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Nonprofit Radio for July 27, 2011: So You Wanna Start A Nonprofit & A Conversation with Darian Rodriguez Heyman

Big Nonprofit Ideas for the Other 95%

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Tony’s Guests:

Gene Takagi and Emily Chan
Gene Takagi & Emily Chan: So You Wanna Start A Nonprofit

Our new legal contributors, Gene Takagi and Emily Chan of the Nonprofit & Exempt Organizations Law Group, will share the ups and downs of starting a nonprofit. What are the alternatives? How do you get 501(c)(3) status? What are you getting yourself into if you go ahead?”

 

 

Darian Rodriguez Heyman
Darian Rodriguez Heyman: A Conversation with Darian Rodriguez Heyman

We’ll talk about his book, Nonprofit Management 101, and the nationwide Social Media for Nonprofits conferences he hosts.

 

 

Here is a link to the podcast: 052: So You Wanna Start a Nonprofit & A Conversation with Darian Rodriguez Heyman


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Welcome to the show, this is tony martignetti non-profit radio i’m your aptly named host. We’re always talking here about big non-profit ideas for the other ninety five percent reminder that this is our one year anniversary month. It was last july that we started the show. This is show number fifty two one per week, minus couple holidays, but this is our fifty second show. I hope you were with me for the fifty first show last week had the ceo as fund-raising mvp mindy dietz and karen pearl, both non-profit chief executives revealed their insights on how to motivate, engage and position your ceo to be a fund-raising m v p then it was the fine art of conversion. My guest was scott barnett, director of web communications for fairfield university, and he urged you not to be afraid of analytics because tools like google analytics can help you prevent. Sorry, help you convert website visitors into online donors and help you engage younger prospects who become donors. Last week’s interviews were from our media sponsorship of the fund-raising day conference in new york city in june. This week, we’re alive, i’m having a conversation with darian rodriguez. Heman first, we’ll talk about his book non-profit management one oh one and the nationwide social media for non-profits conferences that he hosts then. So you want to start a non-profit we welcome our new legal contributors, jean takagi and emily chan of the non-profit and exempt organizations law group in san francisco, and they’ll explain the ups and downs of starting a non-profit what are the alternatives to creating a non-profit how do you get five? Oh, one c three status and what you’re getting yourself into if you go ahead and create a non-profit between the two shows between the two segments, it’ll be tony’s take two again, this is our one year anniversary got new regular contributors to with him starting today and in august, we’ll have ah, additional contributor i’ll tell you about the first show is up for a new podcast, siri’s, that i’m hosting for the chronicle of philanthropy. It’s called fund-raising fundamentals. I’ll be up on the chronicle website every month, and i’ll say a little more about that on tony’s take two there. I’ll be interviewing experts each month to help you with your fund-raising and finally on tony’s, take two, it’ll be. You know, i’m doing stand up comedy now and have been for several months. So i’ll be weaving the comedy and this show and the chronicle of philanthropy monthly podcast altogether. I can’t help it. They all blend together and influence each other more on all of that on tony’s, take two. Right now, we take a break, and then i’ll be with with back with darian rodriguez, kayman so stay with me. You’re listening to the talking alternative network. 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. 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 two one two, nine, six, four, three five zero two. We make people happy. Xero 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 to tony martignetti non-profit radio, i guess now is darien rodriguez haman he’s calling from san francisco. Darian was executive director of the craigslist foundation from two thousand four to two thousand eight. He helped conceive the non-profit boot camps that the foundation sponsored he’s, the editor of non-profit management one o one, which is published by joe sea bass he’s, also a consultant and co founder of the social media for non-profits conferences throughout the country. And i’m very glad that darrin’s work brings him to the show today. Welcome, darien. Thanks, it’s. A pleasure non-profit management one. Oh one. What does the book add to the many books that are out there for non-profit leaders? Well, i mean, i think the when i looked out there what i start with, all the books that were in the marketplace for kind of fell into one of four categories. And so, you know, you had books that were basically textbooks. They were written by and for active combat. Yes. That book at that was focused on latto. Start in on social enterprise. There’s. Also about a career. Guys, you know how to get into sectors from there. But what didn’t kill him, you know, is that there’s no fish depict some fund-raising management, but what didn’t most back-up when that really hyre spectrum but did so from a very practical kind of practice will put into work. Daria, you don’t have to talk to you for a minute or you want a headset. Funny chance i’m not going out here, big guy. So, yeah, we’ll not only echo, but we don’t have a great we’re sort of getting you in bursts i hear about. Yeah, well, i don’t know if we can help all that. Yeah, why don’t you hang up and call right back? And i’ll do a little tap dance. In the meantime, please. Okay, so darren’s book is non-profit management one o one and it is actually he’s, actually the editor of the book. Because it is thirty three essays written by some pretty popular people in their subject areas. And interestingly, it covers areas that he just touched on. But it goes much further because it gives details of how to it’s not theoretical. Darian. You back with us? Yes. This sounds better. Yeah, thank you. I was just telling the audience there. There. Are thirty three essays in the book, but go ahead, why don’t you finish explaining what it contributes? Why why you felt this was important to write, no problem, and i’m and i’m not sure what you were before, but there’s the echo again anyway. So the point is that yeah, i hear you find and if the echo is bothering you, my suggestion is just take the phone away from your ear while you’re talking, and then when you’re done talking, put the phone back because you won’t hear my insightful questions, of course, certainly. Okay, so what i was going to stay is the book is really non-profit boot camp as a book, when i was executive director, craigslist foundation, i started a program that was very successful about non-profit boot camp, and i think the reason it was so successful is that it really covered the whole spectrum of all the different issues you need to know about in order to run an effective non-profit and it did so with a very practical focus, you know, wasn’t just enough to inspire people it’s about inspiring them action? What you going to do differently tomorrow? That’s going to make you more effective and the essays in the book yeah, the book have great detail there, you know, there’s textbooks that are buying for a day there’s career, guide’s, there’s, howto started non-profit or social enterprise, and then they’re sort of issue specific books on board governance or volunteermatch judgment or individual donor efforts or online fund-raising etcetera. And what didn’t just was something that was both comprehensive and practical, something i respect and that isn’t just kind of theoretical and conceptual, but is actually in geared for implementation, you know, it’s, a field guide for people that are professional change makers on brovey yeah, and i think a field guide or manual really is a very good way to describe because i noticed that all the essays have very practical, implementable steps and you have at the end of every essay there do’s and don’ts and there’s terrific resource section at the end of each chapter, which is the each chapter is an essay, so i i see the difference there as well. So they’re just a couple that i want to focus on, and we have just about a minute and a half before our first break. One of them is your say on non-profit career’s. Taking charge of your non-profit career happens to be chapter four in the book. Um, it points out something very interesting being comment on this. The non-profit sector is so diverse, which is a terrific attribute for it. But that makes career management complex. Darian yeah. So just can you comment on the double edged sword there of the non-profit community, it being wonderfully diverse, but no definitive career path since it is so diverse? Yeah. I mean, i think that there’s, you know, diversity in two areas because there’s lots of different causes represented within the sector. There’s also different lots, lots of organizations we’ve got over a mil and a half non-profits registered in this country alone. And so, you know, yes, that is both a good thing in a bad thing, you know, it does offer tremendous diversity, it offers lots of opportunity and you know anything you can think of his representatives enough offgrid in mental job, but at the same time, you have to be using a array of options other professionally. So i think that bill, the most important thing, kind of key to success at this fight i’m sorry dahna is really about, you know, a combination of two things. Do what you love, what’s your bet. And so really the question is, what are the what’s? The answer, those two questions, and that is and you know that russian life and that’s what we really should spend our time and energy thinking about not only on a nice body basis, but i’m an ongoing basis and the clearest that we have professionals get of. What are the causes that i most care about that make packed what are what kind of organizational environment and culture and for what kind of role want to? I want to be in a wreck, prevent upleaf or focused on development and fundrasing or, you know something on the market fighter program to look in the rear of the ant, get all of those questions, the more you’re able tto sort of, you know, put your desires out, you know, to the folks that you meet and the books that you served. My guest is darien rodriguez haman, and we’re talking about his the book that he edited non-profit management one oh one, we’re gonna take a break now, please stay with us e-giving didn’t think the shooting getting ding, ding, ding, ding cubine you’re listening to the talking alternate network e-giving no. Dahna good oppcoll 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 backs to one to seven to one eight one eight three. The conscious consultant helping conscious people be better business people. Oppcoll 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 buy-in, 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 looking to meet mr and mrs wright, but still haven’t found the one. Want to make your car relationship as fulfilling as possible? Then please join us, starting monday, may second at ten am for love in the morning with morning alison as a professional matchmaker, i’ve seen it all. Please tune in and call as we discuss dating relationship and more. Start your week off with love in the morning with marnie alison on talking alternative dot com. Talking alternative radio twenty four hours a day. Welcome back, come with darian rodriguez kayman we’re talking about his book non-profit management one oh one and we’re focusing on one of the thirty three essays in the book titled taking charge of your non-profit career out darian the the end of that chapter has networking, do’s and don’ts, but one of the one of the best networking tips i thought came from a mihdhar, the founder of idealist who wrote your forward and he said that he listed seven or ten things that he had learned in the past fifteen years in his forward, and one of them was, too treat people the way you’d like to be treated. I mean, isn’t that great networking advice? Yeah, i mean, i think that that’s a big part of now bombing has built up, you know, not only cecil career, but the organization would idealware bigot about a million people a month going to that website tto learn about all things not-for-profits idealist dot order, but, you know, for me i’ve seen this across several careers and different sectors is did extent a zoho helpful person that is genuinely concerned with the efforts advancing the success of the o z. From the contact it comes back, you know, a million nationally, so for me and, you know, basically any time on meeting with anybody at some point in the conversation, if even if i don’t say that word, i essentially asked the question, how can i help bond? You know, whether that’s just connecting them to re sources or yourself getting infections, being among them, you know, it’s, like books, conferences or what have you, you know, i think that the important thing to remember is that each and every one of the you know, of the non-profit country has the same owner, which is the public it’s, not the border, the executive director bye definite means to be a non-profit is that we’re publicly and our boardmember zehr just ensuring a public interest that’s why they’re trustees. So, you know, we are genuinely all in this together and it’s really crucial that we support each other’s work further that every one of us on i just think that some of the best networking advice that that you can you can find, yeah, i should actually mention that tommy denoting the social media for non-profits he’s going kicking and often it dork yeah, and we’re going to talk shortly. We’re going talk shortly about that about that series of conferences throughout the country and army has been a guest on this show that s a also makes the point of talking about a sustainable career where you’re, you know, you’re with the right organization are always learning and way always hear about sustainability for non-profits but i never thought of a sustainable career. Good? Yeah, i mean, i think so, too things. Well, first of all, i do want to just kind of point out that even though it’s the most romantic cities in court but these are not really tested their chapters because what you’ll see is to read the book there’s, a common chapter format s so i created a structure so that each chapter would yet have an introduction and a conclusion. But most importantly have, you know, the main section focused on critical skills confidences as well as that sidebar, do’s and don’ts that kind of pull out this salient points than us back that you mentioned, and then there’s also a resource review read chapter so it’s not because they’re just sort of, you know wandering as all in different formats on bitten by different experts, they are of the chapters are all contributed by different experts there’s fifty experts in thirty five different after inspections. But anyway, i wanted to make that because i think it’s important for the readability of the use of looking that died the back to your point about professional sustainability, what i would say is that, you know, i think two things because i also do a lot of environmental where you environment murcott duitz and i think first off sustainability has been even the words that we want to think about much maybe dr, right? Like, how many people would be a sustainable relationship, meaning that it can just keep going it’s not enough to just be able to keep the light, be enjoying what you’re doing, and that ultimately is the key to the ability of the key to being able to continue on. And so i think that as him into earlier such a diverse sector there’s so many opportunities that, you know, challenge happy and so you’re not break the work you’re doing, whether it’s that you’re not passionate about the cause or that you don’t like the people you work with role that you’re in, then you really owe it to the cause into the community to get fashion and whether that trying to wreck himself some things with, you know, the organization you’re working with or, you know, identifying and new places to go work and on put your skills to bear at a organization, what do you know if you can really do your best work? Yeah, the the authors make the point of always reflecting on whatever dissatisfaction you might have, you might be feeling and you’re and that’s that’s exactly what you’re talking to just, you know, this introspection and thinking about whether you’re happy and if not, howto latto make that change so that you can be happier. The other chapter i’d like to talk about is is called online peer-to-peer fund-raising i think that social media is something that non-profits struggle with. In fact, we had a poll for listeners to the show, and one of the question was what’s the your non-profits relationship with social media sites like facebook, twitter, youtube linked in and no one said we get it and we’re good at it and then the answers were pretty much between. You know, we see the value but aren’t getting the most out of it, and even a small percentage, you know, we don’t see the value, but i think, importantly, nobody said we understand it, and we’re good at social media. So the chapter is online peer-to-peer fund-raising it’s all about using social networks to engage your donors, to become fundraisers and engaging sort of friends to become donors. Darrien you have a lot of experience in social networks, these requires support right non-profit can’t just put up a facebook page. Well, actually, you know the non-profit can put up a facebook page just like anybody can, but the important thing to remember is when i called the store phenomenon because what you’re you’re better off not launching a facebook presence, they’re launching one and ignoring and letting it go stale. So what you don’t want to do is have a summer intern, and this happens all the time you’ve got, you know, a young volunteer or summer intern or something like that says, hey, i’m going to set up a facebook presents they put up a page for you and they, you know, maybe do one or two updates in and they go back home or they’re done volunteering or whatever the case may be, and the organization has no plan of how it’s going to keep that page fresh and lively. And so therefore all of a sudden, after couple posted just goes stale and it sits there, and it almost reflects more poorly on the organization and if you wouldn’t have launched a presence there to begin with. So the key is that, although yes, anyone can set up a paige if you’re going to send a social media presence on twitter, facebook, youtube or else where you want to make sure that you have a plan in place with resource, is that air dependable toe actually continue to put content up there, and i should tell listeners we are live today in the if you want to call and talk to darian, you can call eight seven seven four daito for one two oh eight, seven, seven for a tow for one to zero during they talk about leveraging pompel the personal social networks and there’s something very interesting about is a quote from a an executive director who thinks of his employee’s personal use of of social networks in the workplace as the twenty first century cigarette break. What do you think of that? I love that i love that comment by nicki noble who’s, one of the two office of that chapter uh, she actually used to work at the salvation army. What about e-giving? So it wasn’t a small, you know, organization with a lot of flexibility that was hurt looking policies in a very large, well established organization. And i think, you know, this is kind of vindictive of social media in general, which is, you know, one of the concerns a lot of organizations have is lovely. What if it gets out of control what people say things we don’t want them to say, etcetera and it’s kind of the better the devil, you know, than the one you don’t type thing where, you know, control is an illusion to begin with only more so now that we live in this world of social media and so you know, people are going to be doing this anyway, the idea is instead of trying to bend folks from doing stuff they want to dio, how can you rent us that and turn it into an asset for the organization? So whether that’s creating guidelines so that they have a sense of what’s appropriate and what’s not to be posting, you know, helping seat topics, etcetera on then actually encouraging them to, you know, take a couple minutes out of their daito put up, you know, a tweet on twitter or to put a facebook, etcetera, and that can actually be a good thing, and i think that what a lot of folks don’t realize is that you know, people don’t know how many people have logged into facebook in the last month, and the answer is about seven hundred million, so that makes facebook the third largest country on the planet, and you don’t have to have a presence there, but you can’t ignore it. You can’t ignore social media and the fundamental paradigm shift that represents to this bottom ofthe world. So how can you embrace that it with radical transparency and really get ahead of the curve? The authors of chapter twenty two make it explicit that the quid pro quo in that office was that the organization would be lenient with their employees, use of social media as well. A cz long as the employees were tweeting, posting facebooking about the organizations work to their own personal networks that there was a great exchange hyre we have just a couple minutes left, so let me just remind listeners that darrin’s book is non-profit management one o one, and you’ll find that at non-profits one o one dot or ge darian also is founder of the social media for non-profits conferences these aeryn seven different cities throughout the country this year. Darian what? What is sort of asked the same question asked about your book, what is this unconference siri’s contributing to the many conferences that are already out there for? Non-profits so then i mean, i think i like seeing you see, through all of my birth, the focus is on crack tips and tools, and so what you could clear, you know, there’s three chapters in the book focused on social media one my best cantor was amazing, the we talked that one from nikki noble and sean sullivan a peer-to-peer giving and then the folks it for good contributed the online fund-raising chapter and so, you know, even though there were three chapters out of thirty, thirty five submissions that that focused on media, which is quite a lot given, you know, the the significance of the issue, what became fear is now is that people were really creating more information about this topic and kind of like fund-raising where the thing people know they need and so we got a lot of books asking us to put on educational programming around social media and in particular, strategies fundrasing marketing and advocacy on so what we did is we leveraged a lot of the network i had for my work to craigslist foundation with the non-profit boot camps and some of the author’s for the book, actually, and we got folks like that cancer and geico sake and ami dar and the folks of charity water and a lot of the leaders in the social media field, and i wouldn’t call them experts because, you know, the field is changing so quickly that if anybody pretends to be an expert, you know, they’re lying or they have a big ego because it’s, you know, it’s, impossible to be an expert world students in world practitioner so how can we share our lessons learned with our fellow non-profit leaders so that they could be more effective in this funnel and landscape which maximizing their online presence so as you mentioned, were doing nine events across seven cities? Can francisco, los angeles, seattle, chicago, new york and washington d c in atlanta and we’re heading to new york next thursday on august fourth, and then from there to los angeles on august twenty seconds on, folks could learn more social media for non-profits dartboard, so social media and number four non-profits dot org’s and you’ve. You’ve hosted two so far in san francisco and washington daring we have just about a minute left before we have to go. How did those two go? They were gonna pompel they were both totally sold down, folks absolutely loved them. We had ninety plus an approval ratings on again this focus, i’m not just inspiring people, but inspiring them to action and equipping and more effective and efficient after work they’re already trying to do has been really successful, so we’re on track new york next week, and we’re very excited about how the, how the serious has been resonating with non-profit all right, i wish you luck with it, and especially on the new york city one on august fourth, again, to remind you that there’s more information at social media, the number four non-profits dot org’s darien rodriguez heman is the editor of non-profit management, one o one and founder of these social media for non-profits conferences darien, thanks very much for being a guest. Thank you for having me been a pleasure. Thank you. We’re going to take a break, and when we return, it’ll be tony’s. Take two and then welcoming our new experts in law, gene takagi and emily chan. After that, so stay with me. You’re listening to the talking alternative network. 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 buy-in, 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 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. Buy-in 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 in-kind welcome back to the show, as i said earlier, this is our one year anniversary month, this is show number fifty two and i want to send a special thank you to people who have been listening who are listening, whether you’re listening live or you’re listening to the podcast from itunes very grateful i’m very grateful to all the listeners we have on this show at this one year anniversary month and also to the four hundred thirty plus people who are facebook fans and they get our stream on facebook. Thankyou. So to sort of celebrate, we have new regular contributors toe ad tio scott, keg alors monthly technology for non-profits segments and jean takagi and emily chan is going to be joining me very shortly, and then we also are going to be welcoming maria simple in august she’s the prospect find er she’s, a popular speaker and consultant, and she’ll have regular prospect research advice for your non-profit her first show is august twelfth. I started last week a monthly podcast interview show for the chronicle of philanthropy. It’s called fund-raising fundamentals we kicked off with gayle perry gale has been a guest on this show. She’s, the author of fired-up fund-raising turned board passion into action. I think she was an excellent first choice, teo inaugurate that fund-raising fundamentals monthly show for the chronicle of philanthropy and details for listening and subscribing to that show are on my blogged, which is m p g a devi dot com and i’ve been doing stand up comedy, and i’m having trouble keeping that separate from my work on this show and the fund-raising fundamentals for the chronicle and my speaking and keynoting. So if you notice something a little different, it’s it’s probably my stand up comedy influencing things, so keep listening because there’s change is coming. That’s tony’s take two for friday, july twenty ninth, and i’m really pleased now to welcome jean takagi and emily chan as our new regular legal contributors, jean is a principle of neo ennio, the non-profit and exempt organizations law group in san francisco, he edits to popular non-profit law block, which you’ll find at non-profit law blawg dot com emily chan is an attorney at the non-profit and exempt organizations law group. They’re based in san francisco, and she is a principal contributor to the non-profit law block, jean and emily big. Welcome to the show. Three. Thank you so much, tony. We’re thrilled to be a part of non-profit radio. It’s called very glad to have you. So i think we’re starting with a fit topic. So you want to start a non-profit. I know your office gets calls on this subject, people who are passionate about a cause and want to do something. I want to start a non-profit and what’s the first advice that you give them in thinking about that. This is family, i think, a threshold questions that we do ask for when they call it really why? Non-profit so there are individual, better, very past about fun, but sometimes that translates into also happy that would be too private evidence as a few of the public in addition to that it’s important to think about the plan who’s going to be on the board, what is the business going to look like? And funding as well? The costs involved with the initial startup and the ongoing operations? We also like to find out what’s going on with the mission and the core activities and anticipating any kind of challenges, like a conflict of interest compensation issues and thinking about who else is going to be involved in helping to run this organization. So emily that’s a ton of stuff to be thinking about, and in your experience, do you find these air, these air, new things that people haven’t have not thought through? Is that? Is that the case? Usually i think so in many cases, because sometimes that passin for the cause overtakes the practical considerations. Additionally, i think sometimes are unaware how much the law and it’s pettus upon these problems, for example, recently with the irs, there was this issue of a list of two hundred and seventy five thousand organizations have had their past six status revoked for failing to file an annual returns with three years straight. This was a change in the law that happened in two thousand six, and many small organizations simply didn’t know about it. So kind of thinking in advance. You know what air the practical things we need to do and be aware of? What are the kind of mechanical steps involved? Well, the challenges we’re going to face, sometimes things that take a backseat to that initial passion and excitement about having starting in non-profits yeah, they were definitely ongoing compliance requirements and your example, is a great one of almost three hundred thousand non-profits that weren’t complying with filing requirements with the irs, jean, what about some alternatives? There are other things that might achieve the same objective that the person has but would be a lot less onerous for them. Absolutely, tony think one of the things one of the messages that emily brought forward was that good intentions aren’t enough there’s a lot. Of administration and fund-raising involved in starting your your own non-profits i’m sure all the listeners know the alternatives that they might want to think about first is working with an existing non-profit organization, there are nearly two million non-profits out there even after the nearly three hundred thousand that were revoked with tax income status, and there are a lot of great non-profits out there doing great work and just simply to duplicate their work, i may not be the most effective and efficient way to use charitable assets, so working with existing organizations is one way another is called fiscal sponsorship, which is similar to working with another organization, but it allows you to become a project of theirs with a right to spin off. Should you later decide to form your own five o one the three on dh that’s a great way to incubate a new non-profit project see if it works, see if he can raise funds they’re going to take care of you administrated been back office ends on dh then should you become a viable ongoing concerned, then you khun later spin off and you’ve got all the benefit of learning from that. Physical sponsorship. Arrange jean notice. Ah, jean quickly defined fiscal sponsorship because i wanted to keep himself out of jargon jail. So, congratulations. You. No, no, no sentence in jargon jail, at least not for the phrase fiscal sponsorship. We’ll see what comes up. But what types of organizations would a person approach to look for a fiscal sponsor? There’s a community foundations that offer physical sponsorship, so that might be the first place to look. But there’s, also a great website called the fiscal sponsorship directory and that’s, a national directory of fiscal sponsors all over the country, and you can choose your state location to see who’s offering physical sponsorship in your area. Another great thing to look at is the national network of physical sponsors website. They provide guidelines as to what would be on appropriate form were effective form a physical sponsorship, because while there many ways to do it right, there are also many, many ways to do it wrong. Okay, excellent resource is thank you, thank you for that gene. We had a couple of poll questions for the show, and one of them was for those thinking of starting a non-profit are you aware of the alternatives that can help you reach the same goals? And no one said yes, but i want to start my own non-profit hyre a few people said yes, and i’m considering them. Most people said no, i’m not aware of the alternative, so i think this is very worthwhile discussion that was yeah, two thirds no. Sorry, about eighty five percent of people said no, not aware of the alternatives and the alternatives gene could be just as easy as giving right giving to an organization absolutely right, buddy that’s a great point that he simply wanted to contribute at your funds and volunteering another organization that may be the best thing to do instead of farming your own non-profit and having all of the administrative and filing obligations that go along with that. But of course we’re talking about ego to write. If you don’t have your own organization and you become sponsored by another, maybe a community foundation, then you have to sort of play by their rules and for some people, maybe that just doesn’t work. You get sort of ego lorts issues at all in the in these conversations, absolutely, and emily may want to jump in, but definitely there a lot of people who want to form non-profits that really have good intentions about the public, but almost as important as those good intentions is their own intentions of creating a job for themselves or creating opportunities for their family, or maybe creating opportunities for related business? No, andi okay, so we’re talking about jobs for themselves and their families. Now. Now we get into those things emily talked about, like conflicts of interest and excessive compensation rules. What about the donor advised fund has a way of as another one of the alternatives as a way of giving to a charity that does work very similar to what you want to do. How does it donor-centric for that? They would really like emily. Emily, could you speak a little louder, please? Yeah. It’s much, but yeah. Please. That’s better. Thanks. So, what donorsearch vice fund that the individual would i talked to? Was sponsoring organizations such as the public charity or a private foundation on dh set up this fund that is going to be designated by their own name and they have advisory privileges so they can advise the organization how they would like to see those funds distributed. It would be the organization, depression, how they ultimately do that. Generally, this relationship works well, because organizations aren’t goingto have individuals. These donors advice sons if they don’t take those at recommendations and advisory privileges with some weight. Okay, so, again, there’s a little ego issue there because the charity gets the final word. But in most cases, charity is wants to work with the donor, right? Right. And the donor gets to have a little bit of their egos stroked as well, because they feel like they have more say and input after what happened to these funds as opposed tio, you’re normal donations, that organization can decide where they put it within their programs and in furthering their exempt labbate and gina want to go back to something that you said just in a minute we have before a break, working with an existing charity. I mean, you might be able to just achieve what you’d like to do by volunteering. No, absolutely, if you if you have a passion about the mission, you could just volunteer for the organization. If you have a leadership goal in mind, you may be able to offer to that organization that you can raise some funds and bring it into launch a program within that organization, and they may be very happy to let you do that. If you’ve got a little bit of a working relationship with them, we’re going to take a break now with jean takagi and emily chan when we returned. You know, it’s? Not that we’re tryingto talk you out of starting a nonprofit, but jean and emily just want you to be fully informed. So when we return, we’ll talk about what the process of creating a non-profit is all about. So please stay with us. E-giving didn’t think dick tooting getting thinking thing. You’re listening to the talking alternate network. E-giving things. Good. Looking to meet mr and mrs wright, but still haven’t found the one i want to make your car relationship as fulfilling as possible. Then please join us, starting monday, may second at ten am for love in the morning with morning alison as a professional matchmaker, i’ve seen it all. Please tune in and call as we discuss dating relationship and more. Start your week off with love in the morning with marnie alison on talking alternative dot com. Talking alternative radio twenty four hours a day. 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 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. Bonem lively conversation. Top trends, sound advice, that’s. Tony martignetti, yeah, that’s. Tony martignetti non-profit radio. And i’m travis frazier from united way of new york city, and i’m michelle walls from the us fund for unicef. Yeah, welcome back on with jean takagi and emily chan, both of the non-profit and exempt organizations law group in san francisco. So, after that last segment now, hopefully, if we issued the same poll, are you aware of alternatives that can help you reach the same goal as your desire to create a non-profit? Hopefully, some of you would now say, yes, i am aware, emily, what about the process for starting a non-profit somebody decides the alternatives don’t really suit them. They do want to go ahead despite all your counseling, what is the first step to creating a non-profit? Emily, i won’t have to be in there. Increase on. Emily, can i ask you to please remember to speak? Speak a little louder. Sorry. I’m getting a little bit of an echo on buy-in trying. Teo pulled the head that strategically here? Yeah, yeah, we hear you. Ok. Ok, great. So there are quite a few mechanical steps involved. And this is assuming that the individual has already thought about those important discussion points that we raised in the beginning. So these kind of steps can include taking out the name of the corporation, filing the articles. Of incorporation if it’s incorporating the state obtaining a federal employer identification numbers, then you’ll want to appoint the board of directors. Drop the by-laws important policies, such a conflict of interest policy. I have your first board meeting to adopt those government documents, then you may need to file with state, especially if this is a public charity for your trip napor stations file any other state filings, like a statement of information, then we’re going to move over now the federal level of applying for tax exemption and in california after that, you can attach your determination letter from the irs if you obtain it and file for your state tax exemption, so this generally can be described in ten steps just did. But, you know, there’s a lot of thinking that goes along the way and it’s a process that you don’t really want to start unless you’ve thought it through because you may get your tax exempt application and realize, oh, no, our mission doesn’t really fit with the exempt purpose that we’re applying for. So they are mechanical steps, but they still need to be thought about as you go through them. Okay, so that’s a ton of stuff, let’s, let’s, break it down a bit. So there were state requirements, and there were also some federal requirements. So starting with the state that i mean, you have tio incorporate in a state, right you’re you’re you’re not-for-profits corporation offgrid yes, and so there’s everything that goes along with being a corporation, those things that you mentioned, you have to appoint the board, et cetera back-up that’s all important in in order to avoid things like potential personal liability of the members if they operate is an unincorporated association, which is a possibility on dh, usually a practical possibility if it’s a very small non-profit going to operate for a limited period of time for most non-profits that tony, i think it’s important to think about inc if they’re going to be an ongoing okay, let’s, you’re treading very close to jog in jail with unincorporated association. What does that mean? It basically means you’re running as a group without filing any articles of incorporation with the secretary of state of your state. So what? What that usually means is just like in the for-profit world, tony, if you start a business and you don’t incorporate their operating is a sole proprietor or possibly the partnership trying to avoid jargon jail again, but it’s running without the formal legal entity around it to protect you from personal liability of the members and of the director’s. Yeah, and that’s and that’s. Really? Your concern is that there is the potential for personal liability if something goes wrong our what kinds of things could somebody end up being personally liable for if they’re if they’re not incorporated and they’re working as a association? Sure, what went one of the big things that you could be a lot before you hold an event and somebody gets hurt? It’s your event there is no formal entity to do like a corporation they may just decide to do. All of the members are all of the directors of that unincorporated association. In many states, they’re not protected against those lawsuits and they’ll have to defend them with their their own personal funds. Emily let’s, let’s, go back now. So we talk about the state requirements, you know, incorporating and everything that goes along with inc like you mentioned. But then there’s there’s an irs requirement to get that tax exempt. Status that five o one c three on dh we pulled the listeners and about half we’re not aware a little more than half we’re not aware of how to get five o one c three status. So first emily, why don’t you tell us what that is? Why it’s important? A five one seat status refers to dissection in the internal revenue code that gives the tax exemption for organizations public charities in order to get that discriminate. Then the organizations to file was called a form ten twenty three on dh this can be quite scary for individuals to look at it it’s quite long and asked for a lot of information is going to ask for a financial projections, the contemplated activities of the organisation, any kind of relationship that would trigger these conflict of interest issues there, you know, it’s, excessive compensation issues um, and then just general information about the organization wants an organization submits that ten, twenty three applications, the irs can take quite a while to get a determination back. It may be about three to four months assuming that the irs does not have additional questions sometimes if the application doesn’t really answer the questions fully or seems to raise some concerns that show that maybe this organization doesn’t really fit with five, twenty three, they may come back with more questions, and then you’re going to end up in the back and forth for her, who knows how long until they give you a determination of either obtaining tax exempt status or being rejected. And one of the big advantages to getting that recognition is that donors to your organization will earn a charitable income tax deduction when they give to your organization and they and they won’t before you have that status, right? Can you repeat that? Just that one of the big advantages of getting that five o one c three statuses donors earn a charitable income tax deduction? No, and they don’t have that if you’re not five o one c three recognized, right? Yeah. And, you know, a big area of your expertise, you know, that’s important organizations to realize, too in that pending time, val, the application has been filed, but they haven’t yet heard from the irs that they don’t actually have five o one c three status, even though if you file it within twenty seven months of being formed. It will go back to your formation, but until you know you can’t go out there and say, i’m a five, twenty three organization because you really don’t know yet. Excellent, we have to leave it there. Jean takagi is principal of neo, the non-profit exempt organizations law group in san francisco, and he edits that very popular blawg non-profit law blogger and emily chan is an attorney. Neo-sage she’s, principal contributor to the law block. Emily jean. Welcome to the show. Look forward, having you back next month, thanks so much for being on. Next week, it’s wild woman and fund-raising consultant mazarene treyz she joins me from texas to talk about her book, the wild woman’s guide to fund-raising i think we’re gonna have some fun with that. You can keep up with what’s coming up mazarene and everybody after her. By signing up for our insider email alerts on the facebook page, you go to facebook and then the name of this show, and while you’re there, click like become fan of the show, get our stream teo of information from facebook. You can always listen from itunes and subscribe at itunes so that you can listen anytime on your computer or your tablet or your smartphone. Our itunes page you’ll find at non-profit radio dot net. Our creative producer is claire meyerhoff line producer and the owner of talking alternative broadcasting is sam liebowitz, and our social media is by the expert regina walton of organic social media. This is tony martignetti non-profit radio. I hope you’ll be with me next friday one two, two p, m eastern will be right here on talking alternative broadcasting at talking alternative dot com. Oppcoll dick tooting. The good ending things. You’re listening to the talking, alternate network things. Get me thinking. Cubine looking to meet mr and mrs wright but still haven’t found the one i want to make your current relationship as fulfilling as possible. Then please join us starting monday, may second at ten am for love in the morning with morning alison as a professional matchmaker, i’ve seen it all. Please tune in and call as we discuss dating relationship and more start your week off with love in the morning with marnie alison on talking alternative dot com. 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. You’re listening to talking alternative network at www dot talking alternative dot com, now broadcasting twenty four hours a day. 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 effort. 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. 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 us ed to one, two nine six four three five zero two for a free consultation. That’s lawrence h bloom at to one to nine six four three five zero two. We make people happy. Hyre com.

Nonprofit Radio for June 17, 2011: Giving USA Data Integrity & Google for Nonprofits

Big Nonprofit Ideas for the Other 95%

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

Tony’s Guests:

Features editor for The Chronicle of Philanthropy, Holly talks about her coverage of possible shortcomings in Giving USA’s research methods that led to rosier-than-reality estimates of 2009 giving in last year’s report. She tells us what she and others are looking for in this year’s report on 2010 giving. My interview with her was recorded before the 2010 report was released.
 
 

Scott Koegler, editor, Nonprofit Technology News. Scott, our regular tech contributor and the editor of Nonprofit Technology News tells me what Google for Nonprofits offers, how to qualify and why it saves your office money. But, there are caveats.
 

 

Here is the link to the podcast: 046: Giving USA Data Integrity & Google for Nonprofits


 

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Here is a link to the podcast: 046: Giving USA Data Integrity & Google for Nonprofits
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Welcome to the show. I’m your aptly named host, and this is tony martignetti non-profit radio big non-profit ideas for the other ninety five percent. I hope you recall last week i had larry sharpe, we were talking about smart sales training strategies to kick start your fund-raising larry is the director of neo-sage, and he transformed corporate sales lessons into savvy and easy non-profit fund-raising ideas for us. This week, a conversation with holly hall she is features editor at the chronicle of philanthropy will talk about e-giving yusa what some shortcomings may have been in their research in the past, and what she’s looking for when new numbers come out that are expected this week and also some predictions forgiving this year, which is looking up also, scott koegler joins me google for non-profits the editor of non-profit technology news and our regular tech contributor explains what’s offered by this program and how it will help you work smarter and save a lot of money. But there are some caveats about working in the google cloud on tony’s take, too. I’ll talk about the irs auto revocation list it’s out and what if you’re on it and want? To get off it, i blogged about it this week, and we’ll talk about it on tony’s. Take two, all of that, this show, we’ll take a break right now. Then i’ll be joined by holly hall. Stay with me. You’re listening to the talking alternative network. 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. 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 us ed 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. Hyre xero. 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 to tony martignetti non-profit radio big non-profit ideas for the other ninety five percent with me now is holly hol. Holly is features editor for the chronicle of philanthropy. We’re going to talk about giving us a numbers that are expected this week, just so you understand we are recording on tuesday. You’re going to hear this show on friday, june seventeenth, the numbers are expected to come out actually today, which will be tuesday. So we’re doing a little bit of predicting, but mostly we’re going to be looking at the past and seeing what we expect for the numbers that do come out or certainly are expected to come out this week. Holly hall, welcome, thanks for having me, tony pleasure to have you ah, last year, this time last year, in june of two thousand ten, you were questioning some of the conclusions about two thousand nine fund-raising before we get into those questions about the two thousand nine fund-raising why don’t you just explain what e-giving yusa is for people who may not be aware of the report? E-giving usa is the annual tally of all philanthropic giving from individuals, foundations and corporations to american charities and it’s it’s, conducted by the center on philanthropy at indiana university and commissioned by an organization of fund-raising consultant that’s e-giving yusa. Right, well, the giving e-giving institute, right? Okay. And to be fair, it is an estimate. Isn’t that right? Okay, and then they get further information when iris numbers come out later, but but we’ll get to that. Okay, so this time last year, there were some questions about specifically about the individual giving Numbers in 2009 can you explain what your concerns were? Well, individuals make up the lion’s share of all charitable donations, right? About seventy five percent, right? Correct. And giving us, they found that individuals contributed more than two hundred twenty seven million um in two thousand nine, which was about the same as two thousand eight. And we kind of question that because we’re calling around the country and finding that charities were struggling, and other studies also showed a big drop in giving. Okay? And we’ll shortly. We’ll talk about some of those other studies were but so giving us a showed pretty much flat Numbers from 20082 two thousand nine. But that wasn’t what you were hearing from. The non-profit community and seeing in research, other research. That’s correct. Okay, these numbers are are pretty significant for non-profits. How do how do you hear that? Organisations used the e-giving yusa data. Um, there’s sort of a benchmarking that that some organizations will use teo haserot progress and to set goals for the coming year. Um, the numbers provide a breakdown by caused areas. So education, health, religion, etcetera. Okay. And so non-profits air, you know, looking at those toe evaluate whether there in the in the field where they should be all right. Okay. Actually, i just want to clarify i think you said two hundred twenty seven million from individuals, but that would have been two hundred twenty seven billion. You’re absolutely right. I’m sorry. No problem. No problem. It’s. Easier in print, because then you can you can go back. Okay. Um, the, uh the finding was puzzling to not only you but other people is well, who just we’re not seeing flat giving from away toe nine. Yes, it kind of, you know, we’re oh, nine. Remember was the absolute depths of the recession? So many groups who are feeling the pain and that’s what? You’re hearing and but e-giving yusa wasn’t really reflecting that. Yeah aren’t these also significant numbers because we’re looking at what the resiliency of giving is in recessionary times? Well, giving us has been doing what it does for decades, and they have pointed out repeatedly that charitable donations fluctuate left then the economy does when you’re when we’re in recession. But now we now we suspect that maybe e-giving is not as resilient as have been said in the past that it may fluctuate more dramatically, then giving your has found okay, and it’s not just giving us a i think the conventional wisdom is that people continue to be generous, not as generous, but not as dramatically declining fund-raising or giving as a zsa. The stock market may fall, so that still may be true. Okay, it’s, i think the what’s going to be found out is that this recession was different then previous recessions in our lifetime and that giving was affected more deeply then have been okay. Okay, so we may find something contrary to the conventional wisdom. And i know e-giving yusa has been after been at this some, like fifty years or so they do have a long history, including working with the indiana university center on philanthropy, as you mentioned. Okay, we’re going to take a break. And when we return, holly hall will certainly still be with me. And we’ll get into some of the the details of the other research, including research from people who are advisors to giving us city. This is tony martignetti non-profit radio stay with us. They didn’t think the building getting dink, dink, dink dink. You’re listening to the talking alternative network e-giving. Things. 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. Dahna 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 looking to meet mr and mrs wright, but still haven’t found the one. Want to make your car relationship it’s fulfilling kill, then please join us, starting monday, may second at ten am for love in the morning with morning alison as a professional matchmaker, i’ve seen it all. Please tune in and call as we discuss dating relationship and more. Start your week off with love in the morning with marty allison on talking alternative dot com. Talking alternative radio twenty four hours a day. Dahna welcome back to tony martignetti non-profit radio with me is holly hall features editor at the chronicle of philanthropy, and we’re talking about giving us a and there the methodology behind that annual survey, holly the chronicle actually did its own spot check, maybe sort of a small crowd sourcing exercise, didn’t you? Yes, we’re doing the same thing right now, okay? And in looking at the two thousand nine numbers, you found what others were finding right? That giving had actually declined dahna a big challenge for most organizations. For example. Um, hospitals follow-up surveyed by the americans association of healthcare philanthropy e-giving the hospital’s decline by eleven percent in o nine uh, the council for advancement in support of education found that giving the colleges and universities plummeted by seventeen point eight percent, adjusted for inflation. So those air doubled it to drop on dh. What about your own small crowd sourcing a survey? What were you finding? Similar, we did a spot check in o nine of fifty seven charities and thirty seven, thirty five of them e-giving had dropped in o nine and we’re doing the same thing for two thousand ten and even looking at two thousand eleven but it’s a little early to say. However, the overall impression is that things are starting to recover, but they’re still not back to pre recession era. Okay, two thousand seven, two thousand eight, right? How do you select the the charities that you spot? Check at the chronicle? We try toe, get a good representation of all different types of groups. So we’ll call several colleges and universities, several religious organizations, several health organizations and on and on okay. And then you also have your is it philanthropy? Four hundred that with its cool way? D’oh? Uh, we have some of those groups report early, so we’re still pulling those numbers for twenty ten and also twenty eleven, the physical twenty eleven. Some groups have already wrapped up this year. Okay, you know what i’d love to see sort of interesting if we had a a really a site where where non-profits could report on their own, maybe have a have a crowd sourcing a real crowd sourcing site where, you know, tens, hundreds of thousands of charity’s ideally could report on maybe it’s, just some simple numbers, you know, reporting into a google doc or something and, uh, then i just i see a lot of value and crowdsourcing. Sorry. That’s. Interesting. Okay, let me talk. Teo. Peter panepento at the kruckel back-up because there’s a lot of i just see a lot of value in crowd sourcing, and then that would be sort of immediate, you know, what’s happening like this month compared tto tthe this time last year. That’d be interesting. So going back, tio, you’re you’re june of two thousand ten coverage. Someone who you are too researchers who actually our advisors to giving yusa we’re finding numbers contrary to giving us a cz numbers for two thousand nine. Can you talk a little about that? Yes, he’s there to economists at dahna boston college. And they look at wealth patterns and philanthropy. So they had wanted to come out with a quarterly index, and they both sit on giving us a committee. And so they tried to come up with a new alternative estimate, and they found a steeper decline more like ten percent for so eight and o nine. One thing that they pointed out and that giving usa has since acknowledge is that giving us a does not capture. What some people call the psychological dimensions of the economy, things like consumer confidence and unemployment, for example, and these two economists tried to factor some of that in i’m not sure how they did it, but that’s one big difference now giving us a to be fair today are taking a second look at their methodology this year, and so when they come out with their numbers later this week, they may have revised their estimates for, oh eight and nine in fact, i’m pretty sure they will have, so it’ll be very interesting to see if they capture more of the downturn that we were seeing, okay and again to explain to listeners. Holly and i are talking on tuesday, the fourteenth of june, and we’re expecting numbers to come out either this afternoon or this week, but you’re going to listening to the show on friday, the seventeenth, and we hope teo, get someone from e-giving yusa too. Come on and talk about the new numbers they declined to be on today because they’re expecting the new numbers very soon and wanted to wait until those new numbers came out, but we did invite them i did. Invite them t to be with me and holly. So i guess maybe giving you say, maybe sees the the disadvantage of having academics on their board because the academics are always questioning and actually ended up contradicting e-giving yusa, you know, what’s kind of interesting. Actually, i can’t wait to see the figures when they come out later this today or this week, okay, the the indiana university center on philanthropy. So they are the they’re the researchers behind the numbers that right what’s what’s the relationship there the way you understand it, between giving us a and the and indiana center on philanthropy, e-giving yusa or the group of consultants behind the organization pyres, the academic at the center on philanthropy to compile e-giving you say each year okay, i see and then the professor’s, we were just talking about cher vision havens. They are advisers to e-giving yusa. They sit on a methodology committee that reviews the data each year and approved. Figures on what? What was the indiana university’s buy-in set? The center’s senator philanthropies reaction when you were questioning the two thousand nine e-giving figures in our first story that went to press in june of twenty ten, they stuck by there estimates, and they pointed out that they had never been off more than two percentage points from the data that finally comes out from the irs that they used to corroborate you finding but, like said i, this recession is is unusually severe, and we suspect there data may not have captured it accurately. Dahna and the again, this is a the giving us a numbers are our estimates to be fair, the indiana university center. So they were saying, basically that it’s been fifty some years, and we’ve we’ve always been pretty much pretty much on the mark, correct, okay? And have you talked to them about what may be coming this week? Well, only once i talked their director of research and he told me that they had hired are retained buy-in economists to review their methodology with an eye toward i mean, if they needed to change it, and i don’t know if they will. But i suspect strongly suspect that they’re going to revise their method and that we may i see a big drop from two thousand eight, two thousand nine and possibly into twenty ten do you know if if they’re revision, would include some of those psychic e-giving factors that you’re talking about or i don’t know, i don’t know what they’re going to come out with, not like i said, i’m very interested to see we are seeing in our own reporting and other surveys that we track that there is some improvement, but it still continues to be a struggle, for example, after after reporting and nearly twenty percent drop hyre educations is reporting and twenty ten less than one percent decline. So it’s still declining, but things are improving okay, less than one percent decline from last year from from two thousand nine to ten or correct of nine to ten okay, okay, so the the irs now way we’re we’ve been alluding to this let’s, let’s get to the details of it e-giving yusa revise is its numbers when irs comes out with actual data because, as i’ve said a couple times, if we’ve said e-giving you’re saying numbers or an estimate, how does that all work? Well, the irs track how much money individuals claim on their tax returns for charitable donations so these itemizers itemizers heir estimated donate about seventy five percent of all individual gifts. We don’t know what the anonymous letters, non itemizers give buy-in we suspect it’s left and not as big a factor is the itemizers. So the data has come out now for both two thousand eight and two thousand nine, the first two years of the recession, and the irs data suggests more like twenty percent decline for those two years, which would be comparable to what we saw in these other surveys by pompel for advancement in support of education and the association of health care philanthropy is that twenty percent combined over the two years about? Yeah, and we’re talking about two thousand nine two thousand ten’s that right? Okay. Okay. Desires attempt tow estimate what non itemizers do. No, they don’t all right, but e-giving usa does. It does. Do you know how they go about that? I don’t know how they come up with the non itemizers. Uh, figure. Okay, just it is only twenty. Five percent, but still that’s a quarter. But it’s, not it’s, not the minimus. Okay, well, we’ll know more. Um, probably by the time this show has heard anything else, anything you’re gonna be specifically looking for when the number well, i think i’m having kind of a lot of fun, looking at some of the recession survival strategies that charities have undertaken and it’s really fascinating to see some of the creative effort. Arts groups, in particular, have been hard hit in the recession, and they come up with some of the most creative fund-raising and survival strategies. For example, in baltimore, the symphony there allows people who are amateur musicians, too. Sit in with the orchestra, if you will. And they pay for, of course, that they take with members of the company um other arts groups. They’re doing more to bring in donors and to focus less on fancy gallows and more on really bringing people back stage and helping them understand what go goes into the arts. So it’s interesting to see all these creative approaches. Yeah, especially the while sitting in that’s, that’s really clever, but the backstage, you know, that just it’s sort of going back to sort of grassroots fund-raising ideas, which is, you know, expose people to the work you’re doing. If people are giving even at low levels, you know, they may have a greater interest in learning more than they know. And, you know, they only ever see the the the arts group from the front of the house and it’s, not just the arts, you know, seattle children’s hospital, for example, how to really need, uh, five years ago, they created a separate research facility to study children’s diseases. And just last year, you know, amid the economic downturn, they got the idea to bring in what they call research champions these air donors to give a certain minimal amount. I can’t remember what it is, but they started out with a goal of recruiting one hundred people who will come in for what they called science tops, and these are meetings with individual researchers who explained their studies on what they’re learning and the benefits of it. And they, as i said, they started out with a goal of recruiting one hundred members, and they ended up with over four hundred, so it shows that just really getting close to the charitable mission than the work sometimes makes all the difference. Another organization decided to replace its auctions instead of having an auction where they, you know, put up for bidding trips and vacations and other glitzy packages. They decided instead to have an auction for their work. So helping needy kids, you know, let’s auction off summer camp who wants to pay for that? So oh, excellent, yeah, that was very successful. So it’s, just gratifying to see that in hard times latto charitable organizations can become really creative and effective in the press cleverness born of necessity. Yeah, excellent workflows last month, holly, you had a piece that predicted two thousand eleven and you alluded to it. Earlier, two thousand seven, giving what what did what you’re seeing so far about this year, that study was about seventeen thousand five hundred donors, and i’m always a little suspicious of studies that ask people what they intend to give, or d’oh it’s much better to have studies based on what was actually donated. But this study showed that most donors expected to give at least as much, if not more, foreign. Five donors, um, plan to give as much, but if not more, than they did in twenty ten. So that’s, a sign that charitable giving is real, rebounding somewhat. But what was interesting about that study is. But even as people say they intend to give more, they seem to be having less patient for being oversell. Iss it’d four given token gift, you know. Oh, yeah, what were you hearing in that respect? A lot of charities will give tokens. Like, for example, public broadcasting is big. If you give a pledge of one hundred dollars, you get a free cd. Um, donors just aren’t that interested in getting those kinds of perks. They feel that they cut into the contribution, you know, security spending money to buy coffee mugs that eats into the money they’re raising from the donors. And i think a lot of donors through that is this something that you had your first seeing and you suspect it’s because of the recession, i think it’s something that’s all that’s been. The case is just that that sort of annoyance people became less patient with that and more annoyed, the survey found a higher degree of impatient with that type of fund-raising. Excellent. Okay. All right. Well, we’ll see if if those intentions of giving bear bear out in the rest of this year, we sure will. Holly hall is features editor at the chronicle of philanthropy. Holly, thank you very much for being with me has been a real pleasure to look forward to having you back. Maybe to talk about the numbers once they are released. Okay, thank you very much. My pleasure. Thank you. We’ll take a break after this break. Tony’s take to the irs auto revocation list is out, and you want to get off it. Stay with me. You’re listening to the talking alternative network. 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, i 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 huntress people be better business people. Oppcoll 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 to the show, it’s time for tony’s take to the irs auto revocation list is out this is a list that irs published, and we’ll be keeping up to date monthly, i believe, of about two hundred seventy five thousand non-profits that have automatically had their tax exempt status revoked that’s because they failed to file with iris the required reports for three consecutive years tell you ended up on the list now what if you wantto get off it because way think that a lot of the charity’s on there are defunct out of business on just never reported that, but suppose you’re still in business and you don’t want to be on the list. That’s what i blogged about my blog’s at mpg a dv dot com um, you start on the irs website and there’s a link teo to the explanation page in my blogged, and you’ll see that there’s a streamlined procedure for small non-profits that’s those air for this purpose of getting off the auto revocation list. Small is defined as having gross receipts under fifty thousand dollars in the previous year, so there’s a streamlined procedure and reduced fee for those organisations. That fit that criteria and then if you’re not a small organization, there’s also a procedure for getting off the list. But it’s not streamlined, and there isn’t a reduced fee you’re gonna pay, i think it’s eight hundred fifty dollars instead of one hundred dollars for the small non-profits so the details are on my blogged mpg a dv dot com, and that is tony’s. Take two for friday, june seventeenth with me now a regular tech contributor, the editor of non-profit technology news. Scott koegler scotty, welcome, tony, how you today? I’m doing well, how are you? I’m doing great, thanks. I know we’re going to talk about google for non-profits and what what’s being offered by the program and how it can save some some money on and help you work efficiently. But i first want people to know that you’re calling from a camper in charlottesville, virginia. Is that right? That’s exactly right. Why are you there in a camper? Well, we’re vacationing, so we’re okay. Excellent. Hyre but we have a great connection. So and how is the weather in charlottesville? It’s? Beautiful it’s not going to get above eighty today. Very nice. All right. From your camper, what is google for? Non-profits you know, google non-profits is really an extension of the google app, and google has done a great job of just kind of open up their entire repertoire of stations functions to not provoc i think it’s their way of doing good, so if you’re free with gmail that’s out of the entry point to all this, so do you have to have a gmail account in orderto find out about google for non-profits not to find out to find out about it. Still, teo, google dot com flash on, okay, and you’ll find all the information there, but if you don’t have a email account, probably stood free, and so are so many of the other things that included with the package. Like one of the things is microsoft office compatibility? How does that work that’s one of the things that which made google documents kruckel apple take general very well accepted in the world, they have the ability to read and write pretty much any kind of microsoft document word document on excel, spreadsheet, even a power point presentation. So you’re not using office. You’re not using microsoft office, you’re not you’re using google doc’s, right? Exactly, but you can save in a format that is readable by microsoft office, right? You could figure dot end of a dock next, which is the current microsoft that flower for for documents and then but i have either google document for mike stopped officer, he will open that read it whatever. So you’re working in your if you’re working in google docks and you’re working in the cloud, right? Exactly. Okay, we you and i have talked about that before, but when we explain what the cloud is, what is that? Does that mean if you’re working in google docks in the cloud? The cloud is ah, a computer in the sky, it’s you know, you need an internet connection to get to it and to use it, but they’ll be on that it’s really pretty much like working on microsoft office on your desktop there’s a function where you could actually have the documents saved locally and the best top, so that at some point, if you are disconnected from the internet, still can access the doctors. So it’s really great solution in fact, firstly, i’ve i’ve changed, i don’t think that i’d actually used microsoft office for about a year and a half now converted completely by my corporate account by documents, email everything else is now part of google google documents and on a website, right? And we’re going to talk in a few minutes about security and privacy concerns around that, but very interesting that you’ve, you’ve converted your office. So so if people understand you don’t have to pay for microsoft office, which could be a pretty pricey software offering, especially for non-profits right and there’s a bunch of other peters that air enabled with google back, such as having multiple people edit and share revisions of a document without actually having to move the document back and forth between computers. But those were all kind of just part parcel of the google documents and the whole google enterprise function. The fact that that that those things are free, uh, is really not particular to non-profits i use them for free, and i’m not a non-profits but there are other functions that are specifically for non-profit i just like to just kind of quick lift some of those things nukus there really, really incredible one of them. Is just google applications gmail account under documents and support the thing that’s added with with google for non-profits is the support because generally my account, which is free, does not get twentyfourseven customer support, and that is one thing it included with the google non-profit does that mean telephone support or it’s it’s chatting or its email? Or what? Phone and really phone support twenty four seven for non-profits right now, it’s the third state for critical issues that’s probably not. Now how do i form at the spreadsheet? But it’s probably more like how come i can’t connect? And why are my users able? T used system? Probably some limitations. Okay, but still significant that its phone support twenty four seven? Absolutely. Okay, yeah. What? So what other features are there specifically for non-profits let’s be here. Engagement there they have a hold. They have a whole set of features that air specifically for non-profits once called google grants and that would be really appealing for non-profits because it allows you to put a an ad in google ads. Duitz and, you know, donate now and i don’t know exactly what the limitations are there but the fact that they allow you to put anything at all and google ads without paying so it’s grantspace for free uh, edwards, right. Okay, then they also have something about co-branded email. Right? The brand of the mail is essentially what i mean, it’s a perversion of google suite and you you get to put your logo on it. It’s, your domain name like mine is at kay koegler dot net. So that’s my own it’s, not a google male. Gmail. Okay, so so i’m sorry. So the branded email is not particular to non-profits right? They’re just kind of bundling of these features together for not-for-profits okay, what about youtube? They had they had some offering free on youtube, since they own youtube for non bright, their limitations in youtube, of content that normal people and upload or paid for companies can upload and they lighten up that limitation for non-profit cerini able stuff flowed longer. Video is longer than the ten minutes, and you also can put a donate but on your video, which is something that nobody else gets to do so again, it’s another opportunity to interact with your constituents, ask them to donate and give them a video in orderto, you know, state because and tell them why they should be excellent. All right, so so the google aps google grants for edwards, the youtube enhancements you had said that go to google dot com slash non-profits. And how do you how do you qualify as it does every non-profit qualified? And how do you prove that you are one, uh, it’s? Pretty simple. Actually, you need to be a five. A one c three, which you know a lot more about than i do. Most yl charities are all tax exempt charities are so you probably have to give your a copy of your irs tax determination letter. I would imagine. Well, there their explanation. Is that your arika notification of the status? Your e i n need to appear in the irises online database. Okay. All right. So that they see there were more sufficient. They don’t mean more efficient. They don’t want to deal with copies of documents. Attachments? Theyjust they’re using the irs list, right? They just looked up. Yes or no? Okay, on. There are some predictions. For instance, you can’t be doing any commercial services. No car, boat or real. Estate donation okay, get the focus websites with a primary focus on selling good products. Services don’t qualify. Consumer credit counseling doesn’t qualify, so they’re special impatient, but they will they look to be to me at least like they’re trying to weed out those things that could be marginally non-profit oriented and to clarify, i think ifyou’re non-profit is let’s, say, doing car donations or yacht donations some like that, you could still continue that. You just you can’t use google for non-profits to support that kind of work, right? Okay, i love the donate button on the youtube videos. That’s really extraordinary. You know, video has really taken off in the last uh oh, gosh, here in half. In terms of a way to get a message to folks video, you said right work or some kind of video. And i saw study just recently staying at sixty five percent of latto visitors just in general. You a video? Some kind at least two times a week. Uh, that’s. Pretty significant. Kind of traffic to video. Good. Good reason toe get into that. Oh, it’s. So interactive. I think you and i have talked about that when we when we talked about the ideal website, you could just show so much more, you know, you can show your work on site and it doesn’t have to be high production values, right? And if you look at a lot of videos being used now, they’re very personal. It’s uh, you know, a head shot of somebody stating their cause, i’m talking directly to the viewer. So it’s, not some kind of a zoo just said, hi production, just sitting down in front of your flip cam or or your webcam on your computer and just stating your cause doesn’t have to be something you know, heavily produced, although i do have to say that, uh, pre scripting your your talk, those make a lot of difference. You don’t want to be fumbling your words of course, alright, so video, very valuable and you can use google for non-profits to take advantage of what google’s offering on youtube with scott koegler, our regular tech contributor, the editor of non-profit technology news. When we return after this break, we’ll talk about some of the security and privacy concerns about working in the cloud stay with us. You didn’t even think that. Shooting. Getting, thinking. You’re listening to the talking alternate network. E-giving. Thank you. Good. Buy-in looking to meet mr and mrs wright, but still haven’t found the one. Want to make your car relationship as fulfilling as possible? Then please join us, starting monday, may second at ten am for love in the morning with morning alison as a professional matchmaker, i’ve seen it all. Please tune in and call. We discuss dating relationship and more. Start your week off with love in the morning with marnie alison on talking alternative dot com. Talking alternative radio twenty four hours a day. 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 or 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 talking. No. Kayman welcome back home with scott koegler, editor of non-profit technology news, which you’ll find it in peace. The tech news dot com and we’re talking about google for non-profits. Scott, you have your business, you said so many of your business documents in the cloud. And there, there are concerns about security mint just within the past. Well, by the time this show has aired, it will be within the past two weeks or so, citigroup hacked thie international monetary fund packed. So if your if your data isn’t resident on your computer, which which has its own risks, i’m not saying that’s risk. There are risks. Sure. Tony there’s always risk. And i should say that the imf was not a cloud based application. It was actually within their own servers. Okay, so there’s always there’s always something there’s, always somebody wanting to get in and cause mayhem. Of course, if you’re a bigger target, you’re going to be more likely to be to the attack. But i was looking at the security of cloud based systems like this if i have it on el computer from my own network of my own servers, and i’m responsible for that for the security of that, and i can install security applications like instead of firewalls, do all those things that are necessary. But you know what? I am not an expert in that stuff. On the other hand, cloudgood based applications service providers allow you to put your application’s up in their services. They have their entire businesses going on the line and there’s an adage that i’ve heard a couple of times if they the service provider, cloud service provider or sas provider? Yes, it one time it’s a public relations problem. If they get him twice, they have, they’re gonna lose customers. If they get hit three times essentially out of business, so if you look at it from their perspective, it’s not just something that they do it’s, something they have to do in order to stay in business, let me keep you in a lot more at stake as my security than i do. Okay, interesting perspective. Thank you. Let me keep you out of jargon jail you mentioned sas. Now we have talked about sass in the past, but for someone who maybe didn’t listen to that show, which is hard to believe anybody if it is a theoretical possibility that somebody might not have listened to that previous show. So just for that hypothetical, what is what is sass to remind us, please. Zaps and cloud are very related. They both are especially computers in the sky there by the internet so fast actually stands for not where as a tea service google application or google maps qualify as software is the service. They also increasing your private people in our interchange. The thie acronyms, either sas or cloud they really warm or referring to exactly. The technically i would classify it differently. But provoc most intents and purposes you can say sat cloudgood alright, well and technically, that’s. Why you’re the editor of non-profit technology news to make those make those nuanced distinctions and and explain them to us. What? Why would you say they’re a little bit there? Technically different sashes specifically application. So if you look at okay, like fundez counting software, you and i talked a few, many shows ago. Probably now about fund accounting software. That was sas. Correct. Okay. And cloud could be anything. There are their websites, servers that are available where you can actually create your own application here. Things like amazon has three, which is there basically, they’re described in the sky where you could just take all of your files. Documents, pictures, videos, blow them up onto their disk drive up there. That’s a cloud based service. Not really an application. Okay, i understand that the technical difference between right and since you mentioned amazon has three, i’ll give them a little plug. I use them for the video in-kind and audio content for this show. It’s. How i transfer it between the people who are editing it, working on it or the end user who produced it for uploaded to amazon has three and give them a whirl and they can download it. Yeah, many good things about that one. Is that it’s really? Really? Yes. It’s the right all of the people can get to it without files. One place? Yeah, it’s a couple of dollars a month on paying for many gig of storage. Right? One more concerned we have just about two minutes left around working in the cloud and that is privacy. Who questions about who owns the data? There are some lawsuits out there now where google is claiming that they own data that’s stored in their cloud. Now, i don’t know the nuances of the fact patterns around that. I just know that let’s just talk about the issue generally about who owns the data that you store in someone else’s cloud there, there are no rules, it will be up to the perfect provider and i although i haven’t seen the lawsuit with cool, i have to imagine that it’s around some very specific data or, you know, it’s like facebook, facebook essentially owns whatever you put up. On your facebook account, we’ve talked about that that could be, uh, last, but either as a sass or as cloud if you’re putting miles up there, like, uh, use a car photos, facebook owns it and that’s right in their terms of service, and it only gets to be an issue. I think when in terms of google, when they want to do something like delete or give away the data that you provided, i think that the qualification there is going to be very, very narrow for google eyes. They don’t want to get trouble with many persons or companies, proprietary data. So again, i haven’t looked lost otherwise that would discourage the use of their cloud. Yeah, considerably. Yeah. Ah, what about local back-up if oh, you know what, scott? I just realized we’ve we’ve we’ve come. We have to come to the end. We’re at the end. I’m sorry. I want to ask you about local back-up scott koegler, the editor of non-profit technology news at ten p tech news dot com scott, thank you very much. Enjoy your vacation in charlottesville, virginia. Thanks. My pleasure. Good to talk to you. Thank you. I wanna thank scott and holly hall features editor for the chronicle of philanthropy. For being with me today next week, a show from the archive and this time i do know which one it’s going to be the past couple weeks i’ve said, i don’t know what it’s going to be it’s going to fire up your board fund-raising gail perry, the author of fired-up fund-raising turned board passion into action, joins me for the hour next week. 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Nonprofit Radio for May 20, 2011: Pay Attention to People & Have People Pay Attention to Your Website

Big Nonprofit Ideas for the Other 95%

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

Tony’s Guests:

Alice Aspen March

Alice Aspen March, founder of The Attention Factor, she has studied how to be present and give attention to others. Her work will help your relationships with donors, co-workers, board members and volunteers.

 

 

 

Scott Koegler

Scott Koegler, our tech contributor and the editor of Nonprofit Technology News discloses how to make the perfect website for your nonprofit.

 

 

 


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Here is the link to the podcast: 042: Pay Attention to People & Have People Pay Attention to Your Website.
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Dahna for-profit radio big non-profit ideas for the other ninety five percent of your aptly named host i hope you were with us last week when it was e s two event sponsorships and email security karen perry, president of eventjournal, shared her ideas about how to cultivate, solicit and steward corporate sponsors to raise big money for your events. And i had howard globus, the president of t on demand, with strategies to keep your email safe and sound and away from snoopers, and he shared info on a great non-profit discount site for getting significant email and data security savings. This week, it is pay attention to people and have people pay attention to your website. Alice aspen march is the founder of the attention factor she has studied how to be present and give attention to others. Her work will help your relationships with your donors, coworkers, board members and volunteers, and my second guest will be scott koegler, our regular tech contributor and the editor of non-profit technology news he’s done going to disclose how to make the perfect website for your non-profit so that it works for you and people pay attention to it, pay attention. This week, as we learn how to give and get attention, and on tony’s take two this week, last night’s reception at the helmsley park lane hotel for the show was a great success. A lot of fun. A good number of people came out, and i did a special interview for the show. I’ll talk about that, and also why i do radio that’s this week on tony’s. Take two. So, after this message, i’ll be joined by alice aspen. March, chanda pre recorded interview about paying attention to people. Stay with us. You’re listening to the talking alternative network. 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. 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 two 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. 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 dafs right now, i’m joined by alice aspen march, the founder of the attention factor, you’ll find that at the attention factor dot com alice is has appeared on many television and radio shows and has been extensively quoted in print and online outlets talking about attention. Alice aspen, march welcome to the show. Thank you, tony alice, there aren’t many people talking about paying attention and giving attention to others. What first do you mean when you’re talking about attention? Well, first of all, you’re right, nobody is talking about it like i am paying attention is the most important part of our lives because attention is with us twenty four seven and people know today when you’re not paying attention, especially when you’re on your cell phone or you’re texting or you’ve got your earphones on or you’re looking at your computer or your answering a phone, and people feel that what i mean by paying attention or being present is when you are listening to somebody when you are looking at them, when you’re in their energetic field and when you’re not, people can feel invisible or not respected or not included are angry and they they withdraw. They act out. The roots of your work are pretty personal. Yes, they are, because i have three adult sons. And one day i discovered that my youngest one, who had been a television addicts nobody was talking about that at all at that time had gone on to abuse drugs, and i was really terrified tony, that i could lose him. And so i went looking for the role i played in his dysfunctional behavior and att. First i changed my life, selby, but i didn’t know what i was looking for. It was very frustrating until i had an epiphany in a u c l a extension class. I lived in los angeles at the time. I had an epiphany over the word attention, and i knew that was a clue. So then i went looking for everywhere. I could find anything about it, and strangely enough, the on ly place iphone. It was attached to a d h d and a d day, and that wasn’t really what i was looking for. So i went further into the subject and i have a generalist mind. And pretty soon i realized i was reading about attention, but they never used the word. So in about a year, i had a body of work, which i took to a spot that i’d spoken at years before, and i realized that my subject matter resonated with everybody, because attention is everybody’s primary need my guest is alice aspen march, founder of the attention factor, and we’re taking your calls today. The number to call for alice is eight seven seven for eight xero forty one twenty eight, seven, seven for eight xero for one to zero for calls to alice aspen march alice it sounds like with greater attention we can increase our own and maybe and probably other people’s productivity efficiency as well as well being. Tony, you’ve just said the magic words. Yes, the deprivation of attention leads two it can lead to disease, it can lead to violence it can lead to stealing in in corporate the corporate world, people need attention and when they don’t get it, they’ve got to act out. So when they do get the kind they need, of course, productivity goes up. Morale in a corporate world goes up people’s relationships change and our positive i’ve had people who have heard me on a ship or in europe or new zealand and say to me afterwards, i don’t believe this why haven’t we heard this before? You basically just change you saved my daughter’s life or i’m going home and treat my employees differently, or i’ve got to do something about my wife or now i know what’s been wrong in my marriage for forty three years, yes, is this is obviously pervasive work that you’re doing affecting personal and professional relationships and to bring it home for our listeners, i’m thinking about relationships with boardmember sze volunteers, co workers, co workers may be working for you or you’re working for them or against you when you mentioned violence that makes me think a little bit of that phrase going postal violence, that’s not the only place the postal service is not the only place where people where we’ve seen violence in the workplace, certainly, but it can rise to that level. And is your sense that a lot of that violence stems from people not being respected and getting attention in words of one syllable? Yes, and, you know, of course, that expression going postal came out of the post office. You see, an exit interview is vital for people that you’re letting go because it’s a closure for them, and if they don’t get that when they don’t get that, they feel invisible. And he certainly went back to the workplace and made himself visible by taking out a lot of people, you know? And even more recently, there was something in in binghamton, new york. Yes, on alison. And just the minute we have left before the break. Alice really back, of course, after the break, may be there just one one way. You can give us one or two of listening better. How can we be better at giving attention? Well, first of all, you could turn off all your tech stuff. Okay. So, she’s vital. Vital tony? Yes, that’s a that’s first and foremost is my cell phone on vibrate? I think, yes, i did do it for the show. But, yes, you’re right know where we have we have kottler way have become immersed in a culture that does not listen does not listen to each other and it doesn’t seem to be getting any better. And people are feeling out there talking about that more. That he doesn’t listen to me or they don’t listen to me, or she doesn’t listen to me. We’re going to take a break. Alice, my guest is alice has been march, founder of the attention factor. Please stay with us. E-giving defending the tubing. E-giving ding, ding, ding, ding. You’re listening to the talking, alternate network, getting anything dahna. Nothing. Cubine 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. 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 looking to meet mr and mrs wright, but still haven’t found the one. Want to make your car relationship as fulfilling as possible? Then please join us, starting monday, may second, at ten am for love in the morning with morning alison, as a professional matchmaker has seen it all, please tune in and call as we discuss dating relationship and more. Start your week off with love in the morning with marnie alison on talking alternative dot com. Talking alternative radio twenty four hours a day. Oppcoll welcome back. My guest is alice aspen march. The founder of the attention factor at the attention factor. Dot com alice. Right before the break, we started to talk about ways that we can give attention in in much better ways and pay attention. Mohr and you mentioned turning off our tech gadgets. What? What else? How else should we be bestowing the attention that is so much needed by the people we work with and live with? Well, certainly one way in a unique way. That’s not very usual is to ask them. Ask somebody what kind of attention would you like from me? And i could bet that they don’t even know. So the next sentence that you would share with them would be. You may not know right now what kind of attention you want from me. But when you figure it out, please call me. Please let me know. So i can either give it to you are we can talk about it o r o r it would make good conversation. So you think in a professional relationship that’s ah, that’s. A fair question to ask. Now, this is let’s say, boss and employee and the employees, i guess asking the boss what kind of attention do you need from me? Absolutely. Yes. First of all, it makes the employees feel visible that the boss really cares about her or him, and it opens up a whole world of communication. Absolutely. Alice, we have a caller. Barbara, welcome to the show, barbara how thank you what’s. Use your question for alice. Barbara. Well, the friends that i want, i know that i’ve turned with computers so that i’m giving her one hundred percent of my attention. Thank you. Also, i grieve if what you’re saying and i tried to do that, then how can you paying attention to someone when you, when you’re talking to someone who just talks in circles, who never gets to the point? And it could just get frustrating? In-kind that when that happens, my mind, i just go where had also focus, focus those difficult, sort of, maybe frustrating, even moments when someone isn’t getting to the point. Alice so what do we do, what we do in that situation? First of all, how do you feel when that happens? Barber to you, that’s important to realize how do you know when i’m not getting to the point. Yeah, well, you’re feeling frustrated, right? Okay, well, probably one thing you could certainly say to the person is i don’t think you’ve heard what i said because i’m feeling very frustrated about something right now. That’s a direct communication, okay, are you got to say that? Well, i’m sorry to hear that. I know they would have had to see that that’s a good thing to say, oh, good are i need you to repeat back what i’ve just said to you, so then i know that you got it because it’s really important, alice is clearly all about open communication that sounds like the advice that you’re giving not to be afraid to sort of, i guess, obviously politely but firmly ask for more, ask for the attention you’re seeking and in case of barbra’s question, ask for affirmation of what it is that you’re looking for are acknowledging tony, close communication doesn’t work, so you have to have open communication, but you have to know really what you need and if you need somebody to stop talking in circles, which is so really normal, you need that you have. To you have to let them know they’re really not getting you a zay said the way to get the way to alert them to that is to get to never repeat back what you’ve said, barber, does that help you? Thank you. All right, thank you very much for calling barbara. The number to call if you’d like to talk to alice is eight seven, seven for eight xero forty one twenty my guest is alice aspen march, founder of the attention factor. Alice let’s focus more on how we can be better at giving attention be more attentive. Eso you’ve mentioned turning off electronic devices? I mean, those air obviously distracting, and your point is people feel that distraction, um, asking for attention, asking what type of attention is being sought. Are there other ways that we can be better at this? Well, once you ask somebody what kind of attention they need and you start a conversation, you’re going to get lots of information, they’re going to tell you what they need and how to give it to them and and and miracles happen. First of all, you’ve got to know that way are three different kinds. Of people, some of us need attention visually, some of us needed auditory lee. Is that a word? Yeah, auditory and another. Some of us need a kinesthetic lee. And when you established in aesthetics is movement correct? Like i’m flailing my arms right now as i’m talking to you, right? Well, you can hear it in people speech. They will either say, you know, i really see what you’re talking about. I hear what you’ve said. I really don’t feel that well, that’s a big clue that comes from really listening when you get that clue, you could address that need in that person and put it in put your conversation in visual terms or auditory terms or keane aesthetic terms you don’t. I’d like to talk about retention. That’s a new popular issue right now, it’s not only an issue in in your area but it’s in the issue that i’m working with now college kids, you know it usedto only belong in the corporate world. They would talk about retention because people leave. There was a tremendous turnover. Well, college kids, they’re not leaving and trustees air now leaving and i believe firmly cause i hear this from enough people that they leave when they don’t get their needs met and their primary need is for attention. We’ve had a show actually about retaining the good employees that you work so hard to to recruit way look to recruit the best not only employees, but also board members and volunteers and it’s difficult for the organisation when there’s a lot of turnover. Um, your point is you think some of the this turnover could be reduced if people would just be more open about what they’re needs are around attention and fulfilling those needs. Toni, i’ve got lots of research in my files showing that employee turnover khun b reduced when employees start to get the kind of attention they are they need, and i’ve worked with a group. The bottom line personal publication corporation had a fall fabulous experience. It was an experiment. It was called i power. Yes, tell us and they were losing a publication and they had tremendous turnover and stress in their workplace. And they developed this experience where they got their employees to tell them how they felt they could do their job better. There was a process involved in this. But not only did employ turnover cease, the bottom line went up and and the hundreds of dollars were saved in tiny ways, because employees know about waist and they really don’t want to waste their time, nor their owners resource is that it was a miracle. I took that course twice to see if they were doing what i wanted them to do, and they were a fabulous story. Fabulous. This reminds me two of something that was in the is in the news very recently, there’s ah, a university, harrisburg university of science and technology. They’ve decided that for one week they were going to turn off access to all social media to the students so there would be no text messaging, no facebook access, no twitter access for for a solid week and these air all the sorts of distracters that you’re talking about and what happened? No, they haven’t done it yet, it’s coming on, i do it. I would like to know what they’re going to do. I mean, how it turns out, you know, there was a president of santa monica college when i lived there who decreed dead for one hour, just one hour a week, his staff and his service people would do nothing but read that’s. What he proclaimed and the whole campus changed. People were starting to talk to each other again. The gardeners were talking to the only students because everybody want to know what the other person was reading. The point is, we need that in our lives. We need a turnoff. We need to start looking at people and paying attention. You know, i just moved to new york from los angeles where i spent my life in a car isolated the difference. And living here is so overwhelming because i take the bus is i take the subways and i look at people and i talked to people. People are people, people are people all over and they want to be talked to. They want to be looked at. They want to get directions if they look like they’re lost. I stopped. I stopped a couple of the other day in grand central station because the man was taking a photograph of his wife and i said to him, how would you like me to take a picture of both of you and this guy? Smile? From ear to ear, he couldn’t believe it. A small gesture. You and i met on the subway. We met on the atria. We did did that’s how we met on the time we got to know each other. If someone has a difficult relationship with let’s, say a boardmember because that’s, those can be sometimes the most the most excruciating. Ah, they where should they really start to try toe engage the person mohr or teo sort of hell. The relationship. Well, i think if you really know that the relationship is out or not working, you ask him out for lunch and you say, you know, i’d like to talk to you about a few things and that’s when you could say, you know, i get that there’s not a lot of attention around here. What kind would you like? Are we are we scheduling meetings at the wrong time? Are you being harassed by my staff? Are you getting too many emails? But, you know, over food, some wonderful things happen, and generally a person when you’re eating with him will be more comfortable and feels safer. Ah, and you could ask him, of course, if this is a good time to talk about what’s going on that the non-profit you’ve gotta enroll, people enroll in an engage in rolling and gay just asked permission permission for what? I ask permission to talk to him about what’s going on at the non-profit that is attention. I happen to like your idea of sharing a meal with someone it’s, it’s, it’s, a physical, sharing your sharing a physical space, the table. I also like that meals in a restaurant are timed. We know the flow exam there also are going to be the office interruptions because you’re out of the office and adhering to your advice, you’ve turned off your cell phone. You want to be attentive to this person? So you have you’ve eliminated distractions, hopefully, and then there’s the physical level of the physical, but the sharing of a meal and be sure you pick up the bill don’t let him i want to give you another example that occurred in one of my workshops. Ah woman’s boss would call her in for a meeting, and either he was on the phone or on his computer or texting or something, and the meetings were generally disasters. Because he would give her moments. And she said, what could i do? And i said, next time you see him in the hall say, could i have seven minutes of your time with no interruption? You know, if somebody hears is a beginning and the end, they can handle that. And so they a set aside a seven minute time and went in, and they had the meeting with no interruptions. And he was the one at the end of the meeting. Who said, you know, this has been the best meeting we’ve ever had in just a brief period. Yes. And she was she was elated because when she walked out of his office before she felt deflated, depressed, un respected and areva nails particularly invisible, which is a terrible place to be and they were able to turn it around in just a seven minute meeting. That’s, right without interruption. You doing a five minute meeting? Alison? Just a minute. We have left. This also gets me thinking about two types of people. Are you actually think of the movie pulp fiction? The scene with uma thurman and and john travolta? Are you the kind of person? Who listens or either kind of person who waits to talk? Yeah, good question. There are both in our land and i’ve been guilty of both. So i am particularly joining the first group where i listen until the people are really done. And you know, tony, i’ve had people say to me, you know, you’re really a good lister, so i know that it’s happening for them. Well, john travolta would admire you because he answers that he’s the kind of person who waits to talk, but he says he’s working on it. Alice, we have to leave it there. My guest has been alice aspen march, the founder of the attention factor you confined alice thehe tension factor dot com and i want to thank her very much for joining us in the studio. After this break, we’ll be joined by scott koegler. That was my pre recorded interview with alice aspen march. Hope you enjoyed that. We take a break now and when we return it’s tony’s, take two and then i’ll be with scott koegler and we’ll talk about howto have people pay attention to your website. Stay with us. Hyre you’re listening to the talking alternative network. 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 hunches. People be better business people. Buy-in 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 zoho welcome back, it’s. Time for tony’s, take two. I hosted a reception just last night at the helmsley park lane hotel for the show. We were in the leona helmsley suite, which was very nice that actually used to be the only helmsley’s home, so you could imagine it quite an opulent suite overlooking central park set on the forty sixth floor, and we had about fifty guests at the reception when it was a very lovely night, i interviewed naomi levine, who is the executive director of new york university’s heimans center for philanthropy and fund-raising and i’ll be broadcasting that interview with her on a future show coming up shortly. Also this week’s blawg post. Why i do radio i was at the nbc studio tour about a month or so ago with some friends who were visiting from outside new york, and we took the studio tour, and at the end of the tour, they asked for volunteers who want to record something in the newsroom. And as i’ve been doing since third grade, the mistake i’ve been making since third grade, i shot my handup and i volunteered and i ended up doing the weather for a brief newscast so you can see that video of me doing whether in the nbc studio on my blogged at m p g a d v dot com and i called the post me doing tv why i do radio that’s tony’s take two for friday, may twentieth with me now is scott koegler, of course, he’s, our regular tech contributor, he’s, the editor of non-profit technology news and we’re going to talk about how have people pay attention to your well website? Welcome, scott, how you doing? I’m good tony, how you terrific pleasure to have you back. Good to be here. All right, let’s, talk about websites and i’d like to just actually start with the name of the website the domain name. You have some advice around domain name for website i do i have funny of one of the things is that if you have a website, if they have one that was generated with one of the free utilities and your domain name, maybe something like by non-profit dot, three webs st dot com and you know it works. It gets people there but it’s not catching e i mean, people may know the name of your non-profit but they’re probably going to type in something more like my non-profit dot com or my non-profit dot or something. So the first suggestion is get your get your own domain name and they’re readily available, you know, for non-profits is typical to get the dot or ge extension. Typically, those will run ten to fifteen dollars, a year. They, uh and even if you already have one of those free websites that i just referred to generally use and replace the default pompel name that’s been given to it with your own domain name. Okay? And how does an organization by the domain name were first, you know, find out whether it’s available or whether they have to be a little creative? Maybe teo find availability. How does one do that process? How do you know what’s available? And then how do you do actually buy it? I have pretty much used go daddy, dot com or all of my domain names out there. There are some reasons that folks may not want to use go daddy, dot com now, those there’s a lot of political stuff going on around that, but my by much. More pragmatic than that, it works is cheap it’s, easy to use and advantages by thirty or so domain names pretty easily. Okay. Oh, let’s, stop you there. So so one person or one organization can own multiple domain names absolutely typically a comfortable on the set of domain names around their company names. So if my organization name is my non-profit, i will want to get domain name by not-for-profits not orders and probably dot net maybe dot info and even maybe dot com, though there we’ve got five domain names that’s going to be probably fifty dollars, per year. Okay, so not expensive, but you’re trying to buy all the all the possibilities around your name so that somebody else doesn’t exploited. And then you’re constituents get confused. Basically, is that it? Exactly? Okay. On dso really? So and as little as ten dollars, per year per domain name as little as yes, some of them are a little bit more expensive and some are ridiculously expensive, you know, in the hundreds of dollars, but the ones we’re we’re talking about here typically ten to fifteen dollars. Okay, so go, daddy dot com that’s a sight you’re recommending. For research, and then you also buy it through through them he simply type in there’s about as soon as you go there, you’ll see a domain name and that’s kind of like a search bar right across the top, and the most obvious thing to do is just type in the name of your organization and hit enter and they’ll come back and immediately. And they say this is available or it’s not available. It’s not available, it’ll will suggest alternatives for you, so i won’t get into what those might be. But it automatic it’s a great tool. It’s really kind of guide you to it. Ok? And if the name that you want precisely is not available that’s why i was suggesting earlier you might have to get a little creative with some variations or i guess using hyphens things like that. Okay, i don’t want to go too far straight because you do want people that were looking for you to be able tio type in your organization name as closely as possible. Of course. All right on dh. Then you have advice about email accounts also using the same name. Right? Right. Once you have. A domain name, then you khun sign email accounts to that domain. So if you have a volunteer ten volunteers in your organization and maybe three staff members, the chances are that right now, if you don’t have a domain name that each one of those people is goingto have their own email address is going to be, you know, hotmail, dot com or gmail or, you know who knows what? And it’s very it’s tough or people on the other end, people receiving e mail from them to immediately recognize that they’re part of your organization. So with the domain name that is assigned to your organization, you can typically and again prices vary and facilities very go. Daddy does have that facility and i can’t remember off hand how much they cost. Ok, so that’s something you’d you’d pay for additional isto have email accounts with that domain name, but your point being it’s worth it for identity it is and whether it’s traditional price or not depends on the the provider. Ok, if left you the credibility and the direct relationship so people get a an email from scott, my non-profit dot com they know that i’m with non-profit dot com. And they get scott at gmail dot com. They have no idea who that is. Yeah, it sounds like you know, you sound like you. You appear to be a more professional, more together organization that way. Yeah. And i would argue that this by the fact that doing that you actually are okay. All right, well, it’s the reality as well as the perception. Okay, if we could get both that’s great here, sam. Shallow. I just go for the perception. I’m all facade, it’s, all plastic. But scott is a genuine person. He goes for the death and reality depth of character. Not like me. What? So let’s, talk about some features. Okay, so you have your domain name and you got your email accounts affiliated with it as right? Exactly your non-profit name, or as close as you can get. What do you like to see on that site so that people pay attention to it and come back? No, in a variety of things. Okay. Let’s, let’s. Just take them in. No particular order. Okay? Content is king. So you need to be able to post updates and easiest way to do. That is what people normally consider a block. You know, a blogger is really just a bunch of articles that are listed in typically and dates sequential order. So you know, school down the list to see today just yesterday as you see the day before content needs to be on your site and give people a reason to come back. And that also, if you’re updating your block regularly keeps people a reason to come back because there’s fresh content yeah, exactly. And hopefully you’re being interesting and people talk about subscribing to blog’s. I have that on my website. What does that mean to subscribe to a blogger? Subscribe is simply telling the website hey, tell me when there’s a new blogged posted and there’s a variety was doing that, one of the most popular for website is what’s called a okay what’s jargon jail. Now, are you teetering on the edge of george in jail? You have to explain what are ss is our stands for really simple syndication, okay? And that by itself means almost as much as our ss. But what it does is it allows you to use a tool like google reader to bring that information either into google reader or actually into your email, so essentially i post a new block item to my website and your subscribe to it you’ll actually get a copy of that in your email. Oh, you get a copy of the block post in the email, not just a notice that there is a new block post get a link to it and probably the first. Okay, okay, so the description is email course that that’s a whole different topic, but yeah, well, we can talk about that, and and i want to remind people to that that’s something scott and i talked about when we did a feature called fabulous facebook, which was talking about your organization’s facebook page and that the remind i’m reminded of that conversation because one of the things got recommended was having of youth utility there, where people could sign up to get email messages from you. Get your regular email messages from the facebook page where they could sign up, and that was the february twenty fifth show. This year, it was called fabulous facebook. Okay, so keeping people current with your with your your blogged is it isn’t. It pretty common now that the block really is the website scott difficult? Yes, the block generally makes up most of the content of the website. And yeah, so that’s s o i think just, you know, a couple of years ago way used to seymour where there was a website opening page, and then there’d be a link to a block inside. But i see more now that the block is the opening page and i know that’s how i do it on my site, but i’m not saying that because i do. I’m following the trend. I didn’t create it and you mentioned facebook. One of one of the other subscription methods on this needs to be a feature of the website itself is that if you post a new block in addition to posting it to the speed, it will also automatically posted both to facebook and twitter. So all right, essentially, what happens is if a visitor looks the like button on the website and of course that’s, a feature that has to be enabled us. Well, then, that the person like the website and the here backed of liking the website in the function that is built into the website and then take that new block post and posted directly to facebook. So if your main interaction with the internet is facebook, it’s gonna pop up in your stream, okay, so you’re you’ve posted to your blogged and people who like your blogged meaning like it, as in facebook, like they’ll they’ll get your new block post on their wall. Is that right? Okay, all right, so these are a lot of these are a lot of interesting features. I mean, how do you build all these little things in, like posting to twitter automatically when you post a block or adding the like button functionality to your website? How did these little things get in there? Sometimes? It’s easy, sometimes it’s not cans on who’s setting up your web site depends on your website provider because on the tool, the i think previously talked about webs that you’re using, we’re pressed. Yes, we have talked about wordpress, right? And my my tool of choice is juma, and, uh, i know that i’m not familiar with that much with wordpress, although i believe that since it’s still popular, probably those incorporate or at least have yes, ability to incorporate some of these features and that’s the same thing with julia. Would scott wanted us spell jew melissa and give the earl for it to j o m l a and it’s a dot or gall, though dot com will get there as well? Ok, it’s open source free doesn’t mean that it’s that every part of its free but open source software, you could make use of it and that’s for creating a website that would include a blogger or creating a blogged that is the website. Yeah, it’s, kind of a little different from work best, which really started life as a blogging applications juma is what’s termed a content management system, and so one of the things that it manages out is a lot, but it also convicted advertising hyre wake up and we’re going to get to that after the break. We’re going to take a break, scott koegler will stay with us, and when we come back, we’ll start talking about accepting donations on your website that people are now going to be paying attention to stay with us, please. Talking alternative radio twenty four hours a day. Do you love movies, then join me and share your opinions about him on the radio. This is mike, a movie fan like you, starting may tenth. Join me every tuesday night at six pm for my new show movie time on talking alternative dot com. Call me live or email me at movie time radio. At gmail dot com. We’ll talk about all the blockbusters whose the best director and which movies air overrated, among many other topics. Join me for movie time. Tuesdays at six on talking alternative dot com. Looking to meet mr and mrs wright, but still haven’t found the one. Want to make your car relationship as fulfilling as possible? Then please join us starting monday, may second, at ten am for love in the morning with marnie. Gal ilsen as a professional matchmaker has seen it all. Please tune in and call as we discuss dating relationship and more. Start your week off with love in the morning with marnie alison on talking alternative dot com. 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 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 dot com. Dahna there was one commercial in that break that was very articulate, something about non-profit radio hope it stood out for you the way it did for me. Hyre stay with me all day scott koegler is with us, our regular tech contributor, the editor of non-profit technology news, which you always find it n p tech news. Dot com scott about thiss online giving importance to a website important non-profits absolute and again it’s one of those functions that needs to be added to a website. Some tools make it pretty easy. Some require additional programming. Again, i’m really with julia and it’s, one of those add ons that can be put in a pretty, pretty easily. Most of these go to paypal, which is, you know, pretty easy to do. Yeah, i think that it’s generally recognized me there, and even with paypal, you can accept credit cards. Yeah, that is very common. And we did talk about that previously. Also on that february twenty fifth show. What about keeping your people your constituents? Apprised of what’s going on through, like through newsletters? How can your blogged support your newsletter activity? The easiest way is to use the block entries that you put in as just part of your normal update a cz your newsletter comes and that’s an alternative way of getting information to your constituents out an alternative who either the speed or the or the facebook updates. I personally like those letters because it gives me the opportunity to select out the articles that i want to present i could put him in the order that i want, i can add images, pictures, links to other what other resource is within it? And, uh, again, depending on the tool that you’re using, whether it’s, we’re press or junior or some other tool, there are functions that make it easy to say, okay, but this article, this article, this article put him in this order and send up main now almost. Okay, so now you’re repurpose ing your blawg articles for your e newsletter because i’m just so people know we’re talking about an online newsletter and e newsletter that people are going to get. My email, right? Yeah, but now that i don’t know what if people are regularly subscribing to your block, then your newsletter is kind of redundant for them. No, it can be. Some people like to get consolidated, but, of course, you need to be able to allow people to opt out of any of their subscriptions. Whether the newsletter subscription argast. Sabelo let them have that flexibility, okay? They’re complaining completely. Yeah, you’re breaking up a little bit there, so i’m just gonna repeat just a part of what you said, which was you need to give people the opportunity, the option to opt out so that if they are subscribing to your r s s feed getting your block posts the way scott described, maybe they want to opt out of getting your e newsletter, right? Okay, what should this thing this this website look like? Good question and that that’s really open to it kind of hyre the style of the organization, i mean, some can be very formal, some can be very informal. The good thing about most of these again, i’ll talk about weird press, and juma is that there is pretty much an unlimited supply of what’s called templates, and you can apply a template to your website and give it a new look and even change it. You can even change it from page to page if you want to, but the design really is a matter of taste and making sure that it fits within the overall style and perhaps not only style, but you might want to deviate from those templates to have ah, designer who’s goingto do something so that your site is identical to the rest of your visual identity. Yeah, can you? Usually if you are using the templates, can you can you usually import your own artwork so that you can at least have elements that are the same? Like, i mean, you want to bring your logo and if that’s possible is that is that kind of functionality? Absolutely. Those air parts of the initial sped up generally. And because of the way these things were made, there’s usually quite a bit of online help that either can say you go on to the support sessions and you say, how do i do this? Forgive you inspections for you pay a few dollars, get someone too, actually customized to exactly the way, okay? And you find the online help to be actually helpful. Decently robust? Yeah, they’re very good people. He’s kind of systems are, i guess mildly put it fanatical what they do. Okay? And so i think an important message for small shops is that you’re not alone. You’re probably not the first person to have. Encountered a problem with juma or wordpress? Used. Use the online help resource is all right. Wait just a couple minutes left. You know what i find always annoying tio have to look for and sometimes i don’t find it is a way of contacting the organization. You know, i’d like to go beyond your blogged. I’d liketo actually maybe talk to somebody. Or or at least we have the chance to email somebody. And sometimes you can’t find that so easily what’s your thoughts on contact. Well, the standard is at the bottom of the page. There’s a length that says contact their standard that’s pretty much always there. But, you know, certainly those states not they’re pretty frustrating, depending on how important it is the organization’s actually get contact. He may want make-a-wish prominent as the donate, but okay, and again, you were cutting out a little bit. So you’re you’re advice to make the contact button as prominent as the donate button if that’s important to your organization. Yeah, i know that’s the standard down at the bottom that should be looked contact, but and that’s, the first place i look, but sometimes it’s not there, and i have to go hunting for howto email somebody or send it if it’s not an e mail, send a message using the site ondo that crucible frustration leased for may. You don’t want your visitors to be frustrated that, uh, that’s a big deal, i frustrate easily, you know, because i’m shallow person. So it it all goes it’s all consistent with the shallowness and the facade and the perception it’s, it’s all bundled together and something that i need to talk to my therapist about, okay, we have just like a minute left. Scott, what about having a community? Is that like a place where other people who love love your organization, khun gather, is that worth doing? Or should that just be your facebook? Your organization’s facebook page? It depends on your community like everything else like you. Facebook is great if you want to have a relatively open community. What two people engaged it’s entirely possible to build a community function into your website. Juma has a couple of these that air very much facebook like except that they’re closed community. So information and conversations that go on inside that community, stay there, they’re not public. As they are pretty much in the on facebook and the other thing is that, uh, if you can set up your own terms and conditions of that that are much more favorable to those people that use it. In other words, facebook, anything you put on facebook is the property of facebook and they can do anything they want to, and you can kind of go the opposite direction of that say, ok, if you post anything here, you could take it off any time you want it’s your property if you put a picture up it’s your property and, you know, so sometimes it’s more advantageous to have this kind of locked up communities than it is to be open to the world. So it really eso it really depends on what the character of your community is that you wanted to be, scott, we have to leave it there. Scott koegler, our regular tech contributor and the editor of non-profit technology news, which you’ll find at n p tech news. Dot com on in that conversation scott ni refered again teo are the fabulous facebook segment that he and i did together, and you’ll find that again. On the february twenty fifth show, also, i was referring in a few places to my blogged on, if you want to take a look at that, that is that m p g a d v dot com my thanks to alice aspen march for letting us replay her earlier interview and, of course, my thanks to scott koegler next week is going to be a show from the archives, but i don’t know which one yet i haven’t chosen. So the best way to know about what’s going to be on this show is to keep up. By signing up for our insider email alerts on our facebook page, i actually take scott koegler advice and you go to the facebook page facebook dot com tony martignetti non-profit radio there’s, a link there that will let you sign up to get the weekly alerts for the show and that’s. How you can find out what’s coming up while you’re on that facebook page, you can also click the like button, become a fan of the show and then, as scott said, what we post on the show page will show up on your wall and that’s another way for you to know what’s coming up and that’s how you’ll find out what’s coming up next week because even i don’t know at this point, we’re always on itunes. You subscribe. Listen, any time on the device of your choice, go to our itunes page by entering non-profit radio dot net that will take you to our itunes paige, the creative producer of tony martignetti non-profit radio is claire meyerhoff, our line producer. Today was janice taylor. Sam liebowitz is the owner of talking alternative road casting, but he didn’t produce the show today. Janice did. Our social media is by regina walton of organic social media. We did an outstanding job promoting that reception i told you about earlier. God, i hope that you will be with me next week on talking alternative broadcasting at talking alternative dot com that’ll be next friday, one to two p m eastern and, of course, always on itunes. Listen, any time at non-profit radio dot net hope to be with you next week. Upleaf durney i didn’t think that shooting getting ding, ding, ding ding. You’re listening to the talking alternate network to get you thinking. Nothing. Good. 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. Do you love movies, then join me and share your pains about them on the radio. This is mike, a movie fan like you, starting may tenth. Join me every tuesday night at six pm for my new show movie time on talking alternative dot com. Call me live or email me at movie time radio. At gmail dot com. We’ll talk about all the blockbusters whose the best director and which movies air overrated, among many other topics. Join me for movie time. Tuesdays at six on talking alternative dot com. 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 piela 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 two, one, two, nine, six, four, three five zero two. We make people happy. 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 effort. 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 you’re listening to talking on their network at www dot talking alt-right dot com, now broadcasting twenty four hours a day.

Nonprofit Radio for May 13, 2011: Event Sponsorships & Email Security

Big Nonprofit Ideas for the Other 95%

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

Tony’s Guests:

Karen Perry

Karen Perry, president of EventJournal, shares her ideas about how to cultivate, solicit and steward corporate sponsors to raise big money for your events.

 

I have a couple of questions for this segment. You can answer them here or on the show’s Facebook page.

Q1: Who solicits companies for your event sponsorships?

  • Staff
  • Committee volunteer
  • Board member
  • A combination of those above

Q2: In your largest event, what percentage of revenue is from corporate sponsorships?

  • 0-25
  • 26-50
  • 51-75
  • 76-100
Definitely NOT Howard Globus

Howard Globus, president of IT On Demand and guest contributor on this blog, reveals his strategies to keep your email safe and sound and away from snoopers.

 

He’s got some great nonprofit discount sites for major league security!

Here is a question for this segment.

Q3: Do you feel you have strong security protecting your sensitive donor data?

  • Yes
  • No
  • Not sure

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

Sign-up for show alerts!

“Like” the show’s Facebook page.

Don’t forget to subscribe to the show’s podcast on iTunes. Download and listen whenever and wherever you want.

Here is a link to the podcast: 041: Event Sponsorships and Email Security.
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No. Hello and welcome to tony martignetti non-profit radio big non-profit ideas for the other ninety five percent. I’m your aptly named host. I hope you were with me last week when i had a conversation with craig newmark, and we also talked about everlasting endowment. The founder of craigslist joined me hey has created craigconnects dot or ge for non-profits and those who support them, and we talked about the site and its areas of support. Craig is an inspiration to non-profits i’m thinking about this the past week, the way he works outside of his comfort zone to inaugurate craigconnects when he knows it’s a good idea, but he doesn’t really know how it’s going to turn out. So i hope you listen to that. I hope you were with me for that show and of course, it’s always on itunes, and also last week i had the co author of foundation and endowment investing, kathleen rittereiser joined me, she revealed strategies used by big endowment managers that you can take home to keep your endowment safe and invested, right? That was a segment that your cfo and you’re bored should hear this week event sponsorships and email security. Karen perry, the president of eventjournal, shares her ideas on how to cultivate, solicit and steward corporate sponsors so that you can raise big money for your events. And howard globus, president of i t on demand. Howard’s gonna have strategies to keep your email safe and sound and away from snoopers. He’s got some great non-profit discount sites for major league email and data security. So today i’m joined by two presidents in the studio on tony’s. Take two. In between, my guests remind you that we are media sponsors for fund-raising day in june, it’s, a big fund-raising day here in new york city, and i’ll talk a little about that. That is, at roughly thirty two minutes into the hour on tony’s, take two. So all that is, after this break, and right after the break, i’ll be joined by karen perry, will talk about event sponsorships, so stay with me. You’re listening to the talking alternative network. Latto 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. 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 us ed 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. Hey, are 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. Metoo welcome back to tony martignetti non-profit radio, always talking about big non-profit ideas for the other ninety five percent. With me in the studio now is karen perry. She has been helping non-profits raise more money from their galas and other major special events. For more than ten years, karen has worked at several of new york’s top advertising agencies on fortune one hundred accounts and has also worked in the non-profit arena in a variety of advocacy development, casework and outreach positions. She has her master’s in social work. In two thousand two, she founded event journal, the first web based alternative to printed ad journals and program books. Karen is here to share her ideas about event sponsorships. Karen, welcome to the show. Thank you, tony. What have you, um, what’s a sponsorship? A sponsorship is an opportunity. That’s packaged where a third party or a second party organization can get some derive some benefit from supporting another endeavor and were generally talking about corporate sponsorships today. Is that correct? This fall into the same sort of pattern of fund-raising that we see with individuals in that it’s cultivation solicitation stewardship? Well, there’s a general pattern. Yes, but there’s a different motivation in general for corporate sponsors, your individual donors, but we see the same sort of general flow i mean, you’re cultivating, soliciting and starting exactly okay, we’ll talk about each of those, you know, talk major those faces. What? What types of events are appropriate for sponsorship? Fund-raising well, there’s generally a distinction between fund-raising events and cultivation or stewardship events, although fund-raising events requires some stewardship as well, to maintain the sponsors, but basically a sponsored event can be anything from a dinner gala to a golf outing to a five k run. Anything where there’s exposure to the public on behalf of the charity or non-profit, where the sponsor would derive some value from being publicly associated with it? And what what are some of those sponsor motivations? Wired wire companies doing this well, probably the most, the one that most charities would assume is for the philanthropic value of it. Ah, usually you know, corp corporate entities are run by people, and people have different experiences in life. So if the nonprofit organization is doing work that touches on the pulse or the heart strings of thie president or vice president or other other key people in the company they miss may wish to get behind it. If there’s ah employees in the company who have been touched by particular disease or helped by an organization, then they may want to rally behind that organization. But that’s, just a piece of it is the philanthropic aspect. There’s also the what’s in it for me. And i think that in this day and age, there’s a big buzz going on right now about corporate social responsibility caused marketing. And so it really behooves the organization to take a look att tthe e exposure and recognition opportunities that they’re offering too, the sponsors when they support an event. Now we have drug in jail on tony martignetti non-profit radio, and i don’t want you to have very long stint in jargon jail you mentioned caused marketing. What does that mean? Cause marketing is when a when a the opportunity basically for a company to aa or for a non-profit to offer value to a company in association with its mission. And how would somebody figure out whether the company has that kind of affinity for for their mission? So how would a charity sort of sort that out. Well, it always goes back to the people who are in the company because cos they’re not faceless. They have people behind them. So if there’s a a company president who has a brother who was developmentally disabled, perhaps that would be a hot button for such an agency. Um, but i think it’s also a matter of ah on the less philanthropic end is, you know what? Exposure to the public, what goodwill are they conveying to the community when the organization offers thie sponsor an opportunity for exposure? Oh, yeah, definitely. I mean, i’m sort of combining two areas amused, definitely talking about the mission related interest that the company may have, and then also the what a positive association interest that they would have blang allied with the being seen with the charity name. So the organization used to do its homework to know who’s being touched by which type of condition and whether or not their mission speaks to a responsible person within the company, but very often that’s, not something that they can identify. So then i think the best opportunity for most non-profits is to put together compelling packages and traditionally for non-profit events, a dinner gala might have three hundred guests or a golf outing. Might have one hundred forty four golfers at best. That’s. Not a very big audience to be noticing the sponsorship support of a company. So in this day and age, there are so many digital opportunities and media opportunities to get the recognition factor out, that the organizations need to understand, and we’re about to take a break. But when we come back from the break, we’ll talk more about some of these marketing materials that you’re recommending that non-profits need to put together to make this compelling case. Teo cos. This is tony martignetti non-profit radio stay with us. E-giving didn’t think the building getting ding, ding, ding ding. You’re listening to the talking alternate network to get you thinking. Things. Cubine 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. Dahna 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, i 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 duitz looking to meet mr and mrs wright, but still haven’t found the one. Want to make your current relationship as fulfilling as possible? Then please join us, starting monday, may second at ten am for love in the morning with morning alison as a professional matchmaker, i’ve seen it all. Please tune in and call as we discuss dating relationship and more. Start your week off with love in the morning with marnie alison on talking alternative dot com. Talking alternative radio twenty four hours a day. Duitz welcome back to the show i’m with karen perry, the president of event journal, which you’ll find at event journal dot com and we’re talking about event sponsorships. So, karen, before the break, we were talking a little about the marketing materials that are appropriate for a charity to put together. What do those look like? In-kind trying to cultivate the corporate sponsorships? Okay, well, traditionally thie formula that’s been used for the ages has been that initially, to promote an event there’s a save the date card goes out about six months before the event, then there’s typically a sponsorship letter that the charity writes that engages attempts to engage thie company in ah, connection to the mission connection to perhaps an event honore connection, teo recognition exposure that they’re going to be offering. And a typical sponsorship package combines tickets or tables at the event, along with certain, um, benefits of recognition and association with the organization. So then, of course, the invitation pack it comes out in which if there’s someone who has committed early, sometimes their logo will be featured. And so, you know, the the media met message for the event starts churning and then sponsorship is usually inclusive of some kind of recognition in association with the continuation of that. So if they have an advertisement in the newspaper logos for sponsors, khun b identified email marketing, which is a newer component logo czar identified for sponsors and then at the event they’ll typically have some sort of banners or some sort of aa journal book where the sponsors and supporters are acknowledged by having an ad and that’ll be in us and in combination with tickets and the it’s sort of sounding like there has to be, you know, a lot of recognition, but couldn’t this could this work also for smaller organizations, are more locally based, but but maybe they would just be reaching out to local companies? Sure, you know, even a small organization, if they’re having a five k run, they have t shirts where people khun can have ah, you know, logos for companies or take and i’ve seen dog walks where when you get there next to the water station, there sign ege where the sponsors are being recognized, but for the larger events, probably the single biggest recognition opportunity traditionally has been the printed ad journal and ah, that’s something that at this point is become somewhat passe because the books are our passive piece, one of the opportunities that’s out there right now for non-profits is to use digital media in various forms to offer recognition and sponsorship exposure to the companies that underwrite their events. So now there’s websites for events there’s email marketing, where they expand to a much larger audience, digital media is going to reach out to people who may not be in the room the night of the event, but who were still part of the larger database for the organization and community for the organization. So the moran organization can tie into a variety of digital media. It expands from what used to be a printed piece or printed advertisement. Okay, and that’s what? Your work is involved with eventjournal and we’ll get into the recognition. I just want to sort of work our way into that. So there was another we’ve identified you identified two reasons that companies would be interested in some kind of event sponsorship that was analogue i with the mission that they’d be in sympathy with the mission or just ah positive association with a local organization and you mentioned a third, but let’s, let’s investigate that one little bit the honoree relationship. What is that? Well, in the new york metropolitan market, honorees are really tried and proven method for bringing revenue into the event, you know, as you get outside of the new york metro area. Interestingly enough, it’s not done as much really is not so common outside new york, but we’ve learned that it’s it’s sometimes we’re suggesting it to organizations and it’s kind of like an aha for them. But basically what that’s all about is identifying somebody. Who’s either done some incredible work or made contributions to the organization or someone who’s business. They can tie their business to the mission of the event, the organization and or if not just some prominent individual who’s willing to put their name and their support behind the event for particular year. And then they either are asked or were requested are expected to bring in a certain amount of support along with there being recognized, so the honoree themselves generally underwrites the event from their company. To some extent, they’ll usually by a couple of tables, or they’ll invite their colleagues. To buy tables, and then the big opportunity, depending on the prominence of the honore, is to reach out to the vendors and suppliers and clients and colleagues of that particular business person or corporation. And ah, you know, let them know that they should show support for the fact that their colleague is being honored. Yeah, so what’s the receptivity that you find in other parts of the country when you’re having a conversation with eventjournal clients or potential clients to this to this honoree idea that you said is new to them? Well, i think that there is a general sense that, you know, asking people to it there’s a discomfort i found with asking people to not only ah chip in a certain amount of much money for their own company, but then reaching out to the next tier, then and the vendors and kind of putting the arm on them strong, arming them to pony up some money. But i think at the end of the day, one of thie ah, one of the real facts of fund-raising is that its sales? You’ve got to get out there, you’ve got to ask, you’ve gotto give people. Compelling reasons, teo, make their contribution words like stewardship. And where were the other worlds of cultivation? You know you can you can catch those and euthanize them, but basically that’s sort of like prospects, prospecting and following up and doing customer service. It’s all the same thing, it’s, just different verbiage. And you you alluded to that we didn’t call it prospecting earlier. When you’re saying that there may be people in the company or heads of the company that are sympathetic to a mission because of their own family circumstances, that’s the prospecting part of of corporate sponsorships, that’s a piece of it. But i think it’s also just knowing if there’s a company that wants to come out as being a good citizen in the community, and you have an opportunity for them to get their logo and their recognition in front of a thousand people who all share some common bond, where there’s some warm and fuzzy feeling for the fact that they have supported a mission that’s important to the individuals in the organization. That’s important to noto you know, you know what about thie the’s honorees in doing this in other parts of the country are we really anomalous in new york city? I mean, what about other cities? Are they are they doing the honoree strategy? They are there, other cities air doing work with honorees, but a lot of times it’s not as monetarily related. So, you know, they may end up honoring the chairman of the board where they may honor a great volunteer. Who’s. You know, the priest who started the programme or something like that in new york, we’ve kind of got it down to a science where you usually have two or three honorees. One is a business honoree who brings in the money. One might be a cause related, honore and a third might be just a scholarship recipient or somebody has benefited from the program. Okay, but the first of those that business honoree here in new york, i mean, there they are expected teo to put forth their vendor list. Other friends of their company there’s always an agreement. Doctor there’s always an agreement between the charity and the honoree as to what level of involvement they’re goingto have, whether they’re just providing a vendor list, whether they’re sending out a letter teo their supporters. One of the best examples we had recently was an honoree who stepped up personally, and we did a video message from eventjournal we did a video message from that honore that was blasted out on email that went tio a couple of thousand of people that the organization and this particular businessman knew it was a personal appeal from him to support the organization and then the email message click back into the website that eventjournal built for the event where all the event information the honorees byo everything to do with why they should support this charity. And then, of course, because it was an online journal, which is what our company does, it had thie ads of thie supporting vendors where everyone could see who was supporting this gentleman, and if your ad wasn’t there, it was very publicly not there and then, because annie journal is a public recognition opportunity, we also incorporate a shopping courts of people come by the rad’s right then and there and, you know, get their support recognized. And so these expectations are all laid out in advance so that the honoree on the charity know what each is expected to. Do in best practices they are, you know, some some organizations, they’re not. His bold is toe have dollar figures. Some will just ask for support and sharing of lists. Sometimes it depends on who the honoree is and what can reasonably be asked and how strong the relationship is between the charity and that particular honore. If it’s someone they barely know, and they’re just happy to have them lend their name to the organization, they have to tread lightly, expectations will be lower. Sure. S so i don’t know how to interpret the new york city version of galas and honorees, are we? I don’t know if we’re greedy or we’re just ahead of the curve and the rest of the country. Well, we’ll catch up. I think in new york, we know that were after the money. I mean, that’s the whole purpose of a fund raising event, you can have nicey nice events or you could have fund-raising events in new york, i believe we feel it’s about the bottom line, right? I’m with karen perry and she’s, the president of eventjournal we’re talking about excuse me, we’re talking about event sponsorships, karen, who should be out soliciting for the sponsorships now, you know, of course, the audience hears small and midsize non-profit so they may not have the wherewithal to get the high profile sponsorships. But who from the charity should be out soliciting these? Well, i think that it’s it’s a communal effort, there’s, generally a few tears of responsibility. Not every organization has a committee, but some d’oh. So if there’s an event committee, a committee of volunteers you mean generally it’s a committee of volunteers on dh they have some vested interest in the success of the event on behalf of the mission of the organization. So what i think is important for staff people to know is that their committee members aren’t as well versed in why somebody should sponsorship sponsor an event they may not be as comfortable with the ask itself, but they have contacts and friends and colleagues and business connections within the community. So i think that they’re a field that could be mined. I don’t think that they’re the ones who should be making the ask in general, unless you have a very sophisticated committee member on dh, then there’s generally the committee, the gala co chairs. Ok, so wait well, before we go to those let’s, just focus on the volunteer committee, that event committee so are they their role then? If they’re not actually soliciting asking for the for the sponsorship there more just setting it up so that then the staff member actually does they ask? Is that would you know, i think that in an organization that’s very well organized there’s generally a target list of companies, businesses and corporations that they would liketo have sponsor their event. I don’t see that as often as i’d like to. But i think that any time you start out with a target list, you have a much greater chance of actually closing sales or closing donation requests. So i think if you put out a list like that to a committee, you may find out that somebody’s brother in law sister in law is involved in the company and that’s information that you would have overlooked had you not asked for that. You just said, oh, who knows anybody that could sponsor us? Most committee members glaze over. Yeah, but a more specific list on dh then you you have a suggestion to go beyond the event committee itself in terms of who should be out doing this marketing for you. Right? Well, i mean, it’s going to depend on the organizational structure of this particular event. We have clients where all the asks are done by paid staff. We have others where the board members are very involved in reaching out to their contacts. Then there’s generally a gala or an event chairperson sometimes there’s a sponsorship committee, which is more focused than the committee at large. So i think, really. It depends on the structure of the event organization. But in general, what i found is that the actual asked can be started by someone on the committee or the board, but wth e conclusion and what level and what they get for that and how you package the benefits. It’s generally got to be done by a dedicated staff person in general. And in terms of that board board involvement. Is that really just about as far as it should go? I mean, what what do you think is the best practice for the degree to which the board members should be involved in this hole process? Might they also be identifying potential sponsorship opportunities? Absolutely. They might be identifying sponsorship opportunities. I think the board’s primary benefit in this type of endeavor is identifying future honorees. And then once they know someone who they can tap for an honoree for an upcoming event, then it’s their relationship with that person. Perhaps that they can then go and make the ask. And then that ask includes who do you know, mr emma’s honoree that could become sponsors and support your being recognized by organization and there’s. Ah! Number of times that, ah, potential sponsor needs to be asked right or or receive marketing materials before you’re actually gonna get an action action for out of them, isn’t it? Yeah, i think that the fund-raising sector in general is not as up one marketing methodology as i think that they could be. And so typically, with any kind of sales or marketing effort, you need a minimum of four to six times of exposure and recognition of a message for someone to even take action and more like six to twelve times for them to really be compelled to do something about it. So what i described earlier with the save the date card, the sponsor letter, the invitation and maybe a phone call from the organization that’s that’s a bare minimum. And this is two thousand eleven. We have elektronik media and we have social media and we have, you know, you can have a facebook page. You can have ah, email, marketing, web based materials. There’s just so many opportunities to teo get in front of potential sponsors. What’s the revenue expectation for sponsorships around a single event. Can you clarify? Yeah, the i mean how? Much of your revenue from an event do you think should be coming from the sponsorships? Well, i think that depending on whether what the revenue streams are, the percentage is going to vary. If it’s a sit down dinner and there’s tickets sales and then their sponsorships, you know the vast majority of the money should come in from sponsorship packages for any successful event. The ticket sales are generally just the up charge between the out of pocket costs and the ticket price, and so there’s not as much potential, whereas a sponsor dollar if someone’s donating ten thousand dollars a sponsorship and they’re getting a table and that table has ten seats that cost the organization one hundred dollars. So the up charges nine thousand dollars there’s also organisations that have journals. And so the journal is where companies come by an ad and it’s just a matter of all the ad revenue comes together. Sponsors get ads, but then people can also buy ads individually. So the cost of printing or publishing or electronically publishing that journal is taken out of the costs. So if they have tickets and sponsorships, i think it should be at least sixty percent, if not more, of the revenue. If they also have a journal, then you put the journal together with the sponsorships, and then that should be a very large percentage of the revenue. Okay, i pulled our ah, our listeners and people who follow the show on facebook and on twitter no, their replies, there were just a few, but their replies were there. Their sponsorship revenue came in either between twenty six and fifty percent, or it was a combination of anywhere from zero to one hundred might said to me, that’s, that’s a huge opportunity with a do badder than glow. I think that should be you should be vast majority, well, that’s, because i’m think i’m thinking they’re not tapping sponsorship opportunity as best they can just in the minute or so that we have left let’s talk about the recognition because that’s, where your work is the recognition that the corporate sponsor gets what what should that look? Likes a little maybe a lot more detail than you said. Well, there’s on location at the event recognition and then there’s there’s ah at large recognition, so at the event it should be very parent who the supporters are with eventjournal we produce thie e journal online, and then we bring it to the event with a presentation where all of the ads are being shown on big screens and everybody sees who the sponsors are throughout the night. It’s very colorful and robust other times there’s a printed ad book where it says there’s an ad in the on a page in the book, sometimes depending on the nature of the event. If it’s not a very elegant event they might be, they may have a banner for the company or a poster board. They may get recognition from the dais. Sometimes a top sponsor gets to have a few remarks from the dais and then outside of the event there’s all of the event promotional materials like the event website, which can have logos and journal ads and their sponsorship letters and there’s all kinds of materials where they can identify who the supporters are. My guest has been carrying perry and she’s, the president of eventjournal, which you’ll find it eventjournal dot com. Karen, thank you very much for being on the show. You’re quite welcome. It goes fast and a pleasure. We’re going to take a break, and after this break, tony’s, take two. And then i’ll be joined by howard globus, the president of tian demand, and we’ll talk about email security. Stay with us. You’re listening to the talking alternative network. Are you feeling overwhelmed in the current chaos of our changing times? 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Interested simply email at info at talking alternative dot com welcome back to tony martignetti non-profit radio it’s, time for tony’s, take two at roughly thirty two minutes into the hour. We are media sponsors for the new york city chapter of association of fund-raising professionals fund-raising day, and that is the largest one day fund-raising conference in the world. It’s on friday, june tenth, at the marriott marquis hotel in times square here in new york, and i’ll be interviewing the conferences speakers for this show, so i’ll be interviewing them podcast interviews and then later on they’ll be replayed on the show. You could get information about the conference at www dot a f p and y c dot a f p net dot or ge again a f p and y si dot a f p net dot or ge. I always talk about my blogged for the week, but this week i had a guest blogger. My block is at mpg a dv dot com, and you’ll see that my guest blogger is howard globus this week, and howard is also the guest on this show this week, so that is tony’s take two for friday, may thirteenth and now it’s a pleasure for me to welcome howard globus to the studio. Howard welcome. Get after him. Howard has over fifteen years experience designing, installing and supporting windows server and workstation products in industries where security and reliability are critical. He’s worked with mount sinai and why you health system and the hospital for special surgery? He’s, president of t on demand and here to bring his big non-profit technology ideas to the other ninety five percent. I’m very glad that his work brings him to the studio. Howard, you have some suggestions about email security? Why don’t we start with the most basic that password for email? Okay, good afternoon. As i mentioned in the blogger hyre, your password should not be the same as your luggage tag or your luggage lock. Many people keep a luggage lock of xero xero xero or one, two, three, four and currently the most common password out there happens to be password with a capital p oh, but they but people do put a capital p on it. Yes, but that’s not enough to confound snoopers. Not not enough. And actually, some people put a capital p an a number one at the end. So that zoho very that’s. Very good. We like to say sarcastic things like that. It’s. Not very good. Now you can tell because you know, you know, you know he doesn’t mean that’s very good news. Go ahead. Sorry. Basically, you want to take a look at having as complex a password as you can to maintain security. That means doing simple things, like making sure your password is not in the dictionary. People may choose a word at random in the dictionary, but a very typical hacking attack would be to have a list of dictionary words sometimes one hundred thousand two hundred thousand words. And then programmatically attack your email by just going through the words if you’re so there are programs that can go through the whole dictionary or one hundred one hundred two hundred thousand words, all trying to hit just one one person’s password there. Programs that can actually go through about five million password words in approximately six hours. Also, these gross out there in the world, and it doesn’t not somebody sitting behind a screen one of the time it’s actually an automatic process that just runs. So when somebody uses ah, capital letter on the first word of the word or adds a number one or two at the end. It’s not a very good password. What you want to be looking at is having a complex password. Sometimes about eight or nine characters is usually a good starting point. Having a number or an additional character like a tilde or an asterix in the password somewhere. Commonly, people replaced the letter e with the number three. Um so what about those replacements, like e three for e and at signed for for for a name? What’s that oh, for a that’s, right? Right. Those work, they do work, but again, those air common replacements. So you want to try and and switch it up a little bit instead of having on eight or xero for for the letter o, you might want to take a look at a seven or something like that. Something that’s not common. The most important thing to understand is given enough time and enough computing power. Any password can be cracked. So you really want to make it as complex as possible and, frankly, not worth someone’s time to use up the band with trying cracked the password. Okay. I don’t know if people are aware that it’s so easy and that just the automation allows such sort of ah, harsh attacks on on a password in a very systematic way, correct. And i mean typically things like hotmail or gmail, even mac mail, these are things that are susceptible because they are they’re known addresses and there the common. So a lot of people go ahead and attack those female, that kind of thing. Now we’re talking about the email password, but does the same apply for your other password like system? Password? Same same kind of theories apply and depending on where you are and the amount of money and or lists that you have available to you will make you amore attractive were less attractive target. And based on how attractive a target you are, you may be under attack on a fairly regular a constant basis. Yeah, charities have donor xero often they’re preserving date of birth, maybe credit card numbers that might save to make it more convenient for the person for the donor to give, but that means they’re more susceptible, teo attack, because that that’s high value information bank bank routing information bank account information all that stuff is a can be available to ah, to ah, hacker. You know, my interest in this topic started because and i mention this in the block post because i got five e mails from different companies that i do business with all related teo hacking that occurred at a company called absalon, which i’ve never heard of, but apparently they do a lot of email distribution and email management for a lot of big companies because these were all big company names that i got the warning email from but absalon i’ve never heard of absalon is actually one of the biggest companies out there. They manage many list for folks is very disown me bed, bath and beyond paypal to some extent, so i mean, these air, these air companies that absalon works with, and they have hooks into each of these systems, so they’re a perfect target. And when, when a company hires this back end company, what you’re saying is huge, but i don’t think the typical users ever heard of them. It’s not a common name, right? Right? But they’re huge. You’re you’re really you’re relying on the front end. Company to be managing their relationship with the back end company and that’s going to play two non-profits to write if definitely for non-profit is hiring a vendor? What? What do you make sure of your agreement says when you’re hiring somebody else to manage your lists for you. Well, one of the things you definitely want to take a look at when you are using an outside vendor is what kind of arizona emissions insurance they happen to have. That’s ah, that’s. Certainly an after the fact kind of thing, but certainly something that wants that you want to have in place. You want to know that that they’re even thinking about it. If you ask an outside consultant, you know what kind of arizona missions insurance you have or data security insurance you have. And they look atyou blankly. That’s, not a vendor. You want to be talking with very much further. Okay, furthermore, you want to make sure that they have not disclosure agreements in place and that they have some kind of security system that’s audited that you can. Then go ahead and take a look at at least on a quarterly basis. Oh, that that the non-profit can audit the security for how does that work? Usually. Ah, vendor that is working with not-for-profits or for a large firms will have to have their systems audit on a regular basis to be compliant with either hip of requirements or sec requirements or some not-for-profits requirements. And if they are doing an audit on a regular basis, they’ll have a report that they can then go ahead and provide back to the to the customers. Okay, excellent let’s. Talk about attachments, since we are focusing mostly on email but not exclusively. What about those lurking attachments? What’s your advice, there’s a. An increase in what’s known as fishing out in the cyberspace and wanted to spell fishing. So keep you out of jargon jail a h i s h i n g l i just want to make the point that it’s not fishing, throwing a rod, but it starts with p a change. Things go ahead. The concept is, is that an e mail is sent that looks very similar to a a normal email that would come from from your one of your credit card companies or processing company or your bank or what? Have you? And that email will have a logo and we’ll have all the text formatted almost the same as as that emails coming from the actual valid location would be, and they would have a link on it’s saying something like, please update your password, papale had this happened quite a bit about a year and a half ago two years ago, you may also get an email from something someone claiming to be ups saying we have a package that needs to be delivered. Please click on this link to confirm your delivery instructions, and when you click on that link within the email, it will take you to a website, and that website may look very similar to the to the company that you that you’re using the website of the company you thinkyou’re going around exactly, but in fact, it’s ah it’s, a fishing site, and what they’ll do is they’ll ask for information, personal information, sometimes credit card information, and they’re looking to their statement is is they’re looking to confirm that you are who you say you are, but in fact what they’re doing is what’s called social engineering and and asking for information. That normally would provide and you provided fairly freely, and then that’s information that could be used later on teo to extract funds. She’s ok, so what’s your advice, then if you if you get something, how do you tell whether it’s legitimately from ups or or it’s, not in almost no cases will you’re a vendor that you’re working with? Ask you to send, send their information, your information via email or clip through on the website the wayto always check is if you log on to the company’s website directly outside of the e mail attachment, but rather going directly to your browser. Okay, so now you’re in there, you’re ignoring the email you going right to your browser and in the browser address window? Correct? You’re saying typing ups, dot com or paypal dot com and then put your credentials in there if on e mail went out saying you need to update something, it’ll have a notice on that website to say, hey, you need to update something alright, because you’ve logged in so they know that it’s you they would know if they had sent you the e mail, they’re going to know, and they’ll remind you of whatever it is they want to do after you’ve logged in. Okay, okay, why don’t you just we just have a minute before a break. Why don’t you say a little bit about firewalls and were firewall protection? And then we’ll look more added after the drugs. Traditionally, computers come with far walls, whether it’s, a mac, a pc or a linux based operating system that’s, a piece of software that will try to keep your system safe and using that software there’s a degree of of comfort that the end user has. The question is, is that comfort valid and that’s something that really needs to be investigated depending upon where the system is connected to how it’s connected teo to the internet and what of the things you’re doing on the on the machine? Ok, we’ll look more about that. Look more at that in a moment. Take a break right now and then howard globus will stay with us, so i hope you do, too. Talking alternative radio. Twenty four hours. Do you love movies, then join me and share your pains about them on the radio. This is mike, a movie fan like you, starting made tenth. Join me every tuesday night at six pm for my new show movie time on talking alternative dot com. Call me live or email me at movie time radio. At gmail dot com. We’ll talk about all the blockbusters whose the best director and which movies air overrated, among many other topics. Join me for movie time. Tuesdays at six on talking alternative dot com. Looking to meet mr and mrs wright but still haven’t found the one want to make your car relationship as fulfilling as possible? Then please join us starting monday, may second at ten am for love in the morning with morning alison as a professional matchmaker, i’ve seen it all. Please tune in and call as we discuss dating relationship and more. Start your week off with love in the morning with marnie alison on talking alternative dot com oh, 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. 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No. Kayman i’m with howard globus and he’s, the president of tian demand we’re talking about email security, you’ll find his company at hyphen on hyphen demand dot com before the break. Howard, we’re talking a little bit about firewall, so it’s it’s a degree of protection between the outside world and your your inner network, correct to speak a little bit more about that? Most computers come with a far wall, either preinstalled or something that you can turn on. The problem with principal firewalls on a computer is that they need to be hardened. They need to be ah, lock down a bit, which makes it a little bit mohr ah, less oxygen less user friendly on the computer itself. One of the things we recommend is a firewall that’s protecting your entire network, whether that’s, a home network of one or two pcs or or apples or a corporate network, a device that actually has a moral bust process and really is designed specifically tact is a firewall, as opposed to a far wall and a word processor and a web browser and all the other kind of things that a computer is okay and what kinds of things? Is this wall protecting you from? Well, the wall protects you from a number of different things. For example, some of the some of the password attacks that we were talking about not so much on the email side, but certainly on the server side, the database side things that would be password protected, but internally on the network. Additionally, it protects you from viruses and potential malware or little programs that get downloaded by by folks who is surfing the web or until you could tell how it’s, afraid of jargon, jail this’s, malware or little programs gets that definition right in there. Thank you, little programs to get downloaded when folks open up attachments and emails or are served to certain websites, the firewall, what it does is it actually monitors the traffic that goes from the outside in and from the inside out and that’s a critical piece, because if you have a network of any degree of complexity, which really more than one pc is a degree of complexity, the potential is is that there are programs that get installed on your computer that you may not be aware of and by monitoring the far wall. You can find out what what programs are what we call calling home or sending information from the machines back to some other server so you don’t just set this firewall up and and and then forget about it now, monitoring that would be ideal. Basically, ah, home user might have a firewall that they would really ideally take a look at at least once a week and take a look at the logs. Yeah, what about a small office, maybe three or four computers? Smart, a small office that operates on a typical nine to five business day but leaves their machines on so that way folks can work remotely should have. Ah, an active monitoring system is supposed to be a passive monitoring system. What that means is, is that when a potential violation occurs, it emails or notifies out someone who’s monitoring that far wall on a regular basis so you would do things like patch management and upgrades on a on a monthly basis. Take a look at the far wall logs on a weekly basis, but have active management and act of notification on an hourly or sometimes up to the minute basis, okay, and what types of things are you getting alerts about? Well, there’s a number of different things that the most common alert that we would get is we would have intrusion detection so there would be websites, and you’d have an external website or an external address from somewhere out in, out in the world, that’s attempting to ah to connect in using different protocols, things like ftp, which is a file transfer protocol, or using things over port eighty, which is the web protocol that’s things that people use to get out on internet explorer safari browser, but it also is ah, a whole range of different ports that are open and or potentially open, and if those ports are open, every port is a is a potential access point, and these ports are connections into your computer and thrown out of your computer credit. How does this small non-profit budget for all this, for the software that they need to protect their their network? Well, ideally, you’d be looking at or a small non-profit would be looking at some kind of manage service that has ah, a paper month as opposed to pays you go type of faith, the pay as you go, type of he can get very expensive very quickly. If you have a monitoring program in place and you say okay, we know that that monitoring is going to go on for this month. We’ll give you a report at the end of every week or at the end of every month. And we will go ahead and re mediate any of the types of issues that we see and it’s all included in tow. One service and that’s. That would be ideal. The reason why that’s ideal over as a pay pay as you go is the types of intrusion. Detection varies widely depending upon what your internet service provider is the time of the year it is. And, frankly, how valuable your information is assumed to be from an outside source. Roughly. How much would a small office get? Well, are the fees for that type of service based, i assume on the number of users? Is that right? Are the fees are based on the complexity of the device. That’s actually being used as the firewall more complex environment might only have excuse me. A more complex environment might have multiple firewalls and you’d be looking at something where you have to monitor multiple access points, a small environment. Let’s say five users or five people work in an office would probably only have a single firewall fairly, non complex, far wallet that and really be looking at maybe seventy dollars a month in terms of monitoring fees. Okay, okay. Um and that and that. Ah, that active monitoring you said, should be even hourly for some of the things that some of the dangers that are out there. Okay, i know you brought some resource is with you that where that are specific for non-profits why don’t why don’t you share those for discount something? Okay, well, the top website for discounts for non-profits is tech soup, that’s t ea ch soup dot or ge that’s, a website that actually matches non-profit companies with donor cos specifically software and hardware vendors. So microsoft, adobe, symantec, all the big companies go ahead and provide software if ah, non-profit can show their non profit status and joe need. Okay, so there’s a huge names. Is there another one you have or really tech soup? Texas is the main one fourth non-profits and then there’s. A website sands s es and s dot or ge, which deals with specific security issues and can talk a lot about auditing and keeping things upto up to date. Okay, and this sand’s dot org’s also have discounts or that sand xero is just a resource for for things that are going on in the world. All right, that’s, howard globus and he is the president of t on demand, which you’ll find at i t hyphen on hyphen demand dot com howard, thank you very much for joining us. Thank you for having me pleasure next week, our tech contributor and the editor of non-profit technology news, scott koegler will be with me he’s going to share the latest from his newsletter, and i hope you’ll be with me for that, you can keep up with what’s coming up week to week by signing up for our insider email alerts on the facebook page. While you’re there, click like and become a fan of the page, please, you can listen to the show on itunes at any time on the device of your choice at the time of your choice. That’s at non-profit radio dot net and each show is up, usually by the monday following. I want to thank my guests this week, karen perry and howard globus, the two presidents for coming into the office, coming into the studio and joining me. The creative producer of tony martignetti non-profit radio is claire meyerhoff. Our line producer is sam liebowitz he’s, also the owner of talking alternative broadcasting. Our social media is by regina walton of organic social media on tony martignetti, the host of tony martignetti non-profit radio. Always talking about big non-profit ideas for the other ninety five percent. I hope you’ll be with me next friday, one p, m eastern here at talking alternative dot com. I think they’re getting him. You’re listening to the talking alternative network, waiting to get into anything. Good. Duitz 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. Do you love movies, then join me and share your pains about them on the radio. This is mike, a movie fan like you, starting may tenth. Join me every tuesday night at six pm for my new show movie time on talking alternative dot com. Call me live or email me at movie time radio. At gmail dot com. We’ll talk about all the blockbusters whose the best director and which movies air overrated, among many other topics. Join me for movie time. Tuesdays at six on talking alternative dot com. 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 us ed 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. Hyre treyz 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 you’re listening to talking on their network at www dot talking all dot com, now broadcasting twenty four hours a day.

Is Your Email Safe and Sound?

Information Security Wordle, courtesy of purpleslog on Flickr.

In early April, five companies I do business with informed me that my email address had been compromised by a company named Epsilon. Hilton, Marriott, 1-800-Flowers (thanks, mom) and two financial providers where I have amassed a combined balance approaching equivalence to my office area code, use the company for email marketing for their millions of addresses.

This Epsilon episode provokes me to ask you, “Is your email safe and sound?”

Whether you have hundreds, thousands or hundreds of thousands of addresses, they are a valuable asset. You need to keep them safe. I am not an email security expert, but Howard Globus, president of IT On Demand is. Here are Howard’s suggestions:

– Keep your computers and devices up to date – whether you use a Windows PC, an Apple computer, a Linux-flavored operating system or a smart phone, make sure that the software is up to date. New security holes are found, published and exploited every day, on ALL operating systems. Subscribe to your particular operating system’s alerts and apply updates regularly.

– Add a layer of protection between the public and private world – consider a firewall or security product to act as a buffer between your computer (or computers) and the Public Internet. A firewall, when properly monitored, kept up-to-date and sending regular alerts, will provide an early warning to potential security breaches.

– Your email password is not a luggage-lock. Your password for email (and on your computers and your firewall) should be more complex than “1234”. The most common password in use today is “123456”. Fourth on the list? “Password”. Without feeling too superior, ask yourself if you use a dictionary-based password, can your password be found in a dictionary? Or a dictionary word with a number? Jeremy12? Beach89? The more complex your password, the harder it is to crack. Consider using a password with a combination of alpha-numeric digits and an odd character thrown in. Need help coming up with a strong password? Take a look at this password generator. Remember to change your password periodically!

– Do not open attachments from unknown senders – Just like we were told when we were kids, talking to strangers may be bad. If you get an email from the USPS, UPS, Amazon or your bank with phrases like “There is a package we tried to deliver to you. Please see the attached document on how to claim your package”, pause. Services like PayPal, your credit card company or your bank will NEVER ask you to launch an attachment to put your information in. When in doubt, log on to the service through your web browser directly–not through the email attachment or link–and investigate the authenticity of the request sent.

– Don’t share your user account or password via email. Following up on the last tip, do not email your account or password in response to an email request. The vendors or institutions you are working with don’t need it – they know who you are – and they don’t want your password, as it may breach their internal security policy.

I’m guilty of at least one of these transgressions.  I will mend my ways.