Listen Up!Telling your story so people will listen and respond*...
*respond |ri spänd| verb open one’s wallet and give to your worthy cause
What do I know?
• President of Turnbull Marketing Group, a (very) small company dedicated to helping nonprofits help others.
• Born and raised on the mission field in Haiti.
• Hold a BA in Spanish and Journalism from Wake Forest University and an MA in Latin American and Caribbean Studies from Florida International University.
• Was a writer in the award-winning Creative Department at Food For The Poor, the nation’s largest international charity.
• Love traveling and getting my hands dirty. Throw in some Spanish and you have one happy lady.
Turnbull Marketing Group
Helping nonprofits help others.
Listen Up!
• Who cares?
• What makes a story “good”?
• Where can I find a good story?
• How do I tell a story effectively?
• Where do I tell my story?
Turnbull Marketing Group
Helping nonprofits help others.
Who cares?
• Everyone with money to give. And that means that you care, too.
• Fewer charity dollars going around means that you have to step up your game and make your mission relevant to your donors.
• If you don’t have a story to tell, then what in the world are you doing out there?
What makes a story “good”?
• Characters you can relate to
• A plot you can believe in (and that’s relevant)
• Well-executed
• A call to action that moves you
Turnbull Marketing Group
Helping nonprofits help others.
Characters you can relate to
• Personable
• Sympathetic/Vulnerable
• Have a fulfillable need
• Have a succinct story that relates directly to your mission
• Whenever possible, not you
Turnbull Marketing Group
Helping nonprofits help others.
A plot you can believe in
• No conflict, no need
• Clearly expresses the need
• Has a story-like feel (think feature story in your favorite magazine)
• Ties in directly to your mission
• Relevant to your donors
• Succinct
• Invites the reader into the character’s world
Turnbull Marketing Group
Helping nonprofits help others.
Food For The Poor. 2009. The Great Depression Campaign.
Well Executed
• Good writing (or script)
• Descriptive — try to involve all of your readers’ senses
• Clear and easy to read (or watch)
• Professional quality
Turnbull Marketing Group
Helping nonprofits help others.
A call to action that moves you
• Direct—no hemming and hawing
• Repeated
Turnbull Marketing Group
Helping nonprofits help others.
• Urgent—Why me?Why now?
• Doable
• Everywhere! Every single living thing in the world has a story—the hard part is seeing it
• Start at home
• Talk to the people you serve
• Be nosy—ask questions that touch the heart
Where can I find a good story?
Turnbull Marketing Group
Helping nonprofits help others.
Be nosy
• What do you hope/pray for?
• What do you want for your future? For your children’s future?
• How has our organization helped you? What was life like before we began to help you?
• What do you want to tell our friends and supporters?
• Why should our friends & supporters help other people like you?
Turnbull Marketing Group
Helping nonprofits help others.
How do I tell a story effectively?
• Focus on the details that pull at the heart strings—make them weep
• Be succinct—leave out the dry information
• Hook your audience from the very beginning
• Use action words, present tense and adjectives
• Don’t just tell a story—show it
• Tie everything back to your mission
Turnbull Marketing Group
Helping nonprofits help others.
Hook, Line...and Wallet
• Imagine...
• Come with me on a journey...
• I want you to...
• I need you to...
• Start with a quote from the main character
• Transport your audience directly to the scene
Turnbull Marketing Group
Helping nonprofits help others.
Mahalia
Climbing the sagging steps leading up to the dilapidated house teetering 6 feet off the ground in Georgetown, Guyana, I keep my eyes on 8-year-old Mahalia, who bounds ahead of me with no apparent fear of falling through the rotted wood. She leads me inside, where missing floorboards, bowing walls and a rusted piece of tin—more a strainer than a roof—form what bit of space she has to call home. I have come to listen, and Mahalia is just about to tell me a secret.
Turnbull Marketing Group
Helping nonprofits help others.
Where do I tell my story?
• Use them everywhere you can—online, brochures, newsletters, fundraising letters, benefits, annual reports
• Illustrate with compelling photos
• Send your audience online for the rest of the story—websites shouldn’t be just content-driven, they need to be story-driven
• Make short videos—feature the people you serve whenever possible
• Tell one good story in each e-Newsletter
• Use your blog to tell stories, not to give status reports
Turnbull Marketing Group
Helping nonprofits help others.
On Your Web Site
Turnbull Marketing Group
Helping nonprofits help others.
On Your Web Site
Turnbull Marketing Group
Helping nonprofits help others.
On Your Web Site
Turnbull Marketing Group
Helping nonprofits help others.
On Facebook
Turnbull Marketing Group
Helping nonprofits help others.
On Facebook
Turnbull Marketing Group
Helping nonprofits help others.
On Facebook
Turnbull Marketing Group
Helping nonprofits help others.
On Twitter
Turnbull Marketing Group
Helping nonprofits help others.
On Twitter
Turnbull Marketing Group
Helping nonprofits help others.
On Twitter
Turnbull Marketing Group
Helping nonprofits help others.
Happily Ever After
• Pull at heart strings
• Be succinct
• Make it personal
• Tie it back to your mission
• Tell stories all the time, everywhere you go
Turnbull Marketing Group
Helping nonprofits help others.
Let’s keep in touch
Turnbull Marketing Group
Helping nonprofits help others.
Elizabeth Turnbull
email: [email protected]
twitter: @ejturnbull
telephone: 919.741.5072
Download this presentation at www.tbullgroup.com.Sign up for our eNewsletter and receive a FREE story guide.