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Nonprofit Internet Strategies: Best Practices for Marketing, Communications, and Fundraising Success

Nonprofit Internet Strategies: Best Practices for Marketing, Communications, and Fundraising Success
By Ted Hart, James M. Greenfield, Michael Johnston

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Product Description

Nonprofit Internet Strategies offers every charitable organization the opportunity to analyze their options and select the appropriate strategy to integrate traditional marketing, communications, and fundraising practices with their online efforts.

It is an excellent how-to guide--a practical manual for nonprofit staff written in non-technical language--prepared by experts in the field based on real-life experiences and case studies.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #178296 in Books
  • Published on: 2005-03-14
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Hardcover
  • 360 pages

Features


Editorial Reviews

From the Inside Flap
ePhilanthropy is an ongoing process of communicating, educating, cultivating, and soliciting nonprofit supporters to build and enhance stronger relationships. It has become such a powerful tool that many of the most seasoned professionals have not only learned new skills but have also completely reevaluated how they approach almost every aspect of fundraising.

Designed to be an everyday reference for nonprofit managers, staff, and volunteers, Nonprofit Internet Strategies is a practical manual written in a language that is not technical but, instead, rooted in the language of nonprofit staff members and focused on the everyday management issues they face. It helps all types of charitable organizations analyze and select best practices for developing multiple Internet strategies to integrate with their traditional marketing, communications, and fundraising methods.

Nonprofit Internet Strategies covers the five key ePhilanthropy strategies that have led many nonprofit organizations to succeed:

  • The Relationship: Integrate All Supporter Messages
  • Give Supporters a Reason to Visit You Online
  • Interact with Supporters, Don't Just Send Messages
  • Communicate Using Multiple Methods
  • Assess and Improve Performance

Featuring an impressive group of international contributors addressing global applications, this excellent how-to guide is based on real-life occurrences and case studies demonstrating proven, practical ways to use the advantages of the Internet in all areas of public awareness and mass communications. Readers will benefit from the successes and failures of other organizations that have sought to define and develop fully integrated approaches to online and offline applications for the Internet to:

  • Advance their causes
  • Inform their public
  • Raise public confidence and trust in their mission and vision
  • Engender gifts, grants, and contributions, as well as new advocates and volunteer supporters

Nonprofit Internet Strategies is a powerful tool for nonprofit managers and everyone leading a nonprofit organization in marketing, communications, and fundraising, as well as information technology.

From the Back Cover
A comprehensive best-practices approach to developing multiple strategies for using the Internet to boost your nonprofit's success

Nonprofit Internet Strategies helps all types of charitable organizations analyze and select best practices for developing multiple Internet strategies to integrate with their traditional marketing, communications, and fundraising methods, in order to:

  • Advance their causes
  • Inform their public
  • Raise public confidence and trust in their mission and vision
  • Engender gifts, grants, and contributions, as well as new advocates and volunteer supporters

Featuring an international group of contributors, this practical manual provides global applications with how-to guidance and proven, practical methods for using the advantages of the Internet in all areas of public awareness and mass communications.

About the Author
TED HART is founder and President of the international ePhilanthropy Foundation (ephilanthropy.org), headquartered in Washington, D.C., and dedicated to fostering the ethical use of the Internet for philanthropic purposes.

JAMES M. GREENFIELD, ACFRE, FAHP, has served, since 1962, as a fundraising executive to three universities and five hospitals on both the east and west coasts of the United States and in between. He retired from Hoag Memorial Hospital Presbyterian in 2001 after fourteen years as senior vice president of resource development and executive director of the Hoag Hospital Foundation.

MICHAEL JOHNSTON is an expert in fundraising and helping nonprofit agencies maximize the benefits they get from using the Internet. He has worked with more than a hundred nonprofit organizations ranging from hospitals to third-world development organizations and peace and disarmament groups, in Canada, the United States, and the U.K.


Customer Reviews

Great Resource for NonProfits5
The book provides a great overview of fundraising, communications and marketing online. Each chapter is a separate essay by an expert in the field. Topics include ePhilanthropy Strategy, Multichannel Marketing, Integrating Online and Offline Databases, Building Online Communities, Reaching & Inspiring Donors Online, Advocacy, Staffing, and ePhilanthropy Regulation and the Law.

The field of ePhilanthropy is evolving and many organizations are seeking answers to implementing online programs. This book offers great perspectives on how nonprofits can take advantage of technology to increase their effectiveness.

(Eve Fisher, Eden Web Consulting, M.S. Technical Communications)

Online Fundraising Comes of Age4
Not Your Father's ePhilanthropy: Online Fundraising Comes of Age - and So Should You

By: Brian Walsh

(originally published on onPhilanthropy.com)

For more than a decade now, ePhilanthropy has been the rage among nonprofit organizations. During the concept's infancy, many thought that fundraising over the Internet would herald a new era of cheap, easy, and profitable fundraising. Nonprofits, the theory went, would be able to dip their toe into the river of the New Economy and swim in the ocean of resulting donations.

Unfortunately, this initial excitement dissipated when many nonprofit organizations did not see the results they expected from their ePhilanthropy efforts. Evidently, many nonprofits thought that by simply adding a "donate now" button to their Website, they were opening themselves up to an unprecedented new fundraising source.

Now that ePhilanthropy has learned from its childhood mistakes and is growing up, it is time for nonprofits to take another look at its potential. A great place to start is the new guidebook, "Nonprofit Internet Strategies: Best Practices for Marketing, Communications, and Fundraising."

Building upon extensive experience in the field, the book uses numerous case studies to examine what different nonprofits' ePhilanthropy strategies got right - and what they got wrong. Recognizing that fundraising, especially online fundraising, can no longer stand apart from the rest of an organization's efforts, "Nonprofit Internet Strategies" lays out clear guidelines for integrating offline activities with an organization's online presence. Branding efforts, marketing strategies, constituent recruitment and retention, communication approaches - they all need to be effectively coordinated within any ePhilanthropy effort.

Edited by fundraising and ePhilanthropy experts Ted Hart, James Greenfield, and Michael Johnston, each chapter of "Nonprofit Internet Strategies" was written by a noted contributor. Since the book has been written for nonprofit professionals by nonprofit professionals, it is easy to read and easy to follow, avoiding overly-technical jargon. There are also helpful screen captures and diagrams to explain key concepts.

ePhilanthropy is still an emerging and evolving field; this book provides clear support for any organization looking for guidance amidst this confusion. Whether you are launching an online giving program, looking to increase your constituency base, hoping to carry important advocacy messages to a wider audience, or simply looking to expand your online presence, this is a helpful new resource.

"Nonprofit Internet Strategies" should not only be a handy everyday reference, but also can serve as a launch pad for further conversation and brainstorming by organizations. It is now clear that, while online fundraising did not immediately produce the windfall initially anticipated, it will continue to be an important, even critical, component of any nonprofit's efforts. By incorporating approaches explained in this book, all nonprofits - whether large and well-established or smaller and short-staffed - can adopt and enhance effective ePhilanthropy programs.

practical help and an excellent management lesson4
The book's authors provide a good overview of fundraising and technology, and discuss implementation strategies with a fair amount of depth. As a prospect researcher, it is encouraging to see research and data mining covered so well. As someone who has worked in a number of nonprofits of different sizes, the chapter on staffing is the true find. Tim Mill-Groninger not only provides a good model to think through tasks and processes and how to reach effective solutions, he gives a crash course in managing staff and consultants that in a few pages is more helpful than a shelf full of business books. It has application far beyond a nonprofit's development, marketing, and IS needs.

Style-wise, the repetition of "ePhilanthropy" grates and seems awkwardly applied, considering the book's intended readers are the recipients of philanthropy, not primarily those who practice it. Content-wise, I recommend this book highly.