Successful Seminar at the Foundation Center

Howard Adam Levy spoke about Nonprofit Marketing on a Shoestring at the Foundation Center yesterday. He described the process for updating Friends of Karens’ brand and website and then interviewed Jill Gold, Friends of Karen’s Communications Coordinator. Marketing Consultant Nancy Schwartz opened the session with an overview of marketing for nonprofits.

10 Ways to Save Money on Your Marketing

1.   Be consistent to foster recognition. This will save your audience from having to “decode” your message every time they encounter your organization.

2.   Conduct your own research – do interviews over the phone and surveys online with Survey Monkey.

3.    Have a Brand Manual that features your message points and design templates so that you are not constantly re-inventing
the wheel when it comes to grant applications, newsletters, and other marketing.

4.    Use colors wisely. Digital printing typically becomes cost effective at quantities of 1,000.

5.    Get support online. Join a discussion forum on LinkedIn.

6.    Talk to your printer before you start your project — or better yet, at the beginning of the year, so they can find efficiencies.

7.    Tap into volunteers for marketing functions such as photography. You won’t know what you can get until you ask.

8.    Empower your board as brand ambassadors to speak about your organization. Give them the tools and make them aware
of this role.

9.  Make your fundraising event budget go further by adding “mission awareness” as part of your events so that donors
are aware of what your organization does.

10.   Plan your marketing for the year. It’s worth taking the time to determine your goals and the best way to reach them.

Howard Adam Levy discusses how Red Rooster Group developed Friends of Karen’s website. and then interviewed Jill Gold, Friends of Karen’s Communications Coordinator.

Read the full Nonprofit Branding Case Study on the Friends of Karen branding process.

Red Rooster Group Promotes Center for Non-profits Conference

As part of our commitment to the nonprofit sector, Red Rooster Group is proud to sponsor and promote the New Jersey Center for Non-Profits’ conference.

Red Rooster Group is providing naming, branding and promotional services for the conference including development of the theme, conference logo, and design of postcards, posters, and website graphics.

Titled, Ready, Set Recover: Succeeding in the New Landscape, theme is intended to convey the practical nature the sessions, with hands-on advice that nonprofits can use to improve their organizations.

The Conference will bring together nonprofits in the state to gain insight into big picture issues and learn practical tactics for 
improving their organizations. Sessions will address the issues of accountability, advocacy, boards of the future, collaboration, human resources, marketing, media, and technology.

The conference will be held on December 9, 2009 at the Crowne Plaza Monroe / Jamesburg, NJ. Other sponsors include JPMorgan Chase & Co., Novartis, Prudential, Bank of America, Mercadien Group and Nonprofit Central.



The Role of Vision in Nonprofit Marketing & Communications

How your nonprofit can communicate its mission for greater impact

By Howard Adam Levy, Principal, Red Rooster Group


How does your nonprofit organization remain relevant? By keeping your strategic focus on what’s important. While many nonprofits understand the importance of strategic planning, making sure that the organization’s vision is communicated to donors, clients another constituents is another matter. This article, published in Nonprofit Advantage, the quarterly publication of the Connecticut Association of Nonprofits, describes the different between an organization’s vision, brand and marketing, so that you can improve your overall communications and fundraising strategies.


Vision, Brand, and Marketing

You need to have a vision in order to be relevant and inspire donors. A vision bold and audacious enough to inspire people to action around your mission, realistic enough to be believable and measureable.

A nonprofit needs to tell people what it stands for and what it wants to accomplish, what promises it will make to its stakeholders – both clients and donors – and how it will go about keeping those promises.

That’s its vision.

Vison takes into account new ways of accomplishing your mission. It takes into account:

  • trends in the sector
  • economic issues
  • demographic changes
  • new business models, including partnering and collaboration
  • new ways of giving, such as online campaigns
  • combining advocacy with services in order to be more effective in solving social problems.

Vision is great, but if no one knows about it, it’s inconsequential.

Your organization’s brand is its reputation for keeping the promises it made and living up to its vision. A brand is more than a logo or a color scheme: It is how your agency is viewed by the public as a result of what it stand for and what its done. Your brand is what you stand for. So if you have done a good job conveying your vision, people will have an accurate perception about your organization.

That’s your brand.

Marketing is the extent to which you have a say over what people think; it includes what you say and how you say it.

Your marketing and communications plan is integral to fundraising efforts. It’s the message that prompts a response from foundations, individual donors, volunteers, community and political leaders, and clients. You want that response to be positive. A recognized, well-presented, strong brand will support your fundraising efforts by:

  • Attracting donors;
  • Improving community relations
  • Improving the effectiveness of advocacy efforts for your issue
  • Positioning your organization as a leader in your sector (as a valuable source of knowledge, information, and connections).

Combined, your vision, brand, and marketing help people understand and value what you do. And that is the foundation for the long-term success of your organization.

Now that we understand how vision, brand, and marketing work together, let’s take a look at each component.

Defining Your Vision

The best way to define your vision is through a strategic planning process that starts from the bottom — line staff, clients — and works its way up the board. During this process, the organization will:

  • Define its mission, which may have changed from its founding;
  • Identify the programs that further its mission and those that do not;
  • Develop a plan to implement its mission (possibly a redefined one) in the future.

When you’ve decided who you are and what you stand for, you have to develop a succinct way to communicate that vision. You need a brand and a marketing plan.

Creating Your Brand

To reach the people you need to reach — donors, volunteers, community leaders, referring agencies — you have to have a distinct brand. To do so, you need to know the target audiences, the ways in which they access information, and the visual representation — logo, tagline, colors — that will evoke their interest and commitment.

You have to do research both inside and outside the organization. If you’ve already done a strategic plan that clearly delineated your vision, you’re part way there. Now you have to think not just of the clients you serve and how you want to serve them but to the community in which you work and the donors you seek to attract.

You’ll have to think about what media to use and what words, colors, and graphics will be most meaningful and effective for each audience and in each media.

Staff, board members and clients can all contribute to this research but you’ll also need to go outside the agency. Are there other nonprofits who offer the same services you do? What is their brand? How is it presented? Is any organization already using the words or graphics that you’re considering?

So many questions! But the answers will determine how you present your brand — your vision and reputation — effectively, in a way that will generate trust in your organization and encourage support from donors, volunteers, government agencies, and volunteers.

Marketing Your Vision and Brand

The marketing plan defines how, when, and with what resources your organization will use to communicate its key message about the problem it is addressing and the unique and effective way in which it is doing so.

The marketing plan also includes accountability: who is responsible for each part of the plan, a schedule of actions to be taken, and a means of tracking expenses and effectiveness of each aspect of the plan.

A good marketing plan will:

  • Convey your organization’s unique vision
  • Establish a system to ensure consistency across all forms of communications including internal materials, website, and newsletters
  • Lay out the most cost-effect way to produce materials, whether in-house or through outside vendors
  • Raise the level of professionalism of your organization’s marketing materials;
  • Provide a foundation for growth and ongoing marketing by strengthening your organizational capacity

At every point of contact with all stakeholders — website, newsletter, email, social media, printed material — you must convey your vision, not just your services. It’s your vision, not your services, that will inspire donors, staff, and clients to engage and support your organization.

Vision and marketing are inextricably linked. If you don’t market your brand — that vision of who you are and where you are going — you’re winking in the dark: Nobody knows what you are doing and no one is going to care if you need money.


Howard Adam Levy is the principal of Red Rooster Group, branding, marketing and design firm based in New York City serving nonprofits nationwide. Red Rooster Group helps nonprofit organizations to improve their visibility, communications and fundraising efforts by developing effective strategy, websites, email campaigns and other forms of marketing outreach. For help improving your brand, contact: info@redroostergroup.com.


This article was originally published in Nonprofit Advantage, the quarterly publication of the Connecticut Association of Nonprofits.


LINKS


Are you hiding your message from your donors?

Are you hiding your message from your donors?
In today’s environment, it is more critical than ever to have your communications be as crisp and targeted as possible. In his article, The Dance of the Four Veils, Tom Ahern describes the hinderances to communications. I would add a fourth veil: that of poor design, a factor which is often overlooked by nonprofits.
Poor design hinders your communication in many ways. When your reader doesn’t know what to look at first on your website or newsletter, or can’t focus on your message because of the distracting formatting, you are doing a dis-service your communications.
A strong design will lead lead your reader through your message in the sequence you want, including getting the full emotional impact from well-selected images, to understanding the impact, through your writing, to connecting with your brand, through your colors and overall attitude conveyed.
Don’t let design be the overlooked element that hinders readers from connecting with your cause
Veil Number One: Avoiding Conflict at All Costs
Veil Number Two: A Tendency toward Weak, Bland Language Rather Than Bold, Vivid Words
Veil Number Three: Faint Appreciation for the Emotional Basis of Human Response
Veil Number Four: Relying on Jargon
The Dance of the Four Veils
http://www.nonprofitquarterly.org/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=1410:the-dance-of-the-four-veils&catid=150:from-the-archives

In today’s environment, it is more critical than ever to have your communications be as crisp and targeted as possible. In his article, The Dance of the Four Veils, Tom Ahern describes four hinderances to communications. I would add a fifth veil: that of poor design, a factor which is often overlooked by nonprofits.Continue reading

FREE WEBINAR: Words Matter

Improve the power of your response with writing that grabs your readers’ attention. Unfortunately, nonprofits are known for writing from an institutional point of view (what we do), rather than a client-centered perspective (how you benefit). Writing that paints a clear picture for the reader, involves them emotionally, and conveys the personality of your organization is often an overlooked opportunity to forge a bond with your donors and increase your response rate.

To help you get the most impact from your writing, I urge you to attend a free  webinar called “Writing it Right – Why the Words and Format Matter in Business” by Alan Siege on Wednesday, August 5, 1 pm – 2 pm, ET.

He will discuss how to write effective e-mails, memos and reports with an emphasis on ensuring that the message you need to give and the action you want the recipient to take, is clear and well presented.  He will analyze each approach and give examples where, when done well, there is little or no ambiguity.  He will also provide examples that the participants can take with them as “take-aways” that provide added value.

Learn more: Writing it Right – Why the Words and Format Matter in Business