Solving More Than #FirstWorldProblems
They have fewer staff and much less money in their budgets yet nonprofits are leaving brands in the dust when it comes to social media innovation.
They have fewer staff and much less money in their budgets yet nonprofits are leaving brands in the dust when it comes to social media innovation.
Every nonprofit nerd wants to increase the number of people visiting their website. But you shouldn’t sweat small visitor numbers. Here are three reasons why.
Facebook has launched a new set of tools that will help the pictures look better on your page, which will help them get more likes, comments and interaction.
While I’d redeveloped a number of websites in my time, I’ve never started from nothing before I launched this site last August. This was my process.
Engaging volunteers sounds like a no-brainer. Someone wants to work – for free – at your organization. But nonprofits are finding that the changing nature of work, volunteer demographics and nonprofit competition are making it difficult for them to run a successful volunteer program.
Even a small site with relatively few visitors will have produced useful data, which should start to give you a picture of which people visit your site, why they have come and how they got there.