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You Too Can 2.0!

April 2008 By Christina Johns
Facebook and MySpace and Twitter, oh my! While I’m not the yellow brick road to lead you to the Emerald City of social-networking Utopia, I am a real, living, breathing, Facebook-surfing, Gen Y, nonprofit professional. My goal for this column, which will appear bimonthly in FundRaising Success’ Giving 2.0 e-letter, is to help nonprofits understand the who, what and why of Web 2.0. This medium shouldn’t be viewed as a frightening, unknown forest filled with predators, but a world of opportunity to share your message with new demographics in a plethora of innovative, creative ways.

By breaking down the world of Web 2.0, I hope to make social-networking seem less daunting and, I hope, help you to start getting in on the fun! Here are my top five things to think about before venturing into Web 2.0.

1. Get the organization behind your efforts. Start with an internal meeting. You’ll need support from your staff in order to make 2.0 endeavors successful. The Web team needs to understand what direct mail is doing, what television is doing and vice versa. Working in silos will never work with this medium.

2. Understand and establish what Web 2.0 actually is. Think of it as a gateway. It’s a way to gain recognition, knowledge and mission-driven advocates. Notice how I didn’t have the word donations in the above sentence. While I do believe that donations can be driven through this network, I don’t believe that should be the initial goal, and, even more importantly, I believe that you’ll hijack your efforts if you go into this world with fundraising as your main purpose.

3. Start small and build. Start to think about your mission and what makes it special. Find correlations to your mission and the programs it funds in the world today. Once you find topics of current interests that can relate to what your organization does on a daily basis, you can make a connection to what people are talking about on Web 2.0. Locate a social network that emphasizes that aspect of your mission.

I recently did a small test myself. I used my current organization as a starting point. I then located other groups and causes represented on Facebook that relate to my organization. I messaged the originators of the different groups, became “friends” and discussed their thoughts and feelings on the issues that were common between their Facebook groups and elements of my organization.
 

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COMMENTS

Most Recent Comments:
Larry Butler - Posted on April 19, 2008
I thought the article was interesting, I want to learn more about WEB2.0. Looking forward to next article. Great Job.
Frankie and the Knockouts - Posted on April 16, 2008
Article was super fabulous! Relevant info and good insight on what?s happening. But look these pages are taking too long to load. Cut down on some of the banners people?it became sleepy time for me waiting?. This should be lean and mean---I need to be in and out baby---it?s the web for Pete?s sake I could have gotten a book with this info and turned the pages faster.