All posts by Tony Martignetti

Stop Squawking About Charitable Deduction Reduction

Puffin courtesy of AmySelleck.

Obama’s 2012 budget proposal is out and it revives the charitable deduction limitation for wealthy donors.

That means we’ll have to listen to the doomsayers, like Independent Sector’s Diana Aviv, exclaim how devastating this will be to the nonprofit community. From last December, here’s a preview of what we’ll hear very shortly. The only nonprofits she speaks for in that article, “Nonprofits Fear Losing Tax Benefit,” are the members of Independent Sector.

I’m thinking of the other 95%, the vast majority of nonprofits who don’t care because they don’t have donors, or many donors, who earn over $250,000 a year, the income at which the deduction reduction would kick in.

We know that tax incentives are not people’s primary motivation for giving. Altruism is. We know that giving always bounces back after depression, recession and tax changes that depress it. This will not destroy the nonprofit sector.

Can’t we trust our donors for Pete’s sake?

On the day the President’s proposal was released, here’s what Independent Sector had on its home page:

Link provided to the webcache of the Independent Sector website (click on the image).

I remember that. It was about two months ago, and it all sounded quite good for charities, including the 95% unheard “minority” that fundraise from low and middle income donors. Charities scored big in December. Do we have to score big again in 2012?

Why can’t the vocal nonprofits step-up this time and say, “Well, we don’t love it, but we’ll do our share to help reduce the deficit that, in small but noticeable part, the charitable deduction has contributed to for decades. Plus, we got these bennies in December 2010 so we’ll sit out this round.”

Doom-and-gloomers: stop squawking. Spend your lobbying money and strategy time visiting prospects, reminding them how critical your good work is, and soliciting and closing gifts.

The most foresighted charities will stand out from the crowd, and publicly proclaim, “We accept the charitable deduction reduction. We want to do our part to help America’s recovery.” I see a full-page ad in The Times with a hundred CEO signatures. Their donations will triple. Run it in The Journal and donations will quadruple.

I trust America’s altruism. I base my trust on history. (Should “God Bless America” be playing in the background? I hear “This Land Is Your Land.”)

As this gets posted the day after Obama’s proposal was released, I could be wrong about the doomsayers. Maybe they’ll come around and accept what’s fair. If they do, look here for my congratulations and apology.

What Does Your Charity’s Conscience Say?

19th century charity board in the north aisle of St. Mary (copyright Richard Croft and licensed for reuse under this Creative Commons Licence)
National Public Radio reporting confirms what I have believed for years: IRS does not have sufficient resources devoted to policing the nation’s charities. That means the community must keep itself clean.

In NPR’s coverage, I’m focusing on the blog page where the story is posted. Not the four minute story, but the blog post and its shorter audio interview. A former director of the Service’s Tax Exempt/Government Entities team explains nonprofit examinations and audits aren’t a priority because considerably more money can be recovered from taxpayers and businesses.

That makes all of us in the nonprofit community responsible for operating properly. The buzzwords like accountability, transparency and compliance are well known, nearly cliché, and most of us recognize donors increasingly demand clean operations. That in itself should provide sufficient motivation.

Fear also motivates. If you don’t fear an IRS review because you’re resting on favorable odds, recognize that other interests within government are looking over your shoulder. From your state attorney general and secretary of state to the Federal Trade Commission and Congress, there are ample institutions helping to make sure you do the right thing.

Do you honestly not know what’s right? Do you fear the things you don’t know or understand? Your employees probably know the way. (That’s what I’ve seen for 13 years.) Are you listening to them? (In my 13 years, probably not.) If you prefer, there are thousands of consultants, in all stripes, to help your charity find its course.

Ultimately, it’s a matter of conscience–your charity’s conscience. What does it tell you about the right way to conduct business, to keep its reputation, donors, employees and board out of trouble?

That message is stronger than any IRS can put out.

Nonprofit Radio for February 11, 2011: Resplendent Resources – NonProfit Direct, Philanthropy Alive & Idealist.org


Big Nonprofit Ideas for the Other 95%

Episode 26 of Tony Martignetti Nonprofit Radio for February 11, 2011:

In this episode I’ll talk with the people behind three of the best nonprofit websites around.

First, I’ll speak to Marcia Bloomberg, founder NonProfit Direct: The NonProfit National Resource Directory.

Nonprofit Direct is absolutely free for nonprofits looking for assistance to help them survive and thrive. Consultants, coaches, vendors and specialists pay a low ONE-TIME fee for a listing. In order to have a listing on the site, a business or service does not have to be a nonprofit; rather a business or service is being offered to the nonprofit sector.

Second, I’ll speak to Diane MacDonald, principal of Philanthropy Alive! Philanthropy Alive’s mission is to connect organizations to foster capacity building and collaboration for more effective program delivery, leveraged buying power and to create a united and growing voice of advocacy to inspire change.

Last, I’ll talk to Ami Dar, founder of Idealist.org.

Idealist connects people, organizations, and resources to help build a world where all people can live free and dignified lives.

Idealist is independent of any government, political ideology, or religious creed. Their work is guided by the common desire of our members and supporters to find practical solutions to social and environmental problems, in a spirit of generosity and mutual respect.

Top Trends.  Sound Advice.  Lively Conversation.

You’re on the air and on target as I delve into the big issues facing your nonprofit—and your career.

If you have big dreams but an average budget, tune in to Tony Martignetti Nonprofit Radio.

I interview the best in the business on every topic from board relations, fundraising, social media and compliance, to technology, accounting, volunteer management, finance, marketing and beyond.  Always with you in mind.

When and where: Talking Alternative Radio, Fridays, 1-2PM Eastern

You can subscribe on iTunes and listen anytime, anyplace on the device of your choosing.

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Here is a link to the podcast: 028: Resplendent Resources
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Welcome to tony martignetti non-profit radio big non-profit ideas for the other ninety five percent, i’m your aptly named host. What a coincidence that i found this terrific show you may recall last week it was branded best bets for branding and promoting your non-profit my guest was howard levy he’s, the principal of the red rooster group. This week we have resplendent resource is non-profit direct philanthropy alive and idealist, dot or ge critical help for your smaller midsize non-profit the founders of these three sites are going to talk to us about what they’re doing, what the sites air about and why you should be using them. I’ll talk to marsha bloomberg with non-profit direct in the studio with me will be diane mcdonald, with philanthropy alive and by tape mihdhar, the founder of idealist dot or ge that’s from an interview that was recorded at the next-gen charity conference last november on tony’s take two thirty two minutes after the hour. Itunes is not only coming, itunes is here. I’ll remind you about that all of that after this break. But before the break, i just wantto recognize something historic. Today is the day that ah, the egyptian president hosni mubarak resigned. He has left the country. Our producer sam didn’t know that because he’s behind the controls all day happened around five p m local time in cairo. He went to his family vacation home. He and his and his family went to their vacation home in sharm el sheikh, and the vice president made a very brief announcement that said the president had resigned and the army is in control. The president left the army in control. So if you’re listening to this ten years later, i’m sure this podcast it’s the last, at least that long you’ll look back on this as the historic day that egyptian monarchy became, well, became something else. We’ll have to see what becomes. We’re going to take a two minute break, and after we returned, i’ll be with marcia bloomberg. Stay with me, you didn’t do anything, do e-giving ding, ding, ding ding. You’re listening to the talking alternate network e-giving duitz is your marriage in trouble? Are you considering divorce? Hello, i’m lawrence bloom, a family law attorney in new york and new jersey. No one is happier than the day their divorce is final. My firm can help you. We take the nasty out of the divorce process and make people happy. Police crawl are said to want to nine six four three five zero two for a free consultation. That’s lawrence h bloom, too. One, two, nine, six, four, three, five zero two. We make people happy. Durney are you suffering from aches and pains? Has traditional medicine let you down? Are you tired of taking toxic medications, then come to the double diamond wellness center and learn how our natural methods can help you to hell? Call us now at to one to seven to one eight, one eight three that’s to one to seven to one eight one eight three or find us on the web at www dot double diamond wellness dot com way look forward to serving you. Hey, all you crazy listeners looking to boost your business? Why not advertise on talking alternative with very reasonable rates? Interested simply email at info at talking alternative dot com welcome back with me now is marcia bloomberg. Marcia is the founder of non-profit direct. Over nearly thirty years, she has worked in education and family services in new hampshire and vermont, and at the jewish community federation of cleveland, ohio, and also cleveland hillel. In two thousand seven, she founded the bloomberg group, a consulting and coaching company in western massachusetts, and she also created non-profit direct the non-profit national resource directory, and that is what brings her to the show today. Welcome, marcia, how are you? Fine, thank you, toni, and thank you so much for having me on today to talk about non-profit direct is my pleasure to have you welcome you saw a need. What what was that need? I did you know, i can’t really deeply about non-profits in the work they do to make the world a better place. And when i was in cleveland as executive director of a nonprofit there, cleveland hillel sometimes needed an outside event coordinator program, evaluation of evaluator or a grant writer, and i wasn’t sure what i could find someone who could really provide what we needed, and i might ask around among my colleagues, but sometimes that works sometimes it didn’t. I might get one name, but i didn’t know where to find a list of consultants with their credentials and testimonials. So when i moved to massachusetts a couple of years ago and i got my certification in life coaching, i realized that an important by product of the coaching program was that i had to focus on my own life and what inspired me. So as a result of that introspection, i was inspired to create non-profit director non-profit nasco resource directory. I figured if i had a need, others must have a need as well. So it started as a directory of consultants, i guess, and vendors to non-profits exactly when i started in december two thousand eight that’s exactly what it was at this point. It’s grown teo well over two hundred consultant coaches, vendors and specialists, and we now include other kinds of resource is i’m really happy to say, what is the the girl? Uh, police marchenese it w w w dot non-profit dafs direct dot com okay, non-profit dash direct dot com. So two hundred, i’m sure you aspire to be much larger. Absolutely. I would love to have a thousand or more consultants and vendors and specialist listed from across the united states. Right now, we do have folks who served non-profits from almost every state in the union. But i would really love to have five times as many. Okay, why don’t you give us a sense of the breath of the vendors and consultants that you have? Okay, well, we have people listed in over eighty categories of service, so there are folks who offer services in accreditation administration management. There are folks who provide awards and recognition board development. We have those who are specialists and capital campaigns and other kinds of philanthropic development in civil rights, compliance in multi agency collaboration in diversity, all kinds of things. Okay, and how does it work for non-profits? How did they take advantage of non-profit direct? Well, if non-profits go to www dot non-profit dash direct dot com, they will see that there is the directory, the consultant’s directory, along with ah non-profit resource library. And that library is created in conjunction with dea on core, and it is ah, listing of lots and lots of resource is that have been uploaded to idea encore, which i’ve downloaded in various areas of non-profit functioning. So that’s there for non-profits to usas well, okay, way will. We will get to the resource library. But in terms of the consultant in vendor directory first is that free for non-profits? Yes, it is it’s absolutely free to peruse the directory. I would like to say, though that non-profit direct doesn’t evaluate the firms that are listed. We really leave it. Teach non-profit too research whom and what they need and what the best matches. Okay, and how does one search is it by expert area of expertise, you can search my area of expertise if you go to the directory non-profit direct there’s. A tap on the top of the pay the welcome page that says our directory so you can actually search by service category a to z on the welcome page as well. On the right there’s, a pull down menu of service categories and you can type anything that you would like into the search function. So if, for example, someone was looking for a grant writer in massachusetts, they could type in massachusetts, and they would get a list of those firms in massachusetts. Okay, and in spirit of disclosure, i wantto our listeners to know that this show is listed on non-profit direct, but not a quid pro quo. With all the i paid the fee to be listed, and i saw the resource and that’s why i invited marshall to be on, um, marcia, you assume there are consultants and vendors all over the country. There are way. Have them from maine to alaska. Okay, we are going to take a short break, a couple minute break, and when we returned, of course, marcia bloomberg, founder of non-profit direct, will stay with us. I hope you do, too. Talking alternative radio twenty four hours a day. Are you feeling overwhelmed in the current chaos of our changing times? A deeper understanding of authentic astrology can uncover solutions in every area of life. After all, metaphysics is just quantum physics, politically expressed hi and montgomery taylor and i offer lectures, seminars and private consultations. For more information, contact me at monte m o nt y at r l j media. Dot com are you stuck in your business or career trying to take your business to the next level, and it keeps hitting a wall? This is sam liebowitz, the conscious consultant. I will help you get to the root cause of your abundance issues and help move you forward in your life. Call me now and let’s. Create the future you dream of. Two, one, two, seven, two, one, eight, one, eight, three, that’s to one to seven to one, eight one eight three. The conscious consultant helping hunters. People be better business people. Dahna i really need to take better care of myself. If only i had someone to help me with my lifestyle. I feel like giving up. Is this you mind over matter, health and fitness can help. If you’re expecting an epiphany, chances are it’s not happening. Mind over matter, health and fitness could help you get back on track or start a new life and fitness. Join joshua margolis, this fitness expert, at two one two eight six five nine to nine xero, or visit w w w dot mind over matter. Y si dot com. You’re listening to the talking alternative network. Duitz no. Oppcoll hi there. Welcome back. I’m tony martignetti, the host of tony martignetti non-profit radio big non-profit ideas for the other ninety five percent with me. This segment is marcia bloomberg, the founder of non-profit direct. You’ll find that at www dot non-profit hyphen direct dot com marcia, since we’re talking about how non-profits used the sight you you said the directory is free, and the resource center, which will get two is free, is there there is the aa membership option for non-profits is that right? Yes, are actually our latest creation is the non-profit membership, and what we offer is access to all of our tell a seminars we offer between twenty and thirty tell a seminars every year, and so there’s access to each of the tell us emissaries when a non-profit joins non-profit direct there’s also the opportunity to participate in a monthly mastermind group for non-profit leadership and to have two sessions of leadership coaching with me as the coach for a member of their organization. And in addition, we have lots of are listed specialists who have offered either discounts on their services or free consulting for those who join as the non-profit member of non-profit direct. And how did the seas work for non-profits? There are actually two different fees based on the annual budget of the non-profit so it’s a non-profit had an annual budget of under five hundred thousand dollars. Membership fee is one hundred forty nine. And if the annual budget worth five hundred thousand or more it’s two, forty nine for a membership. Okay, whatever some of the tele seminar subjects that you’ve had. Well, we actually let me tell you, the ones that are coming up. We have, i think, twelve that air scheduled through july one is brand building through the board of directors. Another one has to do with fund-raising auctions, common pitfalls and how to address them. We’ve also got fourteen keys latto leading, effective and engage in collaborative teams, raising money with social media, fundamentals of prospect research, those air, some that are coming up okay, nothing about planned e-giving in there. I’m disappointed. I think that we probably have to have you on. Let’s see, you said that your coaching background sort of led you to introspection to create non-profit direct and you do two complimentary leadership coaching for the for the non-profits have joined the site, right? What was it about? Thea, what is it about the coaching that brought you to non-profit directs a little more about that. Well, i really had teo i was being coached while i was learning to be a coach, and one of the things that coaching allows you to do is really look inside and think about what is your real purpose in life and what do you passionate about? And i knew when i went into coaching that i wanted to do something for with about non non-profits but i wasn’t quite sure what and literally it was an inspiration one day that that it popped into my head, that really what i needed to do was create non-profit direct and what would the value be to someone in getting two hours of coaching time with you? What can you do in two hours for of leadership coaching? It’s really? Just a beginning, but it’s a way for a leader in a non profit. Organization either a volunteer leader or professional to think about one challenge that they’re facing, it could be a new organizational challenge, or it could be a personal challenge that relates to the work that they’re doing and to really think about where the challenge comes from and to try to draw on their own hyre wisdom to create a plan to approach the challenge so that they can work their way through it and succeed. We’re about someone who’s apprehensive about coaching. Well, you know what? It is an option if a non-profit would like to take advantage of, you know, really it’s not mandatory, you won’t neo-sage going toe, you’re not going to tie them to a chair for two hours, but people that may have an interest, but they feel, you know, i’m sharing maybe organizational, our organization secrets or my own. I have to talk about my own shortcomings as a leader, perhaps. How do you overcome that kind of apprehensive nus for someone who may have an interest, but those are the kinds of things holding them back. Well, that’s an interesting question, and i think there are lots of folks who wonder about that. Although coaching is not therapy and it’s not consulting, it is like therapy and that anything that’s said in a coaching session is completely confidential and that is agreed upon up front. And is there a right? Is there? I’m just going to go a little further. Is there a written document that says that to assure the person yes, there is there is. There are all kinds of different kinds of coaching contracts, depending on what the services are and who the coaches and that kind of thing. But, yes, there is a document that we can each sign explaining the confidentiality of sessions. Okay, okay, that was a little digression. Just i wanted to just make that clear for people, but but so generally overcoming the apprehension. Yes. You know, i would be happy to have a conversation with anyone who might like to talk about what coaching is and what coaching entails, how we go about it. What? What techniques are what the concepts are, but i would never push anyone who was apprehensive into doing it. It would just be an educational sessions. Okay, i understand i’m with marshall bloomberg and marcia is the founder of non-profit direct non-profit hyphen direct dot com and we’re talking about some of the benefits to non-profits that might join the site, although there are free resource is on that site, you don’t have to non-profit doesn’t have to join we’re talking about some of the benefits if you if you do happen to, and marsha another one of those is the way called the mastermind siri’s, why don’t you tell us what that is? Well, interestingly enough, matt, the concept of mastermind was developed by andrew carnegie, so it’s something that’s been around for quite a while, and it was made popular by napoleon hill, who wrote a book called think and grow rich and it’s. Actually, the concept is that when people put their heads together on and they work on a challenge together, that you can create a kind of mastermind that’s more than the sum of its parts, and that you’re really drawing on everyone’s experience and a kind of collective wisdom so a mastermind would be at the other end of the spectrum of groupthink. Yeah, he’s really with groupthink. No, no, no that’s the okay that’s, the that’s, the that’s! The curse of of ah, sort of decision making by committee, which is that they end up well, there are a lot of implications of it, but basically they end up revolving around and following a course that isn’t the best, but it has to do with people not wanting to disagree with others and everybody rallying around maybe the first idea that sounds good, so everybody jumps on it, so i think it would be at the other end of the spectrum committee in committee and sort of crowdsourcing work. It’s the mastermind, yes, and it’s really not a decision by committee, it really is. But one of the members of the mastermind group may throw out a challenge, and those folks who have experience with it or have an idea about it might share something from their own experience from their own expertise. But the person that really throughout the the challenge is the one who would make the decision about what makes the most sense for him or her. I see, and you’ve had these mastermind session’s already not with the non-profits since it’s, a brand new membership option’s waiting for for a large enough group so that we can really begin, but i’ve been a member of a mastermind group for the last couple of years, and it’s been exceedingly helpful in helping me understand how to build my own business. All right, so what do we talk about the resource library, which is another offering on the site that is free, right? Sonar non-profit doesn’t have to join the site to get access to the resource library. You started to talk about it want to tell me a little more? Sure non-profit resource library is a tab on the welcome page of non-profit direct so anyone can go to it and see what’s listed there. Most of the material that’s lifted is free idea encore, who was a partner in the library, will allowed folks toe upload material that has a cost, but no one has to download that material if they’re not interested in paying for it, and i would say that ninety or ninety five percent of it is is free so there’s lots of material on starting a non-profit on legal issues for non-profits various categories of information and all in all, in downloadable form, or most of it down little form and what’s the organization. That you’re partnered with for that resource library you mentioned? Yes. It’s called idea on core network. Okay, but of course, you access it through non-profit direct. Yeah. Okay. Um so what are some of your goals for the site? It’s now i’m sorry. Just starting to its now what? To it’s? A two, two and a half years old. It’s. Two years old years, ok? And as i mentioned, i would love to have thousands of consultants, coaches, vendors and specialists listed from all around the country on dh. I would like it to be kind of a one stop shop in the first place. That non-profits look, when they’re looking for these kinds of resource is so that’s that’s really what i’m working toward. And so it sounds like a lot of education. And beyond into empowerment. Yes. Absolutely. That’s a great way to put it. All right, you can. You can use that in your it’s. Not a breach of jargon. Jail. Everybody understands empowerment. So yeah, this show we have jargon, jail for anybody, use jargon, but that’s not that’s, not jargon. That’s. Uh, that’s legitimate. So you can’t be welcome to use that. Okay. Um and this applies for and is beneficial for all non-profits of different charitable missions does that matter? I’m really trying to serve non-profits across the board, but just like tony martignetti non-profit radio, i really think that non-profit direct is most appropriate for the other ninety five percent small and midsize, exactly okay, and including startup because you mentioned that there was resource information about starting a non profit in the library in in the resource library, there is information about starting a non profit, and we have some specialists listed whose area of expertise is starting non-profit okay, so even if you’re not a non-profit yet, you still can take advantage of non-profit direct, oh, absolutely. Okay on dh geography doesn’t matter. Geography does not matter that tell of seminars are virtual that they are held by phone every couple of weeks and they’re not webinars. They’re actually done through an audio conference service, and the presenters who are speaking generally send out there are they email out their information ahead of time so that folks have a power point or a pdf toe look at it’s kind of a faux webinar. Marshall, what are some of your challenges? In in marketing and promoting non-profit direct, i think, partly that it’s so new, and that we have a national focus. And so it’s, very broad, and also i am at this point the only employee, okay? Dahna but so you’re sort of competing with sites like the one that we’re goingto profile later in the show idealist dot or ge you you want to be thought of in the first instance, but there are some sites that do have resource is maybe not his riches yours, but that are better? Well, not better known. Oh, absolutely an idealist dot organs of fabulous organization, and they have been around for quite a while. I actually looked at their sight today, and some of the differences are that one of the ways that people use idealist, not organs, when they’re looking for jobs in the nonprofit sector and that’s, not something that non-profit direct offers, they also lists all list, all kind of kinds of events non-profit events that are taking place in a multitude of places, we don’t do that, so i feel like we’re a compliment rather than competition on dh also, in fairness to you, they know idealised. Has been around since nineteen, ninety five long time, long time, all right, so let’s say, in five years, aside from having thousands of vendors and consultants, what else would you like to see on non-profit direct? I would really love to know from non-profits what their major challenges are so that we can help to address them. I feel like i have to do this in partnership with non-profits and that i can’t kind of pull out of the air where we’ll be in five years unless i know what their needs are. And so we are trying to find that out. We find it out through our tell a seminars, i’ve done some surveying, and i’ll continue to do that. And is there a way that people can get in touch with you? Are, you know, be part of that process if they’re not members of non-profit direct? Oh, absolutely. I actually have a database at this point of almost seven thousand non-profits that we’re in touch with someone would like to be in touch with me, i can give you the email address. No. Once you do that, please it’s marcia dot bloomberg at gmail dot com that m a r see a doctor b l o o m b e r g at gmail dot com and then please go home. So the possibility of signing up for our newsletter and that way i also get the contact information and that there’s an e newsletter sign up on the non-profit direct sight so that even if someone isn’t yet using non-profit direct, they can be a part of your conversation in helping to build the site. Absolutely seeing what those non-profit needs are yeah, and i would love to hear from non-profits in terms of that, what kinds of things? Yeah, what kinds of things do you do you get feedback on now? Most of the feedback actually comes through the tele seminars, so i can tell when we’re offering a tele seminar by the number of non profit organizations that registered to participate, we had anywhere from from ten to sixty and the kinds of questions that they ask and the challenges that they share during the question and answer period, why don’t you share an example of something that’s been been challenging and maybe overcome at the same time, but at least ah challenge. If not overcome the challenge that i heard the other day when we did i guess it was yesterday when we did a tell a seminar on developing relationships with grantmaker tze was an organization that has been submitting a grant to a local boedecker for several years and not been able to access a grant on also hasn’t been able to make it appointment with with anyone at the organism at the foundation. So the presenter talked about ways to get around that, and it was an interesting was an interesting challenge, and we had about twenty five organizations on the call who are trying to build relationships with grantmaker zand that’s a really critical one in this economy and and that’s something that’s shared pretty widely by small and midsize non-profits that repetitive, repetitive grant process that just never yields anything exactly exactly alright, excellent, excellent work. Ah, more sure anything you want to leave us with about non-profit direct just that i hope that folks will find it useful and that they will get in touch with me. So let me know what other kinds of resource is they might need so that we can help to create those for them. Thank you very much. Thank you for joining me, marsha. Thank you, tony. Take care, thank you very much. My guest has been marshall bloomerang bloomberg and she’s, the founder of non-profit direct. We’re going to take a short break, then it’s, tony’s, take two, and then i’ll be joined by diane mcdonald, and we’ll be talking about philanthropy alive. Another valuable site. Stay with me. You’re listening to the talking alternative network. Dahna this is tony martignetti aptly named host of tony martignetti non-profit radio big non-profit ideas for the other ninety five percent technology fund-raising compliance social media, small and medium non-profits have needs in all these areas. My guests are expert in all these areas and mohr tony martignetti non-profit radio fridays one to two eastern on talking alternative broadcasting do you want to enhance your company’s web presence with an eye catching and unique website design? Would you like to incorporate professional video marketing mobile marketing into your organization’s marketing campaign? Mission one on one media offers a unique marketing experience that will set you apart from your competitors, magnify your brand exposure and enhancer current marketing efforts. Their services include video production and editing, web design, graphic design photography, social media management and now introducing mobile marketing. Their motto is we do whatever it takes to make our clients happy contact them today. Admission one one media dot com hey, all you crazy listeners looking to boost your business, why not advertise on talking alternative with very reasonable rates? Interested simply email at info at talking alternative dot com welcome back where thirty two minutes into the show and that means it’s. Time for tony’s take two at thirty two. Itunes is no longer coming. I’m sad to say i’m related to say it’s already here so it’s no longer coming it’s here, you can subscribe to the show on itunes and get automated downloads. Then listen at your leisure on the device of your choice that could be your phone might be your laptop or your desktop or your ipad or some other tablet or a netbook. Whatever device can play an mp three, which is just about every device you can listen anywhere you want to sit at home, in the car, in the kitchen, the bedroom, wherever the hallway while you’re vacuuming, you can listen all those times on dh now i’m past the twenty four show Mark this is show number 20 eight so you can actually listen to twenty martignetti non-profit radio for a full day. You could just go back to back twenty four hours nonstop, non sleep and listen, take a break. You know you could take an hour, soto latto latto nap but i would keep the show playing. And so your hearing it sort of subconsciously in your sleep, i would do that. So there’s plenty of media, plenty of content for you to listen to and subscribe to and the way to subscribe is to go to non-profit radio dot net non-profit radio dot net that will bring you to our itunes, paige and that’s, where you’ll be able to subscribe, you’ll get automatic downloads to your device and listen at your leisure that is tony’s take two for friday, february eleventh with me in the studio now is diane mcdonald, and a quote that i found on ah website of hers is, quote, i believe the future of not-for-profits development lies in collaboration and sustainability. End quote diane is the director of operations for all for africa and that’s, the website where that quote is from but she’s here today to tell us about philanthropy alive and how that site and that venture will fill a collaboration gap. Diane has worked in program development with chefs for humanity, action against hunger. She founded an educational community center and developed yoga play, a therapeutic practice for children with special needs. You can tell she has a lot of experience. Around small non-profits founding them doing program work with them, as well as being an executive director or interim deputy director. I’m very pleased that her work and her around philanthropy alive and her concern about collaboration gaps brings her to the show today. Welcome, diane. Thank you for having me looking forward to being here. It’s a pleasure. You are here. You’re in here. You’re in looking forward to talking let’s. Talk about philanthropy alive. Why did you start it? Um, i had the opportunities probably about three or four years ago with the world food program to go to the north atlantic district region in nicaragua. And we were looking at the after effects of felix and food distribution, and we’re driving down the road and i’m seeing villages that are completely, really rebuilt with every different color jerry can and roofs back on the houses and then five kilometers down the road, i would see a village that was still completely decimated where people were still living under plastic and under sticks. No food, no sanitation, and it really struck me. And ever since then, i mean why some communities were were better further along in rebuilding. Than another’s well, and i think it was mostly seeing the jerry cans that in what’s a jerk a jerry can is a like a petroleum or a water jug that people carry water in. So calm in developing countries don’t want to put you in jargon jail so quickly, you’ve only been here a minute or two that’s okay, jordan charge in jail over joey kane’s. Okay, so i think what struck me is that every organization kind of has their own color, jerry can so you’d see a village that had ten different color jerry cans and another village that had no one there. And so to me, it seemed that, you know, there was no communication between organizations who was going where, how food was being distributed, how water was being distributed, how cleanup was being done, and it really struck me. And of course, we saw this with haiti and there’s been a lot of news about this in the media, and so at that moment, seeing it first hand, it just really struck me how little communication there is amongst not-for-profits really working on the ground and does that lead to what you call the collaboration gap? Yes, absolutely. Why don’t you talk about that? What? What? What bothers you there? What bothers me is that i don’t believe that organization schnoll are speaking to each other and i think that, you know, knowing myself running many charities, we get very mission driven. We are very concerned about our donor base are fund-raising and we’re not communicating with other organizations who are in our same field in our same sector, whether it’s childhood nutrition, childhood obesity, international development, s o we’re just so focused on our mission and our impact and our accomplishments that we forget to talk to our neighbors, and we don’t think about that. Perhaps in working with them, we could actually be mohr impactful on dh create greater change, and i think that it’s that communication gap, that is really the major cause of organizations not working together and philanthropy alive. And i want people to know that the site is not built out yet, but it’s founders here and it will be philantech be alive is a solution for that house house that, i presume is that it is a solution are goal is teo really and hate to use this term, but our goal is to really almost create a facebook for not-for-profits the door would be closed, so it wouldn’t be a site where initially funders and donors air looking, it would literally be a platform for not-for-profits too become in communication with other organisations in their same sector, so conversation walls about a particular topic that may be of interest on ability to communicate amongst each other. Talk about what’s working what’s not working also inability for organizations to talk across sector. So, you know, if an organization, for example, i’m very immersed in africa right now, so use this example if an organization is building a school in a village that has no sanitation, no hygiene, no health center, you know, how who can they communicate with to say, hey, let’s, come together in partnership and take a holistic perspective of how we’re going to work in this particular community rather than just go in and build just a school? So the platforms goal is to allow organizations to reach out with projects and to say where they need help, where their gaps are, and then for other organizations to be able to chime in and help fill those gaps and what’s the state of the site right now. Now, i don’t mean the site itself. I mean your your work toward developing the site. We are in conversations with the technical team, but we’re still we have a long way to go. It’s probably six months away from happening six to eight months away from happening. And you have a method similar to my first guest, marcia in gathering information, having starting these conversations with non-profits your educational sorry, your discovery educational siri’s, which is which is actually happening now. So don’t you tell us about it is great. Well, we are. We launched a series of panel discussions last month were doing those in partnership with ej, elaine, edward angels, palmer and dodge and that’s, a law firm that’s a law firm. They have a very strong tax exempt practice, and the goal of these panel discussions is really just teo again, like the website will is just to really begin to have the conversation. Our first panel discussion was funders. We had someone from arabella advisers, unicef and the robin hood foundation, and those funders really sat down and just talked to the organizations to the attendees about the different ways that they have created collaborative partnerships and the great success that they have achieved since then. So we’re going to be running thes every month for the next six months and every topics a little bit different. But all of the topics really focus on various components of collaboration. Ok, and how can someone learn more about the discovery educational siri’s they can go to our very basic website, which is www dot philanthropy dash alive, dot com and there’s a sign up sheet there to get our senate form for for getting information, being on your mailing list. Okay, these panels are they all in new york city? Yes, all the panels air happening at seven hundred and fifty lexington have on the eighth floor. And so what? What? Some of the feedback that you’re getting or messages that you’re hearing that’s actually more important than feedback. What are you hearing in these in these panels? You know, what’s. So interesting is that when this whole project first kind of came into my brain and and we started discussing it, you know, i really felt that there was going to be a huge kind of barrier across to have these conversations and what’s interesting and what was so great in january is the enthusiasm of the attendees who were all folks working in the not-for-profits sector, there is a real understanding that something has to shift and the understanding that we need to start talking more communicating, more sharing ideas, building capacity, really, having those larger conversations in the world is so apparent, and people are really, really excited by what we’re doing now. There are great examples, i think, of collaboration in some non-profit sectors, like maybe environmental work versus distressing signals and outcomes in other charitable missions, which where the collaboration gap is more severe or or exists versus where it doesn’t want to talk a little about some of the sectors that you see doing it well and not so well, um, i think the environmental sector is an excellent example, and i think that of someone who’s doing it really well, there’s a lot of different environmental organizations and associations that have pulled together, you know, many different organizations into one association it’s increased their advocacy, i think just if you look around the world today and see how much information there is out there about global warming and green salute shins you can see that there’s been success there, and that tends to be a sector where there’s been a ton of communication and a lot of collaboration and not just collaboration among non-profits right? But outside with government business is essential to draw into the environmental movement. Absolutely. So they’ve been collaborating just not among non-profits and i, i presume philanthropy alive will allow other entities besides non-profits absolutely, i think collaboration, can’tjust be among the not-for-profits there has the funders need to be involved outside corporations and businesses. I think social entrepreneurs right now there’s a lot of kind of line crossing right now with social entrepreneurs who our starting very mission driven businesses that can work in collaboration with organizations that are already entrenched in a sector. So i would agree wholeheartedly, and i think that that is where the environmental movement has been so powerful is that there’s a huge, holistic communication and every sector is involved, and you can see what that’s done the word is out there, the advocacy is clear, the message is clear and we’re all hearing about it very uplifting. But there are charitable sectors where we haven’t seen that kind of that kind of outcomes, correct? That scene just the just the two minutes or so that we have remaining, are you concerned at all that if the site is not open to donors? Ah, that it’s sort of anti transparency is that, you know, because donors funders are interested now and not only accountability, transparency, openness, do you see this as antithetical to that there’s a back into the site that will be open to funders and donors on dh? That is, after collaborative projects have been created and determined by the people within the sight that those projects can then be visible for funding. So the key is to be able to have the conversation without feeling threatened and feeling like your donor base is at risk because you’re sharing your information or talking about problems, you know we don’t in this sector, we don’t really often have an opportunity or a platform to say, hey, here’s what’s not working, who can help me and that’s because we’re always trying to talk about what is working so that we can increase our funding. But we i believe so strongly that we need a platform where people can say, hey, this is where i’m in trouble, this is what’s, not working. This is where i’m not being able to build my capacity, this’s, where i’m not feeling like i’m having a great impact, and i think that that needs to be a closed conversation. The site is philanthropy alive. You’ll find it at www. Dot philanthropy, hyphen alive, dot com and my guest has been the founder and street strategist, and working and doing everything around building the site, that is diane macdonald. Diane, thank you very much for joining me. Thank you, it’s. My pleasure, my pleasure to have you. I want to thank diane and also marcia bloomberg, and we’re going to take a break. And after this break, will hear have a pre recorded interview that i did with ami dar, the founder of idealist, dot or ge. Stay with us talking alternative radio, twenty four hours a day. Buy-in are you stuck in your business or career trying to take your business to the next level, and it keeps hitting a wall? This is sam liebowitz, the conscious consultant. I will help you get to the root cause of your abundance issues and help move you forward in your life. Call me now and let’s. Create the future you dream of. Two, one, two, seven, two, one, eight, one, eight, three, that’s to one to seven to one, eight one eight three. The conscious consultant helping conscious people. Be better business people. I really need to take better care of myself. If only i had someone to help me with my lifestyle. I feel like giving up. Is this you mind over matter, health and fitness can help. If you’re expecting an epiphany, chances are it’s not happening. Mind over matter, health and fitness could help you get back on track or start a new life and fitness. Join Joshua margolis, fitness expert at 2 one two eight six five nine to nine xero. Or visit w w w died. Mind over matter. Y si dot com. Buy-in do you want to enhance your company’s web presence with an eye catching and unique website design? Would you like to incorporate professional video marketing mobile marketing into your organization’s marketing campaign? Mission one on one media offers a unique marketing experience that will set you apart from your competitors, magnify your brand exposure and enhance your current marketing efforts. Their services include video production and editing, web design, graphic design photography, social media management and now introducing mobile marketing. Their motto is, we do whatever it takes to make our clients happy. Contact them today. Admission. Wanna one media dot com? Talking. Durney welcome back. Now i have a pre recorded interview that i did with ami dar, the founder of idealist dot or ge. And this is from the next-gen charity conference in new york city last november. We have that interview here it is. And joining me now is ami. Dar mi is the founder and executive director of idealist dot org’s. It was built in nineteen ninety six with thirty, five hundred dollars. It has become one of the most popular non-profit re sources on the web with information provided by one hundred thousand organizations around the world. And it has seventy thousand visitors every day to the site. I’m very pleased that idealist and armies work brings him to our coverage today. Ami, thank you very much for joining me. Thank you. Let’s. Talk about idealist. I think people know it for the job. Postings out. How did, uh, how did that? That portion get started? Well, the whole thing started the same time. And we built inside ninety five, ninety six to allow any organization in the world to essentially have a space on the web for free at the time. Ever want to be on the web? But having a website wasn’t sort of obvious how you do that, and so we said, let’s, get a site where any non-profit ngo charity anywhere can come create a profile off themselves, their mission and then post the things that non-profit sort of dew and need. We didn’t get to the whole donation business, but we said, non-profits need staff, they need jobs, you know, volunteers and interns, and they produce programs, they produce events, and the produce resource is, yeah, so allow any non-profit to list as many of those as it wanted from the very beginning, and then a schools are doing that the job’s things sort of took on a life of its own, people kept coming back to the site to find jobs, and so the site became better known for that, but we still do all of the other stuff as well, and we’re going to talk about some of that other stuff, but that was a critical time in ninety five twenty six, the web was just emerging broadly and non-profits we’re trying to figure it out. Yeah, it was interesting year, i mean, ninety five, actually, we started eighty five and it’s the same year that craigslist, amazon, ebay and yahoo means interesting year the following year, another interesting year is the year in which for the first time, people took websites and attached them to databases of ninety six was a year in which you could go and find a book on amazon or go and track your package and fedex. And so we said, well, wait a second, why shouldn’t non-profits have their own database where you could, like, find stuff? And that was complete revolutionary time now it sort of now it sort of obvious, and i remember having a friend i had my first business in ninety for ninety five remember having a friend who predicted that the web wasn’t gonna last. It was bad, he’s still in business. Remarkably, he still doesn’t know his own business. I had opposite that. We have a whole bunch of meetings like that with funders, basically, who said, you know, this thing is just a fad. It’s going away there was again, you know, you just you don’t know about you, but i’m sort of getting old and i remember things for example, remember ninety six, ninety seven, ninety eight how? It took two or three years for foundation staff. Sort of dane toe. Add an email address card. It was like it was phone. This email thing is cleared up, but why should i give it away? So so the thing’s justified? It was going to palace. Well, it’s sort of lasted a bit. Yeah, and let’s talk about some of the other resources that are available besides so that the audience knows they could go there. Aside from looking for jobs or posting jobs. What what’s? Another area you’d like to have the audience know about? Well, volunteering for example, they could confine ability opportunities where they are all over the world. The site the whole site works in english, spanish and french. So ideas are the least touchpoint or at least one more with the whole site is in those three languages. You concert, you can browse, you can sign up, probably call him alerts, which is that you could basically put up a profile of yourself and say, you know, i’m in new york, but i want a volunteer in india as a nurse next summer and so every time non-profit post something matches your interests or your location, you’ll get a no, dear John good morning here. The 3 or four things that match you, they’re posted yesterday, and so we showed at about a quarter million of those emails every night. Two people ok on, you know, the beauty of it is that the most free, so it just goes out, doesn’t cost us anything. We want to pay for a quarter million stamps, and people get their email alerts in their inbox next morning and there’s something that i’m not sure people are that familiar with that individuals can benefit from it. The these types of volunteer opportunity alerts exactly so free you have about a million people right now. We’re getting those on your, you know, invited to sign up. Okay, what’s, another one you’d like to share non-profit side. I mean, you could get bonem use you get interns. If you have any event that you do it, you can promote it and people can send up for it. You can. If you have, you know any kind of resource you produce. The dvd produced a video. You want to share that with people come along and do that. Really? So sharing. All your content insurance account listing it on sharing it and people come for that if you are a different thing altogether, if you’re thinking of possibly going to grad school next year or two, we partner with grass schools, all the country, to do these about twenty fairs like face-to-face you can go in twenty cities in the country and meet admissions people from, you know, things like social work and non-profit management actually talk to them your city’s. So we just finished a whole season. Now we’ll have another season next fall in summer for, like, twenty more so there’s a whole set of then then we have what we call these resource center’s, ifyou’re, volunteermatch injure or non-profit manager, you could go and find out all kinds of things useful links, so i think people need to go on just basically check it out exploring you clearly want idealist to be ah, part of the the social media fabric so that his non-profits are embarking on a social media strategy. You want them to be considering idealist as well as a place for content. Absolute your management volunteer finding etcetera. Okay, anything you’d like to leave us. With a look out for for the next version of the site, we two years ago, we were working on this. Complete new idealist. Artwork will be launching the next few weeks. We’re hoping for the end of the year, so look, offer completely sort of new, modernized site, and hopefully people will find it useful. Okay, excellent. We look forward to that. Thank you so much. Want to thank me dar, the founder and executive director of idealist, dot or ge for joining us? You’re listening to tony martignetti non-profit radio coverage. Live coverage of the next-gen charity conference. Indeed you were. I also want to thank diane macdonald and marsha bloomberg for joining me today next week, finding prospects and finding a job. Maria simple, principal of the prospect finder, returns to the show to talk about the second edition of her book, panning for gold find high net worth prospects now also next week i’m looking, we’ll catch up with our recruiting consultant, paula marks, as she helps our non-profit job seeker leonora enter the non-profit job market hope you’ll listen next week. You can keep up with what’s coming up. You don’t have to listen for me to tell you what’s coming up every week, you can find out on your own. Sign up for our insider email alerts on the facebook page, and you’ll hear from us weekly. And while you’re there, i hope you’ll click the like button, become a fan of tony martignetti non-profit radio. You find that at facebook and then just search for the name of this show and there it will be itunes reminder. Subscribe and listen anywhere anytime that’s it non-profit radio dot net creative producer of tony martignetti non-profit radio as always, is clear meyerhoff our line producer is sam liebowitz, and sam is also the owner of talking alternative broadcasting. Our social media is by regina walton, expertly done of organic social media. That’s, her company, and i hope you will be with me listening next week when we talk about finding prospects and finding a job. That’ll be one p m eastern here on talking alternative broadcasting, as always found at talking alternative dot com. You’re listening to the talking alternative network, waiting to get you thinking. Cubine are you suffering from aches and pains? Has traditional medicine let you down? Are you tired of taking toxic medications, then come to the double diamond wellness center and learn how our natural methods can help you to hell? Call us now at to one to seven to one eight, one eight three that’s to one to seven to one eight one eight three or find us on the web at www dot double diamond wellness dot com way look forward to serving you. Are you feeling overwhelmed in the current chaos of our changing times? A deeper understanding of authentic astrology can uncover solutions in every area of life. After all, metaphysics is just quantum physics, politically expressed hi and montgomery taylor and i offer lectures, seminars and private consultations. For more information, contact me at monte m o nt y at r l j media. Dot com you’re listening to talking on their network at www dot talking alternative dot com now broadcasting twenty four hours a day. Is your marriage in trouble? Are you considering divorce? Hello, i’m lawrence bloom, a family law attorney in new york and new jersey, osili no one is happier than the day their divorce is final. My firm can help you. We take the nasty out of the divorce process and make people happy. Police call us ed to one, two, nine, six, four three five zero two for a free consultation. That’s lawrence h bloom, too. One, two, nine, six, four, three, five zero two. We make people happy. I really need to take better care of myself. If only i had someone to help me with my lifestyle. I feel like giving up. Is this you mind over matter, health and fitness can help. If you’re expecting an epiphany, chances are it’s not happening. Mind over matter, health and fitness can help you get back on track or start a new life and fitness. Join Joshua margolis, fitness expert at 2 one two, eight sixty five nine to nine xero. Or visit w w w dot mind over matter. N y c dot com buy-in talking. Hyre

Rabbinical Assembly, Part Deux: Your Slides Are Here

Thank you for hosting me for part two of Demystifying Planned Giving. You’ve been a lot of fun to be with and you asked really good questions. I hope you’re invigorated–not intimidated–by Planned Giving and its possibilities for your shuls.

We can connect on LinkedIn, Twitter and Facebook.

Your slides are here or you can view them below on Slideshare.

Nonprofit Radio for February 4, 2011: Branded! Best Bets For Branding & Promoting Your Nonprofit


Big Nonprofit Ideas for the Other 95%

Episode 25 of Tony Martignetti Nonprofit Radio for February 4, 2011:

Branded! Best Bets For Branding & Promoting Your Nonprofit

Howard Levy, Principal of the Red Rooster Group, reveals how to identify, propagate, protect and exploit your organization’s brand.

Here are articles we’ll talk about:

Top Trends.  Sound Advice.  Lively Conversation.

You’re on the air and on target as I delve into the big issues facing your nonprofit—and your career.

If you have big dreams but an average budget, tune in to Tony Martignetti Nonprofit Radio.

I interview the best in the business on every topic from board relations, fundraising, social media and compliance, to technology, accounting, volunteer management, finance, marketing and beyond.  Always with you in mind.

When and where: Talking Alternative Radio, Fridays, 1-2PM Eastern

You can subscribe on iTunes and listen anytime, anyplace on the device of your choosing.

Sign-up for show alerts!

“Like” the show’s Facebook page.

Here is the link to the podcast: 027: Branding, Marketing and Promotion
View Full Transcript

Transcript for 027_tony_martignetti_nonprofit_radio_02042011.mp3

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Durney talk to him. Durney welcome to tony martignetti non-profit radio big non-profit ideas for the other ninety five percent. I’m your aptly named host, tony martignetti we’re going to live today and i’m going to give you that number right now, the number to call his eight seven seven for eight xero for one to xero we’re going to live very shortly with taking calls for howard levy and that’s coming up very shortly, talking about branding and promoting your non-profit you remember last week the segments were i’m looking to savvy strategies for your search. We checked in with our non-profit job seeker leonora, as she got advice from paula marks recruiter also on the show last week, winter active websites that was scott koegler, our regular tech contributor, he’s, the editor of non-profit technology news, and he explained what true interactivity is and how to achieve it so that your website winds this week. It’s branded best bets for branding and promoting your non-profit howard levy is the principle of the red rooster group, which you’ll find at red rooster group dot com and he’s going to reveal howto identify, propagate, protect and exploit exploitation is good when we’re talking about your organization’s brand. We’ll start with the basics. What it is, where you find it and work our way through to your board’s responsibility. You’re bored and your brand, really, absolutely. Your board has responsibilities. We’ll talk about all that with howard in this hour on tony’s, take two at thirty two minutes after the hour. Beware of the self serving objective report that’s on my blogged, and itunes is up. You can go and get this show and said, drive to it on itunes, that’s on tony’s, take two. Right now, we take a break and then it’s howard levy co-branded best bets for branding and promoting your non-profit stay with me, talking alternative radio, twenty four hours a day. Are you feeling overwhelmed in the current chaos of our changing times? A deeper understanding of authentic astrology can uncover solutions in every area of life. After all, metaphysics is just quantum physics, politically expressed hi and montgomery taylor and i offer lectures, seminars and private consultations. For more information, contact me at monte m o nt y at r l j media. Dot com are you stuck in your business or career trying to take your business to the next level, and it keeps hitting a wall? This is sam liebowitz, the conscious consultant. I will help you get to the root cause of your abundance issues and help move you forward in your life. Call me now and let’s. Create the future you dream of. Two, one, two, seven, two, one, eight, one, eight, three, that’s to one to seven to one, eight one eight three. The conscious consultant helping conscious people. Be better business people. I really need to take better care of myself. If only i had someone to help me with my lifestyle. I feel like giving up. Is this you mind over matter, health and fitness can help. If you’re expecting an epiphany, chances are it’s not happening. Mind over matter, health and fitness can help you get back on track or start a new life and fitness. Join Joshua margolis, fitness expert at 2 one two eight six five nine to nine xero. Or visit w w w died. Mind over matter. Y si dot com. You’re listening to the talking alternative network. Welcome back to tony martignetti non-profit radio we’re talking about your brand today, your organization’s brand. Joining me in the studio with me is howard levy principle of the red rooster group howard’s, an interest industry recognized brand strategist specializing in non-profits he has over a twenty year career devoted to helping non-profits improve their marketing, he’s helped many organizations launch new branding programs, gained visibility, increased membership and increased, giving he’s, the founder of the non-profit brand institute, to help non-profits learn how to create a more effective brand. I’m very pleased to have him in the studio today, howard welcome, thank you very much. Pleasure to have you. We’re taking calls for howard at eight seven, seven for eight xero for one to xero howard, i hate to start with a stint in jargon jail, so i’m not gonna let that happen. Wei have jargon jail here on the show. I can keep you out of jargon jail, if you will tell us what is a brand that’s? A good question, tony and it’s. Not an uncommon one. There is a lot of jargon in the marketing and branding sector, so i’ll try to make this real simple. Simply put, brand is your reputation. So how do we get to a reputation by making a promise? Typically for a non profit organization, that means their mission, they’re trying to help people. They’re trying teo cure a disease, they’re trying to protect the environment, so the brand essentially, is how well they’re performing on their promise. Okay, they’re brand is their promise. How do they express that promise through a brand so that’s a great question, the way they like to simplify this is, in a word equation certificate picture three words the promise plus communication plus your experiences equals your reputation, and i’ll explain what i mean by that. So the promise like we just said, is really the main premise that the organization is in business, what’s the problem that they’re solving and how they go about addressing it. Some organizations have a really clear and compelling brand, so the red cross, we all know, is going to be there in times of disaster relief. One lap one laptop per child, for example, expresses their brand promise in their name. They want to be able to provide technology for children who don’t have it that’s an actual non-profit one laptop per child so the communication part what you were asking about, which is the next word in this sentence is how they go about expressing it because you could have the greatest idea in the world. This is the same for business, but unless you tell people about it, then they’re not going to know so non-profits can use their websites, their email, communication, their events and many other forms of communication to help tell people about what they’re all about and what their promises. So much of this is wrapped up in perception, right? Exactly. So the last part is the experience that they deliver now, how well are they actually performing on doing what they say they’re doing? If one laptop per child is not actually delivering laptops at a reasonable rate and giving them tio children in the appropriate venues, then they’re not fulfilling on their promise. If red cross is not there in times of disaster relief, then there’s a gap in the perception of how they’re coming across self. For example, after nine eleven, you may remember they actually had a little glitch whereby they had an outpouring of support from the public people gave them a lot of donations, and they in fact, had way more than they needed to fulfill the immediate need for that disaster. So what happened was they took that money, and they put it aside for the next disaster. People, though, complained about that, they said we’re giving specifically for with the expectation that is going toward the nine eleven relief, so there’s a gap between their promise of of using that money for one purpose, and i’m not using not delivering on that. All right? So they’re brand suffered now, given the communication to go back to that they were able teo recover by by actually performing differently by taking the money and putting it toward the nine eleven telling people what they were doing and the reputation they had developed over there hundred year history enable people to overlook this one time bonem infraction of promise, although red cross is kind of interesting example, i mean, they have troubles sort of perpetually because their congressional e, uh, chartered and so there’s greater oversight, but i understand you’re certainly understand your point about the nine eleven and the sort of perception gap there on and in that case, that was a lot of public relations effort to try toe um, recovered help the brand to recover from it’s perception problem, right? I mean, in a way, a brand is an insurance against crisis. If you have invested heavily in helping people to understand what you do, you communicating with them? Clearly, transparency is a key factor in authenticity and conveying really what you’re about it’s not about creating an image. That’s not true it’s about it. It’s i like the word identity versus image. Identity is what the organization really is. What are the organization’s values? What are you actually doing? And if you could communicate that clearly, people who identify with those values are going to support you. Okay? And that’s really the key. And if you have invested in the brand, then it’s got some resilience so it can overcome a perception problem that hopefully becomes temporary. We’re going tow when we come back from pardon me exactly when we come back from this break. Thank you for that validation. When we come back from this break, we’re going to talk about how to figure out what your brand ought to be or if, if it is your mission, how to express it best, that’s. Probably the best way to say how to express that brand best. This is tony martignetti non-profit radio, and i’m with howard levy. We have a three minute break. Hang in there, stay with us. You’re listening to the talking alternate network, waiting to get you thinking. Nothing. Cubine is your marriage in trouble? Are you considering divorce? Hello, i’m lawrence bloom, a family law attorney in new york and new jersey. No one is happier than the day their divorce is final. My firm can help you. We take the nasty out of the divorce process and make people happy. Police call a set to one, two, nine six four three five zero two for a free consultation. That’s lawrence h bloom two, one two, nine, six, four, three five zero two. We make people happy. Geever are you suffering from aches and pains? Has traditional medicine let you down? Are you tired of taking toxic medications, then come to the double diamond wellness center and learn how our natural methods can help you to hell? Call us now at to one to seven to one eight, one eight three that’s to one to seven to one eight one eight three or find us on the web at www dot double diamond wellness dot com. We look forward to serving you. Hey, all you crazy listeners looking to boost your business? Why not advertise on talking alternative with very reasonable rates? Interested simply email at info at talking alternative dot com dahna welcome back to the show him with howard levy, and we’re talking about your non-profits brand we’re taking calls at eight seven seven for eight xero for one to zero if you have questions about your brand and how to promote it, etcetera for howard levy howard, how does how does a non-profit figure out what methods or ah, how it should be expressing its promise in its brand? It’s a good question we like tio start with research. Yeah, because you really want to start with something that’s authentic and not just, you know, be making something up with an assumption that may be incorrect. So you wantto do you really want to find out? Because you’re gonna be spending a lot of time and money in creating this brand and promoting it? You’re bored and we’re gonna talk about all that, so you don’t want to just do it based on what a few people think it ought to be, right? So you want to get a three sixty perspective, you know, from different different points of view, in other words, so the staff in the board usually have one one perspective, or maybe even to the staff. May have one since or even the executive leadership in the program, people may have different perspectives about it, so asking them is a good point of departure. So we like to do research and do interviews with the staff, the board and also others. The donors people are funding the organization and also the constituents. People who are using the services of the organization are benefiting from the organization and maybe there’s other people to, like media or legislators or other community groups or partner organizations. These are all people who are goingto having some relation or interface with the organization and may know it in some intimate way or may not know in an intimate way, and we want to know about their awareness in the level of awareness and their perceptions of it and so forth. And how do you let’s dive in a little deeper? How do you actually ask these questions, focusedbuyer oops. Is it printed questions? How does that work? We typically do one on one phone calls are in person sessions. So we have questions scripted for these different types of organ, different types of audiences, people that are in the organization, people. That are outside it and we’ll have some different questions other you can do focusedbuyer oops! We typically do the one on ones we also dio surveys. We recently did a survey for unorganised ation where we had questions online. We surveymonkey it’s a free tool and you can promote that through the organization’s newsletter or other venues hopefully reach people who know about the organization and some people who don’t know about the organization. If that’s your intent, some other things we do to gather information are a brand review essentially that’s taking a look at all the organisations marketing materials look at their current logo in their tagline will look at their website and see how well does it perform? Certain shins cannot collect donations online. How well does it expressed their mission? How much interaction is there? Can people post or do they post photos of events? How do they engage people online? Well, look at their other forms of communication, like their email newsletters, their print newsletters, brochures, and we’ll get a sense of our the communicating cousin consistently, you know, sometimes they are, and sometimes we’ll find some gaps that need to be addressed, but not only are they communicating consistently, but are they communicating the right message exactly the right manner consistent, but not what the audience is need to here. Exactly. So how do you then deconflict all these different opinions that you’re going to get from what what they’re currently doing and all these different constituents so it’s best to do? We find that with non-profit organizations is best to do this in a manage process, so we’ll put together a marketing team made up of people from the organization and typically that might be staff, and it might be some representatives from the board or other committees, and we’ll have them take a look at the findings that we assess from all this type of research, and we’ll walk him through it, and we’ll get their sense of how this is reflected in what they want to say, and so it’s a way of managing it so that it’s not just us, is outside consultants coming in or it’s, not them from an internal perspective, thinking that they know what’s best to say, we’re really providing the value, synthesizing all the information gathered from different points of view, but then filtering. It through the organization itself. Okay? And this is really sounds like creating sort of expectations about what, what people can i expect to receive from the organization may or expect to get back if there a donor or if their service recipient is it sort of building the brand around expectations? Yeah, in a way, it is, i think a lot of organizations, they’re very inward looking, here’s the services that we provide, you know we do x, y z what donors are looking for is what impact you have. What are the results that you’re actually having in society on, you know, are you fulfilling your mission? Many non-profit they’re set up to actually address a problem, but they’re really not actually addressing the solving the problem. They’re providing services toward meeting a certain populations need so we look at that and we say, you know, is more effective to actually just keep providing this service versus trying, tio we have a larger impact in society if i could simplify your example there’s that saying of ah, give a man a fish and he eats for a day teach a man to fish and he eats for life. So in the same way is the non-profit teaching people to fish or is it just providing the fish for them? So i think that’s something from the donor’s perspective they want to see are you actually teaching people to fish? What are the ultimate impact that you’re going tohave in society? So in identifying what your brand should be, then you really are also looking at what you’re delivering. This is a much bigger conversation. Then what is? Our logo and letter had looked like, what is it is? The promise is really the mission of the organization. So, you know, we do look at the mission of the organization. So if the mission is sound and their promises sound, then it goes into the next phase of that word. Um, um, phrase we had which is the communication part and that’s typically where we focus most of the efforts on so in cases where they need help in refining their promise, or their mission will address that, and in many cases that’s pretty clear. And then it goes to how do we express it effectively? Okay, so this really is a huge conversation for the organization and all. Its constituents tohave, and it needs to be a managed process. And that’s that’s, your work is with the red rooster group. Um, it does. And that’s why it’s important? I think tio have the process a clear process and toe to involve people and to really create the expectation of what the process is so that they don’t you think, oh, it is slapping on a new creating a new logo, putting that on the website and we’ve done branding we really are up to speed with what we need to do is really a lining your promise with how you communicate that across all the forms of communication. And so let’s talk about what some of those different constituencies sort of ar are expecting, i mean, in terms of board members, i will talk later about the board’s responsibility in the brand, but this could have implications for board recruitment, right? I mean, what do they expect when you’re inviting them to be on the board? Definitely, in fact, that’s a key point that people call us in order to redefine their brand or to define their brand is our board can’t express what we dio you know we do so many different things, people come on, they serve for a period of time or we have a new boardmember and really, we want them to be our brand ambassador. We want them to be our spokesperson in the community and really they should be boards boardmember is have their own spheres of influence in whatever worlds there i’m traveling in, and they can be great advocates for the organisation, but they need toe have the tools in order to do that, so they need to have a firm understanding of the mission. And then the mission needs to be clear enough that it could be expressed as an elevator pitch we could in business. We called an elevator pitch, you know, you’re going up the floors and you have, like ten seconds to tell someone in the elevator about your organization, you know, can you do that or not? Are their communications is there a presentation? Is there a brochure or there’s something that the boardmember is proud toe point to tell a business colleague who’s used to a certain level of sophistication? If they’re going, teo asked them for a large amount of money or a sponsorship for an event. So those are the kinds of issues that way address from the question that you said, how do you help inboard recruitment and facilitating board members as brand ambassadors? You know, you want to empower them on this obviously has implications that you’re alluding, teo, for your fund-raising you’re mentioning, you know, approaches to funders, that thinking of institutional funders, but also individual individual donors as well, exactly, and that’s, really the bulk of what precipitates examining brandy issues is how we articulated a message to that donors understand it, and that gets out through their events through their website through their e mail communication. So we like to do is look at having core messages that then permeate the entire communication spectrum. So so yeah, well, i just i just started picking back. So what organization should have a few core ideas that sort of everything else revolves around? Yeah, so for example, if they’re looking to establish themselves as the voice of authority in a certain sector and not all are but for example, if you’re performing funding medical research, then maybe you do wanna have a voice at the table when it comes. Tio congressional funding for your disease. So unless you can build up a certain level of cloud and credibility than legislature, legislators are not going to take you seriously. So if that is a key area that we identify, that should be part of the brand is speaking from authority about your issue, then we’ll look to communicate that in whatever we d’oh so in your newsletter instead of just having a story about someone that you’ve helped well, look att the resource is that the organization brought to bear in order to help that person, so it gives a little deeper to show that the organization has the wherewithal tio have an impact we beyond that one individual, but doing deep research can i give you another hypothetical? What about, say, a small college take a small liberal arts college, then they tend to all sort of be grouped together like i just did, you know, small northeast liberal arts college, how how how would they dive in and sort of identify themselves as different from the rest of the cluster? So brand distinction is the point that you’re really alluding. Teo s o we looked like to look at three, brand attributes we, as we call them a lot of jargon, you’re right. Okay, well, the word attributes people know on you’ll define that really distinguish the organization from others. It’s really key to understand that there’s a range of services that an organization may provide. So in a community college, they may have classes in various areas, right in various departments similar to other other schools. But there is typically something that is unique about that college. So we look to find out what that uniqueness is, okay, and that will come out in those conversations that you have rights, right? All right. Conversing with alumni boardmember sze faculty administrators. And i’m sure you start to see common themes that, you know, a lot of our students may be our first generation in college or got a grant for doing some certain type of research. Or, you know, we write called kids, go off to do one’s particular area or get hired by certain company. That’s found some part of the training very valuable it might be to do with the geographic location association with certain professors on their relationships. It could be anything. I mean, the idea really, is that think in broad terms, and then the key is understanding how that can be a value to your donors or in this case, probably student recruitment is usually a huge issue for colleges, which is why they wantto distinguish themselves. And so there i guess there isn’t any charity that can’t define itself and break away from the general cluster. I mean, animal shelters, you know, i don’t know churches there isn’t there you haven’t made a case that you couldn’t identify, i guess identify in a particular unique way. Some of them are tougher than others, okay, what are some tough one with that name? Names? Some of the tougher, not have none, and i don’t mean a specific organisation. They worked. But what what type of mission were they working in? That was hard to distinguish? Well, one’s social service agencies, which we deal with a lot, often provide a whole range of services, so they’ll, for example, provide services to senior’s senior care services. They might provide foster care services for for children. They might provide counseling services for adults going through troubled times. So right there, there’s, three different populations and three distinct services, but we’ve encountered a lot of organizations that have become full service in a way like conglomerates, whether they’ve gobbled up different divisions or started different ah, division’s, teo, meet the needs of a certain population, especially seeing that now and what i think is the tail into the recession. But for the past eighteen, twenty months or so, a lot of consolidation, right? Right? So just saying where you know, we’re a behavioral health care organization or something with a large catchall phrase is the way that many organizations go, which may sound good to them, but it doesn’t really help the donors to understand the specific things that they provide. So that’s an interesting challenge because you do want to provide them with the sense that there are larger and they are taking advantage of all these things so they can get funding at the same time they need to have a little bit of uniqueness. I’m with howard levy, and we’re talking about branding your organization and how important that is, how to go about it and then what to do after you have branded we have just a couple minutes before a break, howard what about the use of technology in? I don’t know, maybe determining what the brand should be or butt or but propagating the brand once you’ve once you’ve identified it, yeah, it’s a big concerns a non-profits and we find that a lot of the larger organizations are well refined in their sensibility about how we go about using technology, so we look at the, you know, the upper echelon organisations, they have departments, the whole interactive departments, they’re using social media, they have web development departments keeping the website up today, blogging, tweeting, it’s the smaller organizations and don’t have the staff to do it so that the tools are out there, and it is a huge opportunity for them to get feedback on their brand by by getting to a communication through surveys and tweets and blog’s and so forth a cz well, a cz disseminating their message and, um like this, we’ll talk about this a little later through facebook and other media where they can actually build up a base of supporters. Okay, we’re going to take a break, and when we come back, we’ll talk about that what the small and midsize non-profits khun do. Using technology, teo help propagate and promote and further their brand. This is tony martignetti non-profit radio stay with us. You’re listening to the talking alternative network. No. This is tony martignetti aptly named host of tony martignetti non-profit radio big non-profit ideas for the other ninety five percent technology fund-raising compliance social media, small and medium non-profits have needs in all these areas. My guests are expert in all these areas and mohr tony martignetti non-profit radio fridays one to two eastern on talking alternative broadcasting do you want to enhance your company’s web presence with an eye catching and unique website design? Would you like to incorporate professional video marketing mobile marketing into your organization’s marketing campaign? 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Also, i have a block post that i did this week, which is called beware of self serving objective report, an object of his in quotes, it’s getting ah good a number of comments from people who are aware of the fund-raising challenges that arts and culture organizations face on, and also some prospect researchers have commented, essentially, the post is about something that i got in an email, which suggests that arts and culture organizations should be spending approximate actually, they don’t say approximately spending at least twenty five percent of their time on prospect research. These air arts and culture organizations twenty five percent of their staff time on prospect research is ludicrous, i think it’s just dangling in front of them ah, carrot that they can never consume, never get to it’s just it’s, just impractical even for the larger organizations or largest arts and culture organizations, big dance companies, big theatre companies that we think of opera companies and there the outliers anyway. But even for them, i think twenty five per cent is is ah big stretch, but for a small arts and culture organization struggling to keep the keep the theatre rent paid and get the next show up and it’s just completely impractical. But i talk more about that in the block post, and as i said, it’s getting a fair number of comments, my blog’s is that m p g a d v dot com and again, that post is called beware the self serving objective report, and that is tony’s take two for friday, february fourth i’m with howard levy, we’re talking. About branded, you’re the importance of your brand. He is the principal of the red rooster group, which you’ll find at red rooster group dot com. And as i said before the break, howard let’s talk a little more about technology, but on the, you know, for the small and midsize organization, what tools are there that they can use? Well, i think for small organizations, you just taught it’s interesting you’re just talking about time that they have available and that’s probably the most precious commodity, i guess, other than their limited resource is itself, which both translate. The same is how did they use your their time? Tio maximize the effectiveness of social media because really, it takes a lot of time to develop an effective social media campaign. The bottom line is you have to be dedicating some portion of your time to creating the online presence to blogging on a regular basis to be twittering and so forth, you know, creating and maintaining right? It does no good to have a blogged that only gets one post every month or yeah, it’s twitter identity that doesn’t get posted regularly. Frequently. Yeah, it’s, not magic, is working. That’s really what it comes down to so that i think the key this two keys one is understanding what you looking to accomplish? So if you ask most organizations, they’ll say, well, we want to raise money so that’s good, but what’s realistic amount to raise online and how do you go about doing that? And also there are other things that you can accomplish online, i mean, creating awareness about your organization, creating credibility. We talked about that and how that could translate maybe to cloud full on advocacy issues, whether we talked about for legislators, teo, you know, on capitol hill or your state capital, but what about getting people to take some action on behalf of the organization, like sign a petition or send the letter or do something attended demonstration or so forth? That’s also very valuable and people are can be inspired to do that through social media tools. How should an organization decide whether it should let’s say let’s, let’s, take twitter? I mean, i think it’s, i think facebook is so common and we we have had guests in the past, including someone from facebook, andrew noise, one point talking about the value of facebook so i think that’s sort of understood having a facebook page for the organisation, but let’s take one, twitter, which does have to be updated pretty regularly. I mean, you should be tweeting at least a couple of times a day, i think. How does an organization decide whether it’s worth it to devote the time to create the twitter identity and then post regularly? Well, one thing you can try to do is take some steps in that direction. I think just starting often tweeting two times a day is really going to be on realistic for people who are not accustomed to that form of communication and not doing allocating the time. So, i mean, start off with block posts this way, it gives you a way to think about your organization think about resource is like this article you’re commenting on, right? So there’s ways of having content that you’re not creating. You can comment on another article you could post another article or resource from another organization so that’s an easy way to get started. Another way is to think about how you can automate some of these processes. So for example, i’m going to tell you about something we dio i don’t is not a best practice, but it can work out a better practice. Those it’s not a bad practice that’s a bad practice don’t share if you don’t have to be best long that’s good, it works for us, good or better, but maybe not best. Okay, so what we do is we have our blogged feeds block post, go out as twitter as tweets basically, so any time we post a blogger post, it goes out on our twitter feed, so we’re not actually tweeting the way that you intended to tweet on use that tool, which is for a short missives that are very timely on targeted, but it does convey all the target in timely information that we do have on our on our post, and we have found that it is a way to generate a base of followers and things are being noticed and retweeted and that’s probably an automated feature. Yes, okay, so you’re so you’re doing a block post and it automatically is promoted threw it through your twitter feed. It goes afternoon on twitter and it also we so the idea is really, how can you automate your technology? Because that’s going to reduce the amount of time that you have to spend and re posting and redoing things so there’s, a lot of ways to do this. Another way, for example, is on arlington page. You can import your block posts directly there. So when we post a block now, effectively it’s going out on twitter and it’s going out, it’s appearing on are linked in paige. So is many ways as you, khun, get to automate these things, and they’re integrations with facebook and other social media applications. So in terms of addressing, ah, small, non-profit and what they can do is have a goal. Think about realistically what they could accomplish, and then try to automate as much as possible. And we’re well, i’m with howard levy principle of the red rooster group we’re talking about branding your organization, how important that is and how to convey it and we on the block post for this show. So you go to my blogging mpg a dv dot com on the block post for today’s show i have links to three of howard’s articles he’s written many, but there are links to three on this block post. How would one of them talks about using linked in for for your board? I’m pretty sure that i got that from any of our articles what’s the what’s the value there of using linked in for help, you’re bored. Well, i mean the board is going to be a key asset in your organisation, at least it should. And actually a lot of smaller groups don’t really fully take advantage of it. It’s more the mature organizations that air have a well developed board, but it’s something teo aspire to? How could you involve your board in your organization in a deeper way so they could help communicate your value and bring into don’t the donors and the funders like we talked about? So unease e way is through lincoln, at least form a lincoln group for your organization and have your board members link there so that when someone from their network there, business associates, are checking out their profile, at least they’ll see the organization i mean, that’s it should be a no brainer for for organizations to do that. And for small and midsize groups. I mean, that’s really easy to do you’re saying i don’t you’re saying you’re suggesting the larger ones, but i think for smaller organisms, which are smaller, you could okay, they could certainly create a linked in group just for their board, and then that doesn’t become an easy freeway. Teo seventeen information to your board. Yeah, and hopefully will help the board if you have an active board. Hopefully the president is taking a bit of a leadership role can actually use the linked in forum to communicate with the other board members. So it’s inspiring a little bit of online interaction that could then spawn out to other people. Eventually, you might wantto use that group to bring in other people, for example. Okay, i was thinking of it just for the board. But what if you had one that is on ly for the board? I’m thinking of these burdensome board packages that that’s pretty good alliteration, you know, my love of a liberated, burdensome board? Ah, i don’t know, all right packages off to suffer with that that people that organizations do sometimes once a month, and they’ve aboard me once a month. But even if it’s only once a quarter they’re they’re they’re bulky. There typically in a notebook, they take along a lot of staff time to prepare and then and then time to print. And then they always fedex them, which is expensive. And you have a board of a dozen people or mohr and you’re doing this every month or every quarter. That’s really burdensome, but you could just use your linking group to upload a file, right? You do have to be careful about what’s public inwards. Private group is private. No, it wouldn’t work. Yeah, if it’s, i’m not quite sure how that works. Actually, i’m posting files. But you do bring up a very good point. Which another piece of jargon i’ll call brand infrastructure and that’s ah, like you saying communicating internally is also is important as reaching donors and other outside audiences. So in terms of the whole brand process, we look att what systems are in place in order to facilitate communication among the board and among the staff and among other parties that would not be shared with outside sources, so we’ll try to put together and internet, or at least an online archive for somewhere to post these things. You’re referring to board notes but also brand assets. So where the copies of the logo files stored so that they’re not on one person’s computer, that everyone can access them that needs to sew when they’re creating a new document, they khun see what the typefaces are the colors, the logo’s, the templates and things like that. Having this kind of brand infrastructure in place is really crucial to maintaining the brand over a long period of time. Yeah, we’re investing a lot of money in creating it wast want to keep it active on, and i think what you call propagating the brand right let’s, talk a little about the board’s role in the brand i’d like to bring them in. You ah, well, one of the articles that you’ll find on my block for this show is howard’s article the board’s role in managing your non-profits brand. So we’re going to talk about the what he has there, the four p’s that you’re bored has to take on in terms of its brand. And of course, i love alliteration. So, you know, i’m drawn to the four piece, so want to tell us what the four p’s are, first of all, howard, so there are different ways. Well, i just want to say also that the board, um it’s every organization is different in terms of their board involvement in their brand process, so some of them are going to have ah, much stronger role that the board will play and some of them are fairly hands off, and they kind of rubber stamp something that the organization does. So this is all taking in the in the sensibility of the organization, okay, but the the better practice and we’ve had people on to talk about toward practice, right? Better practice for your board and for your organization. Is that the board be involved in important initiatives of the organization? And co-branding is one of them, right? Okay, i understand your viewpoint is different cultures, different accusations, but i want to make the point that the board ought to be involved in this. Yeah, so some of the areas there are producing the brand. So in terms of this process we discussed in terms of this the discovery of doing the research we should be involved and be interviewed and so forth beyond some representation on the marketing committee, probably one or two people from the board on the committee that’s responsible for i’m going through this process, so you have the producing part. You have the projecting part which has had a weak now communicated through the website through email and so forth. So in helping to identify those different areas, you have the protecting part which is really interesting. The ideas of brand is your reputation and that’s something that’s to be protected because that’s the goodwill that you can parlay into corporate sponsorships or other valuable things. So we’re headed into a break shortly, so we’re going to talk more about the protection part leader lead us into the fourth, the fourth key, which is parlaying, parlaying your brand, right? So that goes into this sense of now you have some equity, your value built into the brand. How do you parlay that into cause marketing or other opportunities? Okay, so this is really all around just in the minute we have left before the break. It’s really all creating a sort of marketing mindset is that? Do you think that’s right that term? Yeah. Okay, well, that’s a help myself martignetti ease martignetti is marketing mindset. I wish my first names start with a name. I’ll just rename myself mark martignetti is martin marketing mindset? Is that what we’re doing here? Marketing mindset. It’s. Exactly. Helping the organization to transfer the way that they think about their organization, from sitting back and being passive and thinking that people are going to give them money because they’re doing good work to being proactive and thinking and themselves is ah, marketing machine. Yeah, essential because there are too many organizations that are sitting back, and the proactive ones are the ones who are going to attract volunteers, board members and of course, gif ts, this is tony martignetti non-profit radio with howard levy. Stay with us. Talking alternative radio twenty four hours a day. Are you stuck in your business or career trying to take your business to the next level, and it keeps hitting a wall? This is sam liebowitz, the conscious consultant. I will help you get to the root cause of your abundance issues and help move you forward in your life. Call me now and let’s. Create the future you dream of. Two, one, two, seven, two, one, eight, one, eight, three, that’s to one to seven to one, eight one eight three. The conscious consultant helping conscious people. Be better business people. Altum i really need to take better care of myself. If only i had someone to help me with my lifestyle. I feel like giving up. Is this you mind over matter, health and fitness can help. If you’re expecting an epiphany, chances are it’s not happening. Mind over matter, health and fitness can help you get back on track or start a new life and fitness. Join Joshua margolis, fitness expert at 2 one two, eight sixty five nine to nine xero. Or visit w w w died mind over matter. N y c dot com duitz oppcoll do you want to enhance your company’s web presence with an eye catching and unique website design? Would you like to incorporate professional video marketing mobile marketing into your organization’s marketing campaign? Mission one on one media offers a unique marketing experience that will set you apart from your competitors, magnify your brand exposure and enhance your current marketing efforts. Their services include video production and editing, web design, graphic design photography, social media management and now introducing mobile marketing. Their motto is, we do whatever it takes to make our clients happy. Contact them today. Admission one one media dot com. Talking. I’m back with howard levy, and we’re talking about your brand. We, uh, ended right before the last break with howard’s article the board’s role in managing your non-profits brand again, you’ll find a link to that article on my blogged the block post for this show, and i think how would we should spend a few minutes on the last two of the four piece, which are protect anne and parlour? Because i feel like we’ve talked a good amount about producing and projecting your brand? What what did you do? Your thoughts, they’re about protecting the brand well, the brand is really a valuable piece of intellectual property for the non-profit i mean, if you think about all the good work that the non-profit does, you’re building up a fair amount of goodwill, right? We talked about the brand being a reputation, so if your reputation is positive, that’s something that’s worth some money, so you really want to be able to protect how your brand is portrayed. So one of the things that board khun do it just is a general responsibility in terms of the oversight of the organization is just to make sure that the brand is being used in a consistent and professional way, right? I mean, if it’s used it in inconsistently logo appears one way on the website in another way on the newsletter, then you’re not really building up the kind of recognition for the organization that you want in a way you’re undermining the professionalism of the organization, right? You’re creating a fractured viewpoint that donorsearch e this organization doesn’t really know what the heck they’re doing, you know, they’re the each male piece i get looks a little bit different, yeah, something like that. S so i mean, this is all in business terms. They think they talk about valuing a brand and having equity and actually sell brands for a ton of money, literally millions of dollars like when pan am the airline went out, they actually sold the name and the logo for millions of dollars. Bear stearns, i think it was in redoing their i’m sorry, i think it was merrill lynch with the bull and they were going to redesign it think they had valued it at some x amount of millions of dollars. So it’s a non-profit you have a lot of good will. In what you’re doing, and if you can develop the communication part of the branded logo and the way that you’re using it, then you’re going to be able to dahna leverage that somehow and that goes to the next part of the parlay in-kind going right? So you may have heard of cause marketing there’s a lot of different ways of going about leveraging the goodwill that you have so causevox eating relationship is where corporation will somehow leverage the goodwill you have in exchange for something. Now i want to distinguish between a sponsorship where a company just gives you money. They’re not expecting anything in return other than maybe listing on the website, you know, your look, their logo appears somewhere, right? So that that’s a sponsorship cause marketing is where there’s more of a reciprocal relationship where the corporation is actually gaining some of the goodwill and you’re gaining some of the knowledge, expertise or distribution to access to their the corporation’s audience? Okay? And that let’s let’s apply that to the small and midsize non-profit that isn’t going to be able to attract, you know, big corporate attention, really, but that could be done with ah, local company, right? A smaller local company? Yeah, yeah, even retail stores anywhere that has a high volume of traffic and specifically ones that are attracting the type of people that you’re looking for. So, i mean, you mentioned an animal shelter, for example, so the animal lover where would an animal lover go? You know, maybe a local big local petco. Yeah, exactly. So if there’s some some relationship that you can have with that other business that will benefit both parties that’s really where you can take advantage of having the brand equity, okay? And in just a minute and a half we have left are so you have maybe some advice for funding for the for this sort of research that goes into creating the brand once you give some suggestions that way. Yeah, well, the typically funders wantto don’t individual donors want to donate teo own organization and have their money go directly to programs. But there is a growing realization that capacity building this new phrase that having this organization’s infrastructure be sustainable over the long term is in everyone’s interest, because if they’re out of business next year, that no that’s not going. To benefit anyone. So so we’re slowly funding that funders air supporting capacity building and brand development is part of capacity building. Okay on dure finding that on the individual level, individual donors to some degree interested in that mostly it’s like they’re getting grants from a parent organization, umbrella organization or a funder. You know, a major funder, mate, could be a large individual funder or, you know, a foundation of some sort that’s interested in the long term viability of the organization. Okay, some help out there. My guest has been howard levy. Howard is the principle of the red rooster group, which you’ll find at red rooster group dot com. Howard, thank you very much for joining me today. Thanks, tony it’s been great. Excellent. Thank you. Um, next week we have resplendent resource is the founders of idealist dot or ge national resource directory and philanthropy alive. We’re going to share how their work can help your work from job listings to finding the right consultant to collaboration and cooperative buying. So have three different organizations to profile next week on resplendent resource is you can keep up with what’s coming up. Sign up for our insider alerts by email. You could do that on the facebook page. You go to facebook and then the name of this show, and while you’re there you please click like you become a fan of the show, of course. Itunes at non-profit radio dot net subscribed there. Listen to the show at any time. The creative producer of tony martignetti non-profit radio is claire meyerhoff, our line producer and the owner of talking alternative broadcasting is sam liebowitz, and our social media is by regina walton of organic social media, who expertly does some of the things that howard was talking about in terms of cross posting my blogged and facebook and twitter all done for the show. Bye regina walton of organic social media. This is tony martignetti non-profit radio, where we always have in mind big non-profit ideas for the other ninety five percent stay with us for next friday’s show, which will be one p m to two p m eastern here at talking alternative dot com or, of course, on itunes. Listen, one way or the other next week. Dahna you’re listening to the talking alternative network, waiting to get you thinking. E-giving good. Are you suffering from aches and pains? Has traditional medicine let you down? Are you tired of taking toxic medication? Then come to the double diamond wellness center and learn how our natural methods can help you to hell? Call us now at to one to seven to one eight, one eight three that’s to one to seven to one eight one eight three or find us on the web at www dot double diamond wellness dot com way. Look forward to serving you. Are you feeling overwhelmed in the current chaos of our changing times? 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If only i had someone to help me with my lifestyle. I feel like giving up. Is this you mind over matter, health and fitness can help. If you’re expecting an epiphany, chances are it’s not happening. Mind over matter, health and fitness could help you get back on track or start a new life in fitness. Join Joshua margolis, fitness expert at 2 one two eight sixty five nine to nine xero. Or visit w w w died mind over matter. N y c dot com upleaf told you.