Wednesday, May 25, 2016

[New Post] Hashtag Campaigns and Other Advocacy-Building Tips for Nonprofits

 

Blogs

Hashtag Campaigns and Other Advocacy-Building Tips for Nonprofits

Daniel Watson

PR Tips to inspire support for nonprofits

Today, I'm rocking one sock at work. And not just because of my long-running trials finding the matching one. It's because I support the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children (NCMEC), and they found a way to get me involved.

In honor of today’s National Missing Children's Day, NCMEC is currently working on their #RockOneSock campaign, which found its way to me organically in my social network.

After following the threads of content stitched across NCMEC's marketing channels, I ended up on their campaign hub, where I realized I had no other choice: #RockOneSock is too important (and too much fun). I have to be a part of their day.

Working with some of the best causes and most-known foundations and organizations has helped me see there are core patterns that every successful PR and marketing campaign follows to connect with nonprofit supporters.

#BrandYourInitiative – Even if your organization is well known

Living in a fragmented, multichannel world can make it incredibly difficult for communicators and marketers to get a cohesive story in front of potential advocates and donors.

For better or worse, the hashtag has become a thread across social and even traditional channels that can guide people through the maze of the internet – from Twitter, YouTube, press releases, and email to the ultimate goal – your own network.

The #icebucketchallenge, for instance, has actually become more ubiquitous than the ALS Society that created it, and now it represents a huge brand asset to the nonprofit.

In talking to a number of clients in the space, they offered a few simple tips for hashtagging your initiatives: keep it unbranded, keep it short, and make it more than a little mysterious.

E-CO-1.9.6B_St-Baldricks-Multichannel-Content-Case-Study-for-Nonprofits

Visual Stories Are Even More Impactful for Causes than Brands

While this may seem obvious and a club in the bag already for communicators and marketers in the nonprofit space, we know multimedia of any kind can help boost interactions with content distribution.

Powerful multimedia, videos, personal stories, and other key assets are all more likely to resonate in search and social.

According to research published by Google, online video tops the charts as the most influential source in driving a donation – and more than half of people who watch an online video make a donation afterwards.

Make It About Them

When St. Baldrick's Foundation, whose long-term mission has been to fund research to end all childhood cancers, went back to the drawing board with their communications strategy, they faced a challenge.

"We really wanted to change the conversation around kids diagnosed with cancer, educate people on the special treatment protocols for kids, and let them know that – through the St. Baldrick's Foundation – we do have the power to give children long, healthy lives," says Traci Shirk, Media & PR Manager at the St. Baldrick's Foundation, in PR Newswire's new case study.

The #KidsAreSpecial campaign was born when the foundation realized the answer to getting more people involved rested with the very people they were trying to reach.

St. Baldrick's Foundation called on their audience to contribute and share photos of their own children. Doing so helped parents and potential donors recognize they can give other children the same happy moments through advocacy and support of St. Baldrick's.

At the end of the day, it's important to remember that giving is contagious – and that there is a large increase in giving if potential donors see other donations being made.

Narratives that reinforce your organization's success will inspire people to join and be a part of your community.

Show your audience that it's sometimes a good idea to wear only one sock… or drop a bucket of ice water on themselves… or post a lot of extra pictures of their kids on social media… As long as it's for a good cause.

Get more nonprofit marketing tactics by downloading St. Baldrick's Changes Narrative Surrounding Childhood Cancers. Our latest case study uncovers how the foundation used multichannel, multimedia content distribution to increase web traffic and drive nearly 13,000 image views and downloads.

Author Daniel Watson is the Director of Channel, Advocacy and Partnership Marketing at PR Newswire. He leads a team in charge of developing and executing buyer-centric, demand generation and advocacy strategies to drive transformational business value and revenue for PR Newswire via technology. Daniel's focus has been bridging the gap between marketing and sales at enterprise-class organizations – leveraging customer insight, sales enablement, marketing automation and analytics to drive customer acquisition and champion customer advocacy. You can follow him at @danielchwatson.

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Tuesday, May 24, 2016

[New Post] SEO and Discoverability: Similar, But Not the Same (+ 5 Tips for Content Discoverability)

 

Blogs

SEO and Discoverability: Similar, But Not the Same (+ 5 Tips for Content Discoverability)

Victoria Harres

How to Attract Audiences with Discoverable Content

A major part of the content marketing role is optimizing and getting traffic to your blog posts, white papers, press releases, articles, videos, and other assets that drive leads into the sales funnel.

Two terms that are frequently seen together, SEO and discoverability, can sometimes confuse people. Although similar in many ways, there is a fine difference which is important to understand.

SEO is a tactic and discoverability is an adjective that describes a goal of content promotion.

Both are important, but they are not the same thing.

SEO (search engine optimization) is the art, the method, the strategy – or strategies – for driving traffic to a website, webpage or other digital property by getting that object to appear higher in search engine results.

For example, if a person searches on one of the major search engines for 'fishing lures,' the first result is not necessarily there because it's the best fishing lure website or content (although it might be).

It is ranking first because of effective search engine optimization.

Yes, being popular (lots of people visiting and spending time on your site) is important, but that alone isn't going to get you to the top of search results. Again, I'll call it an art.

To help people find your site or page you need to have clear markers that help search engine algorithms match you up with keywords and search strings that you want to be found for, like "best fishing lures."

N-CO-3.2.1_What_you_get_with_your_press_release

The same applies to a piece of content. Many factors go into getting a press release to appear high in search results: the site it is housed on, the right keywords in the right place, the quality of the content, the popularity of the topic, and so on.

Search engine algorithms are complex and ever-evolving, but one thing always stays the same: search engines are businesses and they want to serve their customers the best and highest quality matches for their searches.

SEO is a beautiful combination of artistic and technical skill that can deliver quality traffic where you want and need it. It is one of the tactics to make your content discoverable.

Discoverabilty, on the other hand, is the 'findability' of your content. When you create great content for a targeted audience, you need to make sure that audience can find it.

SEO should be part of the process of creating the piece – woven in if you will – and discoverability will be the measure of your hard work.

To make your content discoverable by the audience you seek, you can't always depend on that audience coming to you. You also have to put that content, or promotions for that content, in places where you know your audience will be.

Like fishing, even with excellent bait, you're not going to catch anything in waters that are devoid of fish. Smart fishers will do their research to know where the fish are and when they will be feeding, so their bait is easily found and nibbled.

So, other than smart SEO, how do you make your content more discoverable? Here are a few tips:

1. Use the right bait: Make sure the content you're creating is the content your target audience wants. This takes careful research, but it will save you loads of time otherwise wasted on content that doesn't deliver.

2. Don't be vague with your headline: A book will be judged by its cover and your content will be judged by its title. Make sure your headlines are transparent and interesting enough to draw your audience to it.

3. Tag your content well: Remember to also tag your content appropriately to help people find it. Most places you place your content will use tags to help people search and navigate their sites more efficiently.

4. Place your content well: Like a savvy fisherman, do your research and make sure your content is housed on a site or page that draws the audience you desire to reach.

5. Tell people about it: Don't think creating great content with the right keywords means your job is done. Oh no, my fine fisherman. You still have work to do. Get out there and share your content on all channels where your audience can be reached, including paid, earned, social, and owned.

The key for marketers is to drive content discovery by the right audiences. Fortunately, these days, marketers can choose from numerous distribution options.

If your goal is to have your brand discovered by new prospects and customers, PR tactics like pitching, press releases, and newswire distribution are essential as earned media is more effective than owned media across multiple stages of the buyer’s journey.

Discover how PR Newswire’s personalized distribution process will help optimize your message to its fullest potential. Download What You Get with Your PR Newswire Release for a behind-the-scenes look at what happens after your press release is submitted for distribution.

Author Victoria Harres is vice president, strategic communications and content at PR Newswire. Her team leads social media, PR, creative and blogging for the brand. Vicky was the original twitterer on @PRNewswire and continues to be part of that crew. If she's not at her desk, you'll likely find her in the garden.

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