- 30% of nonprofit marketers neither agree nor disagree that they can demonstrate that their marketing content has increased the number of people helped or served by their organization.
- 23% neither agree nor disagree they can prove their marketing content has increased event attendance or participation.
- 17% don’t agree or disagree that they could demonstrate how their marketing content has increased audience engagement.
- 49% neither agree nor disagree they can prove how their marketing content has increased fundraising.
- 35% neither agree nor disagree they can demonstrate how their marketing content has increased donations/sales.
- 74% execute marketing efforts without any documented content marketing strategy
- 62% perform marketing efforts without ever measuring the return on investment
- 41% fail to align marketing metrics to the organization’s goals
Highlight Your Who, How, and Why
Your organization’s positioning, mission, and purpose aren’t the same. If you don’t clearly distinguish them, your marketing doesn’t stand a chance at being clear and effective with the audiences that matter most.- Positioning is your organization’s identity – your who.
- Mission is your organization’s reason for existing – your why.
- Purpose is your organization’s way to implement its mission – your how.
Now what?
You have a simple three-part message in place. Now it’s time to turn it into the heart of your marketing content – your statement of purpose. This more detailed sentence will include your who, why, and how (positioning, mission, and purpose) – as well as your audience. When you start to line up who you are and what you do with the audiences who care most, you can begin to build a plan to reach them and to accomplish your goals once you do. Answer these three questions:- Who is your priority target audience
- What is the greatest need you solve for them
- What is the outcome you need from them
- Selecting the Right Social Channel for Your Non-Profit
- A Closer Look: Facebook & Instagram
- The Basics of a Paid Social Strategy
