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Online Advocacy: Using the Internet to Communicate with Your Constituents www.npower.org
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Session Overview What IS e-advocacy? Components of an e-advocacy program Tools to consider Getting started
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Jargon busting Alphabet (or Acronym) Soup: ASP CRM CMS BCC HTML, URL Also: SPAM Action-alerts Are there others you have in mind?
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What is Advocacy? (Official) ad·vo·ca·cy – n. The act of pleading or arguing in favor of something, such as a cause, idea, or policy; active support. (Source: The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Ed © 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company)Source (Strict) ad·vo·ca·cy – n. The ability of an organization to facilitate communication between citizens and decision makers (Source: “Using Online Advoacy” available at www.groundspring.org) (Loose) ad·vo·ca·cy – n. Comprehensive efforts to grow membership, engage potential supporters, cultivate relationships, build communities, raise awareness, and mobilize constituencies around a cause. (Source: “Using Online Advoacy” available at www.groundspring.org)
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What is Advocacy? What does advocacy mean to YOU? What offline advocacy do you already do?
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What is Advocacy? Catch phrases for Advocacy:
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What is E-Advocacy? Faxes Websites (CMS) Email eNewsletters Listservs Weblogs (‘blogs) RSS (content syndication) Online forms/surveys Integrated databases Online donations Others? Technology changes the landscape of advocacy: Which of these tools are you already using?
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What is E-Advocacy? What are the benefits of e-advocacy? Reach more people at less cost Grow your support or member base Fast… Opportunistic High response rate Cultivate relationships (& potential donors) Raises awareness
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First things first… What do you want to accomplish with e- advocacy? What are your expected outcomes? What impact would you like to have?
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Possible outcomes of e-Advocacy Impact policies, laws and decisions Raise awareness about your issue (outreach & education) Grow your member base (i.e. email list) Catalyze action Raise money Recruit help or boost involvement (i.e. at an event) Build community WHICH 2 OR 3 OF THE OUTCOMES RESONATE THE MOST FOR YOUR ORGANIZATION?
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What activities do you want to do? Possible e-advocacy activities: Send email, enewsletter, or action alerts Survey constituents Foster petitions Post information on the web Write news Connect citizens and lawmakers (through letter- writing, emailing or faxing) Send E-cards or “tell-a-friend” Collect donations
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Goals impact Tools Your goals & activities for e-advocacy will help determine what tools you choose. Regardless, there are 3 core elements to any online advocacy strategy…
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Components of e-advocacy 3 core pieces you need to launch an e-advocacy strategy: 1)Constituent emails & a way to organize them 2)A current, content-rich & engaging website 3)An effective email messaging strategy
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Step 1: Collect email addresses Collect email addresses at every turn Combine & clean up existing lists Maintain them in database and respect privacy Keep your list current & clean
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Step 1: Collect email addresses Where/How can you collect email address?
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Step 2: Have an engaging website Your website should: Attract Engage Retain Renew Static brochure-ware won’t cut it anymore… (Easter Seals Activity)
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Step 2: Have an engaging website Consider: Who is your target website audience? How are you driving them to your site? What content can you change frequently? What opportunities are you giving participant to engage on your site? Why would they come back?
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Step 2: Have an engaging website Tips: Reuse offline content online Use shortcuts: share content, newsfeeds, ask for help from your stakeholders Monitor & adjust based on your web stats Collect email addresses on your site Plan for a symbiotic relationship between your website and your email messaging
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It’s important, so I’m saying it again: Your website and email messaging should have a symbiotic relationship.
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Step 3: Email Messaging Distribution lists Groups or listservs E-newsletters Action alerts & Issue advocacy
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Step 3: Email Messaging What are the benefits to email messaging (i.e. e-newsletters or action alerts?) Fast & cheap Professional & compelling High response rate Personal (and invited) “word of mouse” marketing
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Step 3: Email Messaging Tips to start: Decide on frequency of contact Get permission: Use double opt-in approach Clear privacy policy Use an ASP to help Be prepared to respond!
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Step 3: Email Messaging Tips for writing: One action, One idea Be succinct, use hyperlinks to your site for more Clear contact information Legitimate “from” address Truthful subject line Always give an opt-out option Test every message first – internally, and maybe externally
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Step 3: Email Messaging Tips for maintenance: Monitor & adjust based on statistics Honor unsubscribe requests Segment lists & personalize messages
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How Technology Can Help THE GOOD NEWS: The number of tools to help you do all forms of online advocacy is increasing… THE BAD NEWS: The number of tools to help you do all forms of online advocacy is increasing… The tools range from free & simple to expensive & robust.
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Benefits of using an ASP Compared to building & hosting in-house, can be cost-effective Helps you better track & analyze your results Makes process simpler for constituent Requires less in-house tech staff for you Help with email management (I.e. bounces) More integrated approach Easy to create & launch effective & professional campaigns quickly
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Evaluating ASP’s Things to consider for yourself: Are we thinking about our long-term goals? Do we have (or will we create) the staff time & energy to do this? Are we willing to train our staff? Are our constituents online? Do we have high-quality data? (more important than quantity) Have we budgeted (time & money) to plan & execute these efforts? If YES, then proceed. If NO – hold up!
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Evaluating ASP’s Questions to ask them: How long have you been in business? How many nonprofits do you work with? What are their results/impact? Access to customer service? 24/7 access to data? Contracts/length of commitment Next steps in development Do they have the functionality you need? How will they train your staff to use it? Upfront & ongoing costs
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For more tools Nonprofit Matrix – www.nonprofit.matrix.com TechSoup Stock – www.techsoup.org/stock Compasspoint’s guide to ASP’s – www.compasspoint.org/enonprofit www.compasspoint.org/enonprofit Refer to your handouts for more tools…
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Getting Started Let’s take a few minutes to get you thinking about your own online advocacy strategies…
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Tips for success Start small; pace yourself Scale your initial investment & commitment Quality over quantity Be creative & opportunistic Leave time to do research, explore tools Make your website & messaging symbiotic Integrate multiple strategies, including offline Analyze your results & make adjustments
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NPower ~ Putting technology know- how in the hands of Non-Profits Sign up for our quarterly e-newsletter at www.NPower.org
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