Warming Up to Causes Online
Temperatures are dropping and the holiday season is approaching, causing an outbreak of the “warm and fuzzies.” Yes, the giving season is upon us, and this year is already proving to be the most digitally driven to-date. Nearly every holiday cause campaign underway has an online component, thanks, in part, to growing consumer comfort interacting with brands via new media – up 32 percent from 2008.
Despite all the glittery online promotions, it’s important to recognize consumers are still hesitant to donate online. The 2009 Cone Consumer New Media Study showed some American new media users are concerned whether their donations will have an impact and others would rather donate offline. But that’s not to say online donations cannot be powerful. A leading holiday fundraiser and one of Cone’s Nonprofit Power Brands, the Salvation Army overcame the odds when, in 2008, online fundraising for its iconic Red Kettle campaign contributed an additional $10 million to annual revenues. However, the nonprofit was savvy enough to use new media fundraising as a complement to its offline efforts, ensuring donor comfort and convenience whatever the medium.
To help build confidence and trust among your online supporters this holiday season, keep in mind some best practices for new media fundraising:
-
Demonstrate tangible impact: illustrate for consumers how their donation is being put to work by showcasing goals achieved in real-time
-
Tap emotion: demonstrate why your cause is important to donors through emotionally compelling storytelling
-
Provide value to contributors: don’t leave your donors hanging once they open their wallets – make them feel special by providing a badge of honor to display on their social networks or offer additional opportunities to support the cause
-
Make it social: incorporate tools that make your campaign easy to share and pass along

The Big Warm Up installation, Boston
Doing its part to warm communities, Land’s End recently launched the Big Warm Up to encourage winter coat donations to the country’s homeless. The campaign embodies many of the best practices, having a robust online campaign that marries with its offline efforts - and, it just happens to be installed right outside our office windows.
Tags: fundraising newmedia causebranding donation campaigns nonprofitpowerbrand100 research top10
Did you like this post? Please share it:
Email Post
Comments (6)
For Top 10 Nonprofit Power Brands, Engagement is Key
Since yesterday’s launch of The Cone Nonprofit Power Brand 100, we’ve had many great discussions about the research. Every conversation starts with the same question. “What is it about the Top 10 that makes them the Top 10?” The answer, in a word, is ENGAGEMENT.
Whether 100+ years old, or newer kids on the block, these nonprofits are experts at leveraging multiple points of consumer engagement. Many have bricks-and-mortar facilities (YMCA, The Salvation Army, American Red Cross, Goodwill, Boys & Girls Clubs) or in-your-face marketing (Habitat, American Cancer Society) that keep them top-of-mind with consumers, donors and other stakeholders.

Other common threads include:
-
Their services have broad appeal to an array of stakeholders
-
They are entrenched in hundreds or even thousands of local communities across the country with extensive consumer touch points
-
They provide a credible voice and are a sought-after resource to help in difficult times
-
They have successfully partnered with companies to reach a broader array of constituents with a clear call-to-action
-
They have derived significant revenue through cause commerce (selling goods or services that help fund their cause)
It’s also notable that six of the Top 10 Nonprofit Power Brands are domestic social needs organizations (The Salvation Army, United Way of America, American Red Cross, Goodwill Industries International, Catholic Charities USA and Habitat for Humanity International). This sector is thriving as Americans turn their attention homeward since the devastating disasters of September 11 and the 2005 hurricane season. And, in these tough economic times, individual support of nonprofits providing life’s basic necessities has actually increased, and we expect this sector and its organizations will only sustain their upward momentum.
Visit our Web site to get branding insights straight from the Top 10, or to hear from the CEOs of the United Way, Catholic Charities and the American Cancer Society.
Tags: engagement nonprofitpowerbrand100 research top10 cone nonprofit
Did you like this post? Please share it:
Email Post
Comments (0)




Home