Nonprofit Marketing Tip: Explain all 9 ways people can donate

wikipedia logo for nonprofit marketing and publicityDoes your nonprofit tell visitors at your website all the ways they can donate?

During the webinar I hosted yesterday on nonprofit marketing, PR and publicity with nonprofit marketing expert Sandy Rees, one of the participants asked if she should include a “Donate” button on every page of her agency’s website.

Uh, of course, we answered. (No-brainer.)

I wish I had seen the “Ways to Give” page at the Wikimedia Foundation’s website, which I just stumbled across this afternoon. That’s the nonprofit that operates Wikipedia, the world’s mammoth online encyclopedia.

It lists these nine ways to give:

  1. Credit card or Paypal
      
  2. Via regular mail
      
  3. Monthly recurring giving
      
  4. Stock donation
      
  5. Direct deposit
      
  6. Combined Federal Campaign
      
  7. Corporate Matching Gift
      
  8. Moneybookers
      
  9. Payroll deductions

Especially helpful are the detailed instructions. Brilliant! Nonprofits could link to a list like this from the end of articles they write, from blog posts or from press releases.  

What other ways can your donors give? And how do you let them know? 

 

 

Write killer headlines: 102 fill-in-the-blank formulas

headline formulas cheat sheetThe next time you’re struggling with a headline for an article, press release, blog post, a page at your website or a paid ad, whip out this handy five-page cheat sheet and steal one of the 102 headline-writing formulas.

Fill in the blank, and you’ve got a killer headline.

It’s courtesy of blogger Chris Garrett, and it could be one of the most valuable tools in your office. Download it here.
     

Why Writing Great Headlines Is Important 

Killer headlines pull people into your copy. They beg to be retweeted. And they often tell the reader, “You have a problem and this article will solve it.”

For added oomph, choose several other headlines from the list and place them throughout your article or blog post as sub-heads, like I’ve done in this blog post. Sub-heads are great for scanners, who often won’t take the time to read every word. They’re visual clues that tell readers what else they’ll find within an article.
     
     
Sample Headlines 

Here are examples of headlines from this free report:

Get Rid of Your ___________ Once and For All

What Your _____________ is Not Telling You About _____________

10 Lies We Tell Our ________________

How to Spot a Fake ________________

5 Reasons _____________ is Better Than _________________

If those don’t fit the article or blog post you’re writing, you’ll find several that will.
     
    
More Tools to Help You

This report is one of 60 free or inexpensive tools I shared during the webinar “60 Ideas in 60 Minutes:  Free (or Practically Free) Tips, Tricks, Tools & Tutorials for Publicity & Social Media.” Click here to read more about what it includes and how to access the video replay and the handouts.

I’ve listed several ways you can use these headlines. How else would you use them?

60 free (or almost free) tools for marketing, publicity

fiverr ad for publicity
Everybody’s talking about Fiverr.com, a website where people tell you what they’re willing to do for $5.
  
If you have a slim budget for publicity, this site could be perfect for you.  
  
Among the wacky things people say they’re willing to do (“I’ll write your name in the foam on top of my cappuccino and send you a photo of it”), you’ll find people willing to do mini-projects like write a killer headline for an article you’ve written, draw an illustration that you can use to accompany a press release, or design a logo.
  
If you needed a logo, you could find five people on that site, give them all the same assignment for $5 each, and then choose the best logo.
  
You’d spend only $25—a steal.
  
Tom Antion, an Internet marketer and one of my mentors, says he uses this site frequently when he needs logos created for new websites he’s created, and has had great results.
  
Fiverr’s disadvantage is that is because the price is so cheap, you can’t ask for a refund if you don’t like the work, and you can’t carry on a conversation with the person doing your project. So even though you’re taking a chance, the results could really pay off.
  
Fiverr.com is one of the valuable publicity resources I’ll be sharing on Monday when I host the webinar, “60 Ideas in 60 Minutes: Free (or Practically Free) Tips, Tricks, Tools & Tutorials for Publicity & Social Media.”
It’s a compilation of the best tools, mostly freebies, that I’ve been sharing the last several months at my blog, social media sites, in articles and elsewhere.
  
The call is at 8 p.m. Eastern Time.  If you can’t make it, sign up anyway because I’ll send you the link for the video replay and the handout that lists all 60 ideas.
  
Register here, and check out the special bonus you’ll get the day of the call.

Inventory clearance on CDs, transcripts, booklets

Recruitment & Retention Tips Booklets

Information products can become out of date so quickly, particularly those dealing with social media sites or any type of technology.

For that reason, I’m cleaning out my massive inventory and practically giving away more than 20 titles.

CD and transcripts, regularly $39.95, are only $5 each, plus shipping.  Tips booklets on employee recruitment and retention, regularly $5 each, are $1.35, and include shipping.

Even though many of the products are out of date, all of them include valuable tips that are still as good today as they were when I created the them. Topics include Facebook, how to get PR clients, press releases, nonprofit publicity, how to get your own TV show, special event planning and promotion, employee recruitment and retention, and more.  Here’s the complete list of titles.

Some of the CD titles are gone already, and we aren’t reordering, but you can still order the transcripts. Grab them while you have the chance

Questions? Contact my assistant, Christine Buffaloe, at 619-955-5772 or Chris (at) SerenityVA.com.

Why statistics can be your greatest PR ally–or enemy

Media trainer Brad PhillipsThis month’s guest blogger is Brad Phillips, the author of the Mr. Media Training Blog, which offers daily media and presentation training tips. His firm, Phillips Media Relations, specializes in media and presentation training.
    
    
    

By Brad Phillips
Guest Blogger

If you’re of a certain age, you probably remember those old television commercials for the Christian Children’s Fund. In them, actress Sally Struthers sold viewers the promise of saving a child for “the price of a cup of coffee.”

A quarter-century later, those ads are still memorable. And the way Ms. Struthers used numbers in those commercials is a big part of the reason why.

Imagine if she had instead said, “You can save a child for just $255 a year.”

Few people would have anted up, and it certainly wouldn’t have stuck in your memory. Instead, she said, “For about 70 cents, you can buy a can of soda, regular or diet. In Ethiopia, for just 70 cents a day, you can feed a child like Jamal nourishing meals.”

Statistics can be beautiful things, but too many press releases and media interviews are buried in data that offer no context. As a result, they’re rarely effective.
     
    
5 Ways to Help Your Numbers Jump Off the Page

  1. Create a Mental Picture:  There are 1.37 million homeless children in the United States. No one will remember that specific number. Instead, try saying this:
         
    Yankee Stadium seats 52,000 people. Imagine that stadium completely sold out, not a single  empty seat in the house. Now imagine 26 of those stadiums, side-by-side, each completely full.  That’s the number of children who will be homeless in America sometime this year.
      
  2. Make Numbers Personal: Numbers are often best when they’re reduced to a personal or familial level. So instead of saying a tax cut would save the American people $100 billion this year, say the average family of four would receive $1,250 in tax relief.
      
  3. Don’t Rely on Percentages: Instead of proclaiming that your plant’s new energy efficient manufacturing equipment will cut your company’s carbon footprint by 35 percent, tell your audience what that means. Does your new efficiency mean that you will save 20,000 barrels of oil this year? Say so!
      
  4. Use Ratios: 170,000 people in Washington, D.C. are functionally illiterate. But that number doesn’t tell you much, especially if you have no sense of the overall population. Instead, why not say:One in three adults living in Washington, DC is functionally illiterate. Next time you’re on the  Metro, look around you. Odds are that the person to your left or right can’t read a newspaper.
      
  5. Provide Relative Distance: If you’re a car company announcing increased fuel efficiency, you’d be proud to announce that this year’s model gets four miles more per gallon. But you’d probably get even more traction if you said, “That’s enough to get from Maine to Miami – without spending an extra penny on gas.”

These five ideas may get you started, but keep looking. You’ll find other great examples on television commercials, in marketing solicitations, even pasted onto billboards.

So take out those statistics you keep using year-after-year, and use these ideas to help freshen them up. Challenge yourself by inserting one of these context-rich statistics into your next press release or media interview. You may be surprised to find it’s the thing your audience remembers the most.