Will Marlow

Word of mouth marketing for schools, nonprofits, and businesses. 

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Fundraising

 

Dear universities: an open letter about social media and fundraising

Dear universities,

Many of you want to use social media platforms like Facebook and Twitter to supplement your arsenal of fundraising tools, and that's great.  The challenge is that social media platforms are different from almost all other types of communication tools.  In order to pull value in from social media platforms, you need to push value out to your intended audience.

Here's how you should do it: first, forget about fundraising.  Instead, focus on the students, prospective students and alums who need your help.  Specifically, use Twitter and Facebook to give them information that will help them succeed in their classes, find internships, connect with fellow alums, find jobs, and stay in touch with one another.  Use these platforms to announce the achievements of people in your community.  Use Flickr and YouTube to post videos of homecoming, sports events, reunions, and undergrads having a great time succeeding on campus.  Use social media platforms to make announcements whenever any of your grads are mentioned positively in newspapers or blogs.  Write posts that show how proud you are of your community.

In short, don't focus on using social media platforms to do fundraising.  Instead, focus on using social media platforms to deliver value.  Then, when you are fundraising, point to your social media presence as one of the many ways that you enhance the lives of the alumni without spending money on glossy direct mail.  This will not hurt your fundraising prospects.

Hint: a major reason to go with this strategy is that prospective students, current students, and recent grads are the quickest cohorts to connect with you on social media platforms, but each cohort is generally slower to connect than the last.  This has nothing to do with how web-savvy the users are.  It's simply because prospective students need the most information from you, because they need to decide if your school is the best fit for them; current students are willing to connect with you, because you can deliver them information that will help them succeed while on campus; and recent grads are similarly interested in connecting, because they need your help to find mentors and jobs.  The slowest cohort of all to connect with you on social media?  That would be the donors themselves, who need the least from you.  The way to get them involved is to show them how much value you're delivering to their fellow alums who need help.

Sincerely,
Will Marlow
Internet Advisor, Social Media Strategist and Fundraising Consultant

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Will Marlow is a digital strategist/online marketing consultant.  He's the co-creator of  AlumniFidelity, which is a Web 2.0 fundraising platform for colleges, nonprofits and secondary schools.   He’s working with clients such as UVA, the College of William & Mary, the University of Oklahoma, and Bowling Green State University and he loves nothing better than a thorny marketing challenge.  He would love to help you market your business on the Internet, boost the fundraising numbers for your school or nonprofit, or sellout your next big event.  Email him at will@alumnifidelity.com.

*I took the photo above on Saturday, August 21, 2010 at an event to help the recently homeless in Fairfax, Virginia, which was put on by FACETS, a great charity where my wife works.

Filed under  //   Fundraising   higher education   online communications   Social Media   Universities  

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Fundraising partnerships

When are fundraising partnerships a good idea?  You shouldn't look for a partner who will solve all your problems, because that rarely works out.  You should seek a partner who will solve one specific problem (if your organization has lots of problems, you're better off with your head down trying to solve them yourself than seeking a partner who will do the work for you), and who will in turn be grateful for something that you can do for them.  

The classic example is when a nonprofit has a large donor list/membership base, but lacks a clear and compelling cause for donors to donate.  In this case, this nonprofit may consider forming a partnership with a new organization that lacks a large donor list/membership base but that has a compelling cause.  The two organizations may each benefit from a partnership on a specific fundraising event, because each organization brings value to the table and can help the other succeed and do good work. 

Will Marlow co-founded AlumniFidelity to help his clients reposition their fundraising to benefit from Web 2.0 technology and marketing techniques. He’s working with clients such as UVA, the College of William & Mary, the University of Oklahoma, Bowling Green State University, Randolph Macon College, and he loves nothing better than a thorny marketing challenge.  Read more about Will Marlow here, or email him at will@alumnifidelity.com.

Filed under  //   Fundraising   Fundraising events   Fundraising partnerships   Online Fundraising  

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How to make great fundraising videos

Disclaimer: rules were made to be broken.  Feel free to break these.  Don't forget that people don't read on the Internet.  They consume information through (1) "chunks" of text that are "scannable," (2) pictures, (3) videos, and (4) audio clips.  If you want to communicate with a donor, one of your best bets is to use video, because you can convey very complex messages to lots of people, and in order to get a donation from anyone, you need to communicate the fact that they have a relationship with you AND that their gift will have an impact on something they care about.

1.  Fundraising is all about storytelling.  But getting money is all about asking for money.  Don't forget to do either one. 

2.  But know whether your video is primarily about (a) storytelling or (b) solicitation of funds.  It is important to release some videos that are not strictly solicitations, because prospects will stop watching your new videos if they think that you only produce them to solicit funds...Click here to read all 7 rules for making awesome fundraising videos.

Filed under  //   Fundraising   Online Fundraising   Online fundraising strategy   Video production  

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Let Yourself Be Found (Flip the Switch)

Proctor & Gamble, currently the world’s 8th largest corporation and over 170 years old, was the first company to put a toll-free 1-800 number on all of its product packaging.  The first year after doing so, it received 200,000 phone calls from customers offering ideas or complaints.  P&G, with revenues of almost $80 billion in 2009, spends hundreds of millions of marketing dollars aimed at identifying and locating customers.  But all it needed to do was flip a switch and suddenly 200,000 customers reversed the process and started finding P&G.

Nonprofits, schools, and companies are beginning to think of social media the same way.  Just turn on the channel (with a blog, a Facebook profile, Twitter, YouTube, or a specialty service like AlumFi), and let your donors, volunteers, and customers find you.  Take their messages seriously.  Respond to them over the same social network with which they contacted you.  You’ll have richer communications, better relationships with your base, and a better year overall than you would otherwise have had.

Will Marlow is the co-creator of AlumniFidelity, where he helps schools such as the University of Virginia, William & Mary, the University of Oklahoma, and Bowling Green State University, as well as about 25 other schools and nonprofits,  with online fundraising and marketing campaigns.  Email him at will@alumnifidelity.com.  

Filed under  //   blogging   Blogs   e-Commerce   Facebook   Fundraising   Marketing   PR   Social Media   Twitter  

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