Writing for 'Small Spaces'
E-book outlines the secrets to composing messages for Twitter, Facebook, e-mail.
February 2011 By Heather FletcherIn December, Bethesda, Md.-based Network for Good gave fundraisers a holiday present — a free e-book.
"Big Impact in Small Places: 9 Ways to Write Better Email Subject Lines, Headlines, Tweets and Facebook Updates" by Kivi Leroux Miller is an 18-page work filled with punchy bits of advice about how fundraisers can be pithy.
Miller, also the founder of NonprofitMarket ingGuide.com, spoke with FS recently about why nonprofits must write effectively in small spaces:
FundRaising Success: Why did you choose this book-publishing format?
Kivi Leroux Miller: Both Network for Good and I love the e-book format because it allows us to quickly and easily get much-needed inform ation and guidance out to nonprofits on the issues they are struggling with today. Our field is changing fast, especially with online marketing and fundraising, so e-books are a great way to respond to those changes in a very timely way.
FS: What prompted the creation of this book?
KLM: Katya Andresen at Network for Good and I like to share notes on what we see small nonprofits doing well and not so well, because those are the groups we both care most about helping. Over lunch one day, we talked about how it seemed like many nonprofits were struggling with how to communicate in little spaces, whether e-mail subject lines or tweets or Facebook updates. There's a lot of potential power in those little spaces, and yet we both noticed that nonprofits weren't really taking advantage of it. Even though there are some big differences between e-mail subject lines and Twitter, for example, there are some strong similarities, too. So we thought that kind of writing deserved its own e-book.
FS: How does this book address challenges fundraisers are seeing in this economy?




Hitting the Email Inbox
Hitting the Email Inbox