Blog Heaven
Here’s why nonprofit organizations absolutely should be blogging ... and some sobering reality checks.
January 2007 By Jeff BrooksComment: You might want to add a warning to all this optimism: If you have a hard time defining and understanding your audience (as many nonprofits do), your blog is going to suck. Your audience is not you. Their knowledge, assumptions and connection to your cause are different from yours. Don’t miss that vital point on your blog!
Comment: Speaking of audience, you’re talking as if donors and prospective donors are the only audience. There are others, like staff, clients, vendors and peer nonprofits. A blog might be a useful tool with any of them.
Blogging: Your training for the future.
Blogs signal a fundamental shift of power between marketers and their markets.
A cool, new remark-worthy product can spread through the blogosphere, taking a business from zero to 60 in just days. In the same way, bad service, shoddy products, scandal or dishonesty can be called out in the blog world, and word can spread even faster and farther.
Would you know how to handle either one of these situations if it happened to your nonprofit?
Chances are, blogs (or something like them) eventually will become a mainstream source of information and marketing, consumed by nearly everyone. And blogs are just one form of social-networking tool. There are photo-sharing sites like Flickr, video-sharing sites like YouTube, wikis (user-built information sites) like Wikipedia — even virtual online worlds like Second Life. The expertise you gain from operating a good blog will position you to do well in these other places, any of which could quickly go mainstream.
Start now, and you’ll be an old hand by the time that happens. Experience is the most valuable resource you can have, and now is the time to get it. So start blogging.
Comment: You’re asking nonprofits to make a very serious time commitment! It takes time to write a good blog. Lots of it. First, you need to write well, and that takes time. Second, if you want regular readers, you need to post frequently. Daily, if not more often. And any blogger worth her salt is also following related blogs and taking part in the wider conversation. All that will take somewhere between 10 and 20 hours a week! Who has that kind of time?
Comment: Amen to that! Running a blog would be a great thing to do, but very hard for anyone saddled with nonprofit economics to justify. An hour spent producing direct-mail fundraising is going to yield much more revenue than an hour spent blogging.
Start a blog now! It will connect you to your donors. A lot of nonprofits are obsessed with telling their story. Their reasoning: If we can distill our wonderfulness and uniqueness into a quick narrative, donors will flock to our cause!
Trouble is, it doesn’t work that way. If you want to get donors excited, tell their story. Not yours.
Obvious? Not if you live in the hermetically sealed chamber of one-way marketing, where you try to figure out donors without actually holding conversations with them. If you’re ready to break out of that chamber and really learn something about your donors, launch a blog.
When you start blogging, two things will happen:
- You’ll get instant feedback from donors about anything you say. Sometimes that feedback is in the form of silence and lack of blog traffic. That tells you you aren’t interesting enough. But the more interesting feedback comes from donors actually talking back — in comments on your blog, and in other blogs.
- You’ll discover what donors care about, what they aspire to, what they believe, what they’re skeptical about, and how they express themselves. It’ll become clearer than ever how you can align yourself with their dreams.
So launch a blog. You won’t regret it.
Comment: That’s all fine, but not very many of your donors will read your blog. Forget the hype about blogs. Hardly anybody’s reading them! Only around one in five Americans has ever knowingly visited one. And blog use among donor-aged (55+) people is lower yet. The donors just aren’t there!
How not to sound like an idiot to your donors.
You sound like a complete idiot. I’m not saying that to hurt your feelings. Assuming you don’t have a blog, I can almost guarantee it. Most advertising, direct marketing — and fundraising — uses a tone you’d never use with your friends. If you did, they’d laugh in your face — or slap you!
Think about it. Your messages are likely sprinkled with:
- Phony superlatives, like “leading,” “best,” “most important.”
- Meaningless, high-flown claims, like “cutting-edge” and “pioneering.” Even if true, they don’t communicate anything.
- Self-aggrandizement. Look-at-me copy that talks at donors, not about them.
- Unnaturally long and complex sentences that abandon all pretense of human speech.
It all adds up to a tone of voice that no human would ever use in person — yet nonprofits use all the time.
You can’t write that way in a blog. Nobody would read it. Those who did would openly mock it. With a blog, you have to write like a human.
And when you learn that, you can apply it to all your communications. You’ll learn a whole new way of approaching people: the non-idiot approach.
That’s the good thing about a blog — and why you should launch one.
Comment: Let’s get real. Do you know how hard it is to write like a human? We’ve been trained since first grade to sound phony when we write! Even if you have someone who can write well, is your organization willing to let it happen? Not if you require an approval process. And if lawyers have to vet your blog posts, forget it. Your blog will suck. Don’t even bother!
I’m so excited about nonprofit blogging, I could burst.
The decision to blog is not easy or obvious. There are pitfalls galore. But the positive change it can bring is astounding.
* Blogs can mean an end of brandmeisters with their irrelevant and dictatorial brand guideline books. The day is coming when all our energy will go into communicating with and serving donors — not our self-expression.
* Blogs will put bogus research methods (like focus groups) out of business. We won’t have to ask donors phony questions in unnatural settings. We’ll know what they think.
* Blogs will help put an end to churn-and-burn fundraising. It’s going to be all about finding and holding on to donors who really care about our causes — not just flipping gifts through a caging facility.
* And that means the end, finally, of organizations that get away with the ethical bare minimum, secure in the knowledge that donors don’t really know or care what’s going on. Donors are not going to give to organizations they don’t know and trust.
Jeff Brooks is creative director at full-service fundraising consultancy Merkle/Domain and keeper of the fundraising blog Donor Power Blog.
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