#GivingTuesday is over: Now what to do about those objectionable fundraising messages
An email drafted for you to share your concerns with the communications team.
An email drafted for you to share your concerns with the communications team.
3 reasons I make sure my organization rejects conventional, offensive fundraising strategies.
Just in case you want to remain “old school” in your communications strategies and keep them grounded in a charitable fundraising model.
Chris Wardle in Nepal shares his experience and approach. What are your solutions?
Having experience as both a grant seeker and grant maker, it’s funders who I look to for bravery first. Here’s 7 ways funders can be more courageous.
Sharing an article from NPR’s Goats & Soda blog, “At What Point Does A Fundraising Ad Go Too Far?”
Can photos provoke people to donate to charity AND ensure people’s dignity?
A conversation with David Humphries, Global Communities’ Vice President of Communications and Public Affairs.
For NGOs considering how to ‘reframe their message’ in their communications and fundraising, they can include their local partners in developing countries in this proces. Invest in partners’ branding and communications. Let them tell their own story. As much it is ‘our message,’ even more so it is theirs. ~Judith Madigan of BrandOutLoud
Do donor policies and practices force their so-called “partners” to be unethical?
New publication suggests a new way forward for international aid organizations’ communications strategies with the general public.
“The Development Element: Guidelines for the future of communicating about the end of global poverty” resonates with those in the #globaldev sector.