Gary Dillard
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whereby the original author's information and copyright must be included. Why small nonprofits should use the web by Gary Dillard in Non-Profit (submitted 2008-11-30)
For many small organizations, the idea of using the internet for promoting themselves seems beyond reach.
Without paid web experts on staff, it's difficult for a small nonprofit even to develop a plan, much less to carry it out. There seem to be too many questions, too many choices, too many roadblocks for the average non-geek to think about promotion on the internet. Simple questions,
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First, analyze your organization. If you are truly local only,
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Many organizations,
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But it also has a small budget and an ever-aging pool of volunteers to supplement its three-person staff. So how can it use the web to its advantage?
Take, for example, its oral history program. It's one thing to record these histories, but how much more work is it to get them transcribed? Many former city residents are spread throughout the country and can't volunteer to come in once a week to help with the work. But there are types of work that can be done wherever a person lives, such as transcribing or editing transcriptions. It just becomes a matter of finding these people. That's where a good website and/or blog and/or email newsletter comes in.
The museum has an impressive library,
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These are just a couple of ideas the Bisbee Mining & Historical Museum is now pondering for its future internet endeavors. They must be thought of as long-term efforts, starting slowing and growing over the years.
But the sooner your internet initiatives get under way, the sooner they will bear fruit. About the Author
Gary Dillard is a long-time newspaper and magazine editor who is preparing a book on PR and Marketing for the Small Nonprofit. His blog on that subject can be found at www.marketingandnonprofits.net.