Kivi Leroux Miller

The Nonprofit Marketing Guide


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to do it all, and anyone new to the work of nonprofit marketing and communications. I hope it is both a reference that you'll return to often and a comforting support, reassuring you that you really can do this, even if you are working on your own. Crease up the spine, mark up the pages, and make it your own personal guide to marketing your good cause.

      The book is organized into four sections.

      Part One: Getting Ready to Do It Right gives you some big-picture perspective on the world of nonprofit marketing and provides context for everything else that follows in the book. It includes chapters on planning, effectiveness, listening, and more.

      Part Two: Answering the Three Most Important Nonprofit Marketing Questions dives into defining your target communities, creating messaging that works, and delivering those messages in the best ways.

      Part Three: Building a Community of Supporters Around You recognizes the profound shift in how people and nonprofits are connecting with and relating to each other and will help you build your own community of supporters.

      The book concludes with some suggestions for the big questions to ask yourself as you evaluate the success of your nonprofit marketing program.

      You can approach the book in the way that works best for you: read it straight through, or backward, or start in the middle. The detailed table of contents in the front, as well as an index in the back, can help you quickly find the sections you need.

      To continue the learning and conversation, we invite you to join us at NonprofitMarketingGuide.com and to follow us on social media. Look for @npmktgd and @kivilm. You will also find a companion workbook to help you implement what you learn in the book at npmg.us/workbook.

      Nonprofit marketing is hard work. It's also tremendously fun and satisfying, especially when you do it right. Your work will challenge you in ways you have yet to understand, and you'll learn about disciplines that you had never considered before. Because nonprofit marketing is complex, it can quickly overwhelm people new to the field. This is particularly true if it's something thrown on top of your “real” job as an executive director, development director, or program manager. This book should make your job a little easier.

      In Chapter 1, I review 10 realities of marketing and communications work that are the foundation for the thinking in the rest of the book. Chapter 2 defines nonprofit marketing and the many choices you have for marketing goals, strategies, objectives, and tactics as a nonprofit communicator. Chapter 3 gives you an overview of what a full-blown marketing strategy looks like, what tactical communications plans include, and how to do a quick-and-dirty version if that is all you can handle.

      Chapter 4 outlines the different stages or levels of effectiveness that nonprofits move through as their communications staff become more skilled and their organizations fully embrace marketing best practices. The final chapter in this section, Chapter 5, explains why listening (call it market research if you prefer) is essential to any successful nonprofit marketing strategy and how you can use a variety of tools and methods to learn a great deal about the people you are working with and serving.

      I opened the first edition of this book with a chapter called “10 New Realities for Nonprofits” with an emphasis on “New.” Back in 2010, I was still urging nonprofits to be OK with calling this work “marketing” rather than euphemisms like “outreach,” to take social media seriously, and to convince them that people over 50 really were using the Internet. Thankfully, we've moved well beyond those sticking points.

      All of the other elements in that original list proved foundational to the work of nonprofit communications. While I have updated this list, what you'll find here are the assumptions on which all of the other chapters in the book are built. Understanding this list will help you get the most out of this book and to understand the choices I suggest you make.

      Many forces beyond your control will affect how you market your nonprofit organization. The economy will go up and down. Friendly elected officials will be in charge, and then they will lose an election. Talented volunteers, staff, and board members will come and go. What people can do from their phones no matter where they are in the world will continue to grow.

      But I don't expect the following 10 realities to change much.

      At Nonprofit Marketing Guide, we've been researching communication effectiveness at nonprofits for more than a decade. I can tell you with absolute confidence that nonprofits that treat marketing and communications like the specialty profession that it is get better results.

      For maximum effectiveness, your confident and skilled marketing staff need to work within an organizational culture that values marketing and communications.

      Too often nonprofits just want communications staff to make all the stuff – the social media and website updates, the newsletters, flyers, and event invitations, etc. The least effective organizations treat their communications staff like fast-food drive-through windows, taking orders and churning out content.

      In contrast, supportive organizations understand that you need more than just communications tactics for success. You need real strategy. You need planning. You need adequate resources, including time, talent, and treasure. You need to view marketing and communications as an essential, valued function.

      Nonprofit marketing work comes with an overabundance of options and decisions to make. You simply cannot do it all. You have to make choices, and that can be incredibly challenging to do.

      Communications staff who don't understand this and don't learn to manage expectations for both themselves and their organizations will find themselves burned out within a few years. I never expected to incorporate the concept of setting personal boundaries into my communications coaching practice, but it's become an essential skill.

      When I teach nonprofit marketing workshops, I often make participants