person It’s too institutional and formal, therefore irrelevant and boring.
INSTEAD: Use first (I, We, Our) and second person (You, Your) as much as possible.
Excessive editing and handwringing By the time you get it out, it’s no longer relevant!
INSTEAD: Give everyone a shot at it, then be happy with Good instead of Perfect.
Press releases You are more likely to get media attention by being a real person with an opinion or a story than an org with airbrushed talking points.
INSTEAD: Get to know your top ten media outlets and the people who work there. And blog and tweet your real news and opinions (& newsjack).
Writing articles that are waaaaaaay too long. They take forever to produce and then no one reads them.
INSTEAD: Write appetizers, snack packs, tapas or a salad bar, not seven course meals with heavy entrees.
Focusing more on acquisition than on retention. Acquisition is a lot harder and takes longer to produce results.
INSTEAD: Make understanding and retaining your current donors a higher priority. fl
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Mobile apps You just aren’t that fun or helpful!
INSTEAD: Focus on making your website and email mobile friendly.
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QR codes They require more steps than needed and most people can’t figure out how to use them
anyway.
INSTEAD: Get a custom url shortener. We use Shortswitch.com for kivilm.com and npmg.us.
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Paying for custom software It never keeps up with the open market and costs ridiculous amounts of money to maintain!
INSTEAD: You are not THAT special! Go with a commercial or open-source product and only tinker around the edges.
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Saying anything is “Dead” It’s just an excuse not to do your job, which is now integrated, multi-channel marketing.
INSTEAD: Accept that your job will be complicated and will require lots of juggling.
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Obsessing about SEO Google is smarter than you are!
INSTEAD: Quit worrying so much about optimizing a page and focus on creating content people will share.
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Measuring too many things The numbers are meaningless without analysis and knowing what triggers action!
INSTEAD: Choose a handful of numbers to watch and learn what you can from them.
Sitting on your butt waiting for someone else to do it They hired YOU and they think it’s YOUR job!
INSTEAD: Go for it. Make something – anything! – happen. It’s OK to learn as you go.
Trying to do it all at once You’ll end up doing a lousy job at most of it.
INSTEAD: Prioritize and focus.
Walking on egg shells You’ll never get anywhere if you don’t step forward boldly.
INSTEAD: Make educated guesses and then try. Learn. Be fearless.
Kivi Leroux Miller @kivilm Fb.com/nonprofitmarketingguide [email protected] Follow @kristinaleroux for live tweets from Kivi’s webinars