Thu, Sep 9, 2010 Hello ! | Sign Out | Account Settings
Latest Entries
Loading...
Search:
Social Media In-Depth
June 2009
Tuesday June 30, 2009
AddThis Widget Helps Drive Success for ThePort Clients in Online Campaigns, Fundraising and Causes
Posted by: Walter Roark at 6:33PM AFT on June 30, 2009

Nonprofits and Associations Use AddThis to Publish Community Content Across the Internet

            Private label social networking communities are boosting online interaction with new tools that expressly benefit nonprofits and associations. One of these now available from ThePort Network is AddThis, a hard-working, compact module that can be placed on high-traffic pages which community members can easily access. With a couple of clicks, users can push published content within the community to over 50 destinations on the worldwide web. Included with AddThis functionality are options for emailing and instant messaging individuals as well as printing the content.

AddThis Lets Community Members Instantly Share Content with Their Contacts on the Internet’s Most Popular Social Networking Sites

            Because social networking is all about sharing, AddThis provides a fast, easy way to help your community members connect with their friends on Facebook, Twitter, Digg, Delicious, MySpace and other sites. For example, registered members of MyUCC, sponsored by ThePort client United Church of Christ, use AddThis to make others aware of interesting blog entries and photos posted within the MyUCC community. In the same way, members can quickly share additional community content such as profile information, videos, groups and events.

How Nonprofits Can Use AddThis Effectively in a Fundraising Drive

            A socially-enabled community offers the perfect opportunity to reinforce fundraising with the use of integrated social media solutions from ThePort along with the AddThis widget. Let’s say you have a fundraising deadline on your calendar that coincides with a special event that caps off an important campaign. Consider creating an event online...published for all community members to see and take part in. After posting the facts about the upcoming cause-related happening using ThePort Events tools, you can further boost excitement and attendance by sharing details of the event with visitors to Facebook, Twitter, and Digg, for example. AddThis makes it simple to spread the news around where the most people will see it.

 

AddThis Can Help You Attract Visitors to Your Community and Register New MembersAddThis widget

          Associations and Nonprofit organizations can make the most of AddThis connectivity by using the tool to consistently reach out to potential new members. Publishing relevant content from your private label community on heavily-trafficked social networking sites will get the attention of like-minded individuals and give them a quick, uncomplicated way to see what you are all about. An AddThis link is like an email invitation—only better—because the viewer of your content link will see it in a familiar environment that he or she has chosen to visit and that the invitation is from a familiar friend.

 Connect Community Members Around a Cause Using AddThis

            Energize your member base with the causes they care about as you give constituents a greater sense of belonging in your community. Using ThePort’s social Grouping solution in conjunction with AddThis will draw maximum attention to your mission objectives. First, create a Group (or multiple Groups) in your online community linked to cause-related issues. Giving the Group a public setting will allow any registered member to see it and join. This will help connect supporters who share similar interests Climate Crossroads Sierra Cluband are passionate about the cause. Finally, share the Group’s philosophy and actions with everyone on the web by circulating details of the cause-related activity around the internet using a few AddThis clicks.

ThePort client Sierra Club, for instance, boasts an Astronomers for Climate Solutions group in the Climate Crossroads community where members, using AddThis, can share their concerns for the environment with friends on other social networking sites.

We encourage you to comment on our blog topic about the AddThis widget, nonprofits, associations, fundraising, cause-related activity and all facets of online social networking.

Wednesday June 10, 2009
Top 5 Myths for Nonprofits and Associations Engaged in Social Networking
Posted by: Walter Roark at 3:25AM AFT on June 10, 2009
Since the explosion of social media on the internet has become reality, every organization is looking for ways to leverage the power of online networking. But for nonprofit and association leadership and marketing teams, there may be potholes in the path to success.

5) Social Media Isn’t Media

Those new to social media and social networking sometimes lose sight of its true nature. Social media is, in fact, a new (yet very human) form of interaction in a relatively new medium, the worldwide web. Social networking is the new form of connecting with others and sharing communications in a public format.

In terms of marketing and advertising linked to a social networking community, you can conduct marketing campaigns and advertising buys just as you can with other media. In other words, social media is more an evolution in format than it is a revolution in advertising. Regardless, as indicated in myth number 4, an investment in a private label social community definitely demands a significant marketing investment.

4) If You Build It, They Will Come

For those of us close to social media--those of us who passionately believe in it--social networking  certainly has magical qualities. But online networking is not the Field of Dreams. If you build a community, especially if you integrate it with your existing brand, then you need to actively support it before and after its launch.

Aside from a branded, proprietary community, the same Field of Dreams caution applies to launching a Facebook group or page. Just because you set it up doesn’t mean your active area of a megalithic online community will drive awareness for your brand or causes. Add to that barrier the fact that Facebook can never fully represent your brand, and you have a recipe for disappointment in the engagement of social media. A better tack might be the strategy of a white label community vigorously supported by predetermined marketing resources.

3) IT Security Risks Are Not Common in  Administrating a Social Community

That depends. With an out-of-the-box, less integrated online presence, security breeches, beginning with spam and spiraling to viral attacks, can require frequent “hot fixes” or even culminate in a community shut-down when you least expect it. On the other hand, if you choose to deploy a platform powered by a SaaS provider on a subscription basis, the community can be hosted on your vendor’s servers and monitored by their IT professionals. This warrants an investigation into the security of your vendor’s IT infrastructure.

The decision to leave IT administration up to your SaaS partner eliminates security risks to your organization’s systems. A well-qualified SaaS provider will consistently make your community’s performance a high priority, reducing headaches, man-hours and around-the-clock oversight otherwise attached to your IT staff.

2) As Always, Quality Social Relationships Are Built More Offline than Online

Every day, more and more, online networking is proving that social community interaction can be positively rewarding, enlightening, even inspiring. When you engage with a like-minded individual in a community atmosphere of comparable interest and respect, you have the chance of creating a dedicated, lasting relationship that can bridge virtual and real worlds.

A socially-infused community wrapped around your organization’s identity gives you the opportunity of connecting and communicating face-to-face with freely registered individuals who are truly your target audience. Brand stature and growth among these active members can provide your organization with long-term, high-quality benefits.

1) Social Media Won’t Last

From the dawn of early social networking prototypes on the internet, skeptics have denounced social interaction on the worldwide web as an overhyped fad. In the beginning, critics claimed that individuals who participated in and enjoyed social networking communities were simply wasting their shared time together.

Certainly at its current development in 2009, the phenomenal traction of online social media is far more than a fad or indulgence. The amazing growth of MySpace, Facebook, Twitter, Flickr, YouTube, and so many other internet destinations is no accident. The adoption of private label social communities by so many leading nonprofits and trade associations is not a coincidence either.

While social media will undoubtedly evolve in the future, its power and value, just like that of the worldwide web itself, is firmly established in the daily routines of people in every corner of our planet. Put simply, the internet is inherently a social platform. The ability of people all around the world to connect and communicate without geographical boundaries is what makes social networking so appealing, and ultimately enduring.

As always, we encourage your comments if you have thoughts about social media, social networking and the remarkable growth of social interaction on the internet.