luni, 19 august 2013

Damn Cool Pics

Damn Cool Pics


Water Bomber at Trans Labrador Highway Accident [Video]

Posted: 19 Aug 2013 01:38 PM PDT



Milestone Media reports that a semi-truck in Canada crashed on a remote highway. As emergency vehicles were hours away, a water bomber was dispatched to extinguish the flames with a huge water dumping from a propeller plane.

Intersting Facts About The Movie “Ghostbusters”

Posted: 19 Aug 2013 12:31 PM PDT

Both Chevy Chase and Michael Keaton turned down the role of Dr. Peter Venkman (Bill Murray's character).



Eddie Murphy and John Candy both turned down main roles.



Eddie Murphy starred in Beverly Hills Cop the same year Ghostbusters was released.

Bill Murray's role was originally written for John Belushi, but he died while the script was being written.




On set, Dan Aykroyd referred to Slimer as the ghost of John Belushi.



Dan Aykroyd's script originally took place in the future, but Harold Ramis rewrote it to take place in modern times.



As a result, the production budget was cut from a projected $300 million (according to director Ivan Reitman) to just over $30 million.

The original trailer featured a 1-800 number, not a 555 number, which led to a prerecording of Bill Murray and Dan Aykroyd.




They got 1,000 calls per hour, 24 hours a day, for six weeks.

The Ghostbusters' firehouse headquarters was remodeled as the mechanic shop in The Mask.




It's located at 14 N. Moore St., Manhattan, New York.

The marshmallow goo that explodes onto William Atherton is actually 50 pounds of shaving cream.




The Stay-Puft Marshmallow Man suits cost $20,000 each.



Three were made and all were destroyed during filming.

Ray Parker Jr.'s theme song for the film was a No. 1 hit for three weeks.




Huey Lewis later sued Ray Parker Jr. for plagiarism, due to similarities between the Ghostbusters theme song and Lewis' "I Want a New Drug."

The jail scene was filmed in a real prison, and Dan Aykroyd was convinced the building was haunted.




Bill Murray only agreed to star in Ghostbusters because they offered to remake The Razor's Edge with him as the star.



The party scene with Rick Moranis and his guests is almost entirely improvised.



Ghostbusters was the highest-grossing comedy of all time, until the release of Home Alone.



It made $240 million domestically in 1984, which is equal to about $580 million when adjusted for inflation.

The term "proton pack" was never actually used until the middle of Ghostbusters II.




In the sequel, Spengler said "before we go any further I think we should get our proton packs."

The guns for the proton packs were originally wands.




The wands were changed to laser guns to make it more believable that the Ghostbusters created their gear from practical equipment.

The film was originally titled Ghost Smashers.




But director Ivan Reitman called it "the telephone book" because of how long the first draft was.

Ghostbusters was Larry King's film debut.




Ron Jeremy was an extra in the film and later starred in a porn parody entitled This Ain't Ghosbusters XXX.



The cast and crew referred to Slimer as "Onion Head" because of how bad the prop smelled.



To show its massive size, the Stay-Puft Marshmallow Man was originally supposed to come out of the water next to The Statue of Liberty.



But the scene was too difficult to shoot, so they scrapped the idea.

There was a second version of the Librarian Puppet, but it was rejected because it "looked too disgusting."




It was later used in Fright Night, which was released one year after Ghostbusters.

The demonic voice of Dana/Zuul was performed by director Ivan Reitman.




And most of Bill Murray's lines were ad-libs.

Girls High Jump Landings

Posted: 19 Aug 2013 11:40 AM PDT

These girls know how to land right after a high jump.

















Star Wars Actors Then and Now

Posted: 19 Aug 2013 11:25 AM PDT



Harrison Ford 



Billy Dee Williams



Hayden Christensen



Natalie Portman



Ewan McGregor



Jake Lloyd



Mark Hamill



Carrie Fisher



James Earl Jones (voice)



Anthony Daniels



Frank Oz (voice)



Peter Mayhew



Kenny Baker



Ian McDiarmid

How to Kiss a Girl in 1911

Posted: 19 Aug 2013 09:31 AM PDT

The kissing game's changed quite a bit in the last 100 years and not always for the better. While ladies today would prefer to give the go-ahead and probably won't have any Listerated Pepsin Gum lingering at the bottom of their purse, a sigh or two wouldn't hurt to set the mood. Hey, if it worked for great-grandma…




The fastest growing source of power in the United States

The White House Monday, August 19, 2013
 

The fastest growing source of power in the United States

The Department of Energy recently released two new reports that make one thing clear: We're hitting record highs for U.S. wind energy production and manufacturing.

Wind energy is the fastest growing source of power in the United States -- representing more than 40 percent of all new U.S. electric generation capacity in 2012. We've more than doubled wind and solar power generation in the past four years.

President Obama has made clear that the growth of clean, renewable wind energy is a critical part of his Climate Action Plan, and we're committed to seeing wind energy production double once again.

Check out the role wind energy is playing in the infographic below, or visit Energy.gov for more.

Check out this wind energy infographic

Stay Connected

 

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Rebuilding After Hurricane Sandy

Here's What's Happening Here at the White House
 
 
 
 
 
 
  Featured 

Rebuilding After Hurricane Sandy

Almost one year ago, Hurricane Sandy devastated the Jersey Shore. In that short time, we've made incredible progress rebuilding.

Today, Secretary of Housing and Urban Development Shaun Donovan released a report from the Hurricane Sandy Rebuilding Task Force highlighting all the ways we're helping the affected region -- and how communities can plan for the future.

Check out this post from Secretary Donovan and find out more.

 
 
  Top Stories

American Businesses Support a Path to Citizenship, a Shot at the American Dream

This week, the White House released a report highlighting the economic benefits of providing a path to earned citizenship for the 11 million undocumented immigrants currently living and working in the U.S. shadow economy.

READ MORE

Weekly Address: Working to Implement the Affordable Care Act"

President Obama says we are on the way to fully implementing the Affordable Care Act and helping millions of Americans.

READ MORE

West Wing Week: 08/16/13 or "Summer Mailbag: A Break from Tradition"

We broke from tradition a bit and took to our social media networks to ask our followers about what they would like to know about everything that's happening at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue.

READ MORE

 
 
  Today's Schedule

11:00 AM: President Obama receives the Presidential Daily Briefing

11:45 AM: The President meets with senior advisors

2:15 PM: The President meets with independent financial regulators

 

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Online Marketing Tips for Nonprofits

Online Marketing Tips for Nonprofits


Online Marketing Tips for Nonprofits

Posted: 18 Aug 2013 07:25 PM PDT

Posted by SteveOllington

What's this about?

Having worked in-house at one charity and provided some volunteer consulting to a couple of others, I decided it would be good to write about some useful ways that charities can increase their online exposure, without the need to drain too much of their already limited resources.

Many of the examples below are from my experiences working as the digital strategist for the British Humanist Association, where I learned that it can be very different from working at an agency, or in-house for a for-profit company.

LASA Charity Digital Survey 2012

How is online marketing for charities different?

There are advantages and disadvantages in digital marketing for charities. The advantages are the passion of the staff, the compassion of the audience, and the natural, powerful content that comes about through its work. The disadvantages are primarily the lack of resources and budget in comparison to the business world. What resources exist come from the generosity of people through donations and volunteering, and the willingness by staff to work twice the number of hours for half the pay.

So, here are a few tips that might help to offset the resource limits.

Google Grants for AdWords

As long as you have a registered charity number you can apply to Google Grants and receive $329 USD per day in free advertising with Google AdWords. Whilst this has to be in USD, it’s not confined to America only; UK charities (and others internationally) get the equivalent amount to spend on their ads.

Until recently, it was difficult to use up this budget, as there was a maximum per-click bid limit of $1.00. This meant you could only really go for keywords which didn’t have very much competition (and there’s a reason for that). However, in early 2013 this was increased to $2.00 per click, which makes a huge difference, allowing you to advertise with more highly searched keywords and bringing you more of the traffic you want.

How to set up Google Grants

Setting up Google Grants can take a few weeks because once you apply Google will need to assess your eligibility. The eligibility criteria and restrictions on use for Google Grants can be found here, but the main items are:

Restrictions on use

  • Only run keyword-targeted campaigns
  • Only appear on your country’s version of Google (this will differ depending on where your charity is based)
  • Only run text ads

Eligibility guidelines

  • Hold current and valid charity status
  • Acknowledge and agree to the application's required certifications regarding nondiscrimination and donation receipt and use.

If you have a registered charity number and are not yet using Google Grants, set up a Google AdWords account here (don’t complete the billing section upon setup), then apply to Google Grants here. Once you get going you’ll be offered the help you need from Google and you’re on your way to getting free advertising that can make a big difference to your online presence.

*Where I’ve taken so long about writing this, I have been pipped to the post (pun intended) by another Mozzer. They’ve got lots more detail on Google Grants in their post here.

Effective use of video

Videos can have a huge impact for charities because they offer a chance to show viewers the problems they’re trying to combat, allowing them to spread awareness about the charity and/or individual campaigns whilst triggering an emotional response that other media types might not.

Video doesn’t have to be expensive. There are plenty of volunteers out there at both the amateur and the professional level who will help out (there’s more on recruiting volunteers later), and for the video content there are student actors to act, staff members to interview, or people who have been affected by issues you’re campaigning on that are happy to talk about those issues.

If your charity is environment- or wildlife-based, contact Environment Films to have a video created. They’re a non-profit organisation too, and if you’re lucky you might even end up with Distilled’s Margarita Iosif working on your video!

Have a look at these clips worked on by a team including Margarita:

Whips Hurt. Ban Them. â€" A video for Animal Aid. This is a campaign-based video about horsewhipping (45 seconds).

The Soi Dog Foundation â€" A trailer for the Soi Dog Foundation. This is a video about the charity itself (4 minutes, 19 seconds).

In just a few minutes, the clips above are able to communicate their message in a way that people are often more willing to engage with than with plain text, and the short duration means they’re more likely to be both watched and shared online.

There are lots of different types of videos that your charity could consider, including trailers, animations, discussions, interviews, and debates. The most important thing in the video is the message.

Video marketing

It’s important to determine the goals for your video before you market it (or even create it). Is the primary goal to spread awareness, or to encourage donations? The goals of the video will make a difference in how you should market it, such as on which platform (because it’s not always YouTube that you should go for).

Phil Nottingham, whom I have the honour to sit opposite, is the video marketing specialist, and if you’re going to make a video, you HAVE to watch this video of Phil explaining how to do it right. Also, check out the Distilled Video Marketing Guide.

Video outreach

Videos, just like any other content, should be promoted through outreach. Outreach in its simplest form is contacting others in the relevant field with the hope they will publish, share, or promote something for you (there’s more on this later).

Below are two videos that were released by the BHA.

Humanism Intro (1 of 2)Humanism Intro (2 of 2)

Video One was published on July 30, 2012, and Video Two was published on December 3, 2012. So there is more than four months between them, but look at the difference in the number of views. By the time the first video reached 8-9 months in (as the second has now) it had a lot more than 8,575 views. In fact, it had that within the first couple of weeks. Why is that? Both videos feature the same people, and are on the same subject appealing to the same audiences. It’s because the first video had a lot more outreach done for it. At the time the second video was released, there was a lot else happening with a new site going live, etc. As a result, not as much outreach was done as with the first video, where many people were contacted early and offered the story on the day of the release so it was still new news for all. Lots of people were emailed and asked if they could tweet or blog about it, and they did. Outreach is an important component of online marketing, and it can mean the difference between success or failure of a marketing campaign.

YouTube Nonprofit Program

If you have videos, you likely have at least some of them on YouTube (any/all videos for which the primary goal is lots of views). But do you know about the free benefits you can have on your channel if you’re a charity?

If you sign up to YouTube’s Nonprofit program, you will have access to a number of exclusive features, and features you would normally have to pay for.

Donation button

There is the option of a Donation button on your channel page, which could increase your donations if you get many visitors to your channel. You’ll need to sign up to Google Wallet for this, if you don’t already have an account.

PETA YouTube Channel

Call-to-action overlay

Any videos uploaded to YouTube can have annotations applied, but with the Nonprofit Program you can have a call-to-action overlay containing a link, which is usually something you’d have to pay for. The overlay shows up at the bottom of the video screen and encourages people to take an action such as following a link or sharing.

Live streaming

If your charity stages events, such as protest rallies, talks, or anything else, you can live stream the event directly to your YouTube channel for all those supporters who couldn’t attend. The most important thing to remember about doing this, is that you’ll need to publicize that people can watch this live first; there’s no point in live streaming to no audience. When you promote your event, be sure to let everyone know that if they can’t make it, they can watch live, providing the date, times (including for different time zones), and a link to the channel.

For details on how to set up live streaming, see this video from YouTube.

Community forum

The Nonprofit Program supplies access to a Community Forum which can be helpful in terms of support. However, most of this support will tend to come from other users (many of whom are very helpful and will do their best to solve your problems) rather than actual Google staff.

Donating on Facebook

If you have a significant Facebook audience, or are working towards one, it’s worth considering adding a way for people to donate through Facebook. If you add a story to Facebook that becomes well shared and brings more people to your page, then some of those people may want to help out in any way they can.

There are a number of solutions for taking Facebook donations. There is an app by JustGiving which can appear in the Facebook navigation, as shown below on the Dogs Trust Facebook page.

Dogs Trust Facebook Page

You will need a JustGiving account to set this up, but it’s relatively simple to do. You can find out more about it in these slides.

Another option is DonateApp. This solution takes a small commission, but if it’s donations that would not have been received otherwise, then it’s still a net gain.

DonateApp reports that:

  • A 2012 study of 3,500 nonprofits found about half of them (46%) have raised funds on Facebook.
  • The most popular way to raise funds was to solicit Facebook supporters for individual donations.
  • The average value of a Facebook donor was found to be $214.81 over 12 months.

Advertising on Facebook

Sadly, there is no Facebook equivalent to Google Grants, so there is no free advertising for charities (or even discounted), but due to the way audiences can be targeted by their interests it’s worth looking at as an option.

Whatever your charity’s causes are, you’re likely to find plenty of people on Facebook who have declared those causes in their interests, and you can target just those people with your ads. Of course this applies to businesses, too, but the difference is in the number people who tend to join relevant groups or state relevant interests. There are plenty of ‘likes’ for brands, and some products, but generally there’s going to be a lot more people who have interest in causes such as eco-issues than there are for kitchen appliance parts, and you can take advantage of this. There are plenty of other targeting options too, including location, age, gender, and more.

You can put just a small amount of budget into a Facebook ad campaign to run a test and see how it goes, but don’t forget to track the results in your analytics so you know if it’s working or not!

You can find out more about and sign up for Facebook advertising here.

Media Trust (and Community Newswire)

For UK charities, Media Trust is an organisation that provides a variety of support for promoting charities, from marketing and PR classes to information sharing and new initiatives. As far as I can tell, the closest match to this in the US would be Charities.org. However, I can only really talk about Media Trust as I don’t have any experience with other similar organisations.

One thing which your charity may find particularly useful from Media Trust is The Community Newswire. You can submit press releases here that will have increased opportunities to get picked up by news outlets. Media Trust has good relationships with the Press Association and journalists who report in the charity sector. Press releases that go through their system will be monitored by some journalists who know that Media Trust is a credible source and are therefore more likely to run with something that comes through them.

Do have a look at what Media Trust has to offer as a whole (if you haven’t already), but also make sure you submit your press releases (ensuring they’re well written, contain at least one image, and are about something interesting) to the Community Newswire.

GrowYourCharityOnline.com

At the start of this year I attended an opening event for an initiative by Google and the Media Trust. There were lots of charities there, and some Google staff to answer questions. It was the launch of a new website called GrowYourCharityOnline.com. Here you can find information and action steps on the Google products discussed in this post, including Google Grants and the YouTube Nonprofit Program, as well as advice on using Google Plus to promote your campaigns and causes.

Have a look at the website, it’s got some useful tips and will help you organise your efforts with promotion through the Google products.

Text to donate

Most charities will likely already know about donations via text. As I learned, this is not always the best option, as it depends entirely on your channels of promotion. If you’re campaigning mainly online through your website and social media, then people generally seem to prefer following links to donate with something like JustGiving or Razoo. Text-based donations were very few when I tried this. However, if you’re also going to be promoting offline then it’s definitely worth it, as it gives people a way to donate if they don’t have a link to follow. This can be on any literature you’re handing out, or in press releases for local print newspapers, on billboards, presentation slides, T-Shirts and other merchandise, or speaking to people on the street.

This is relatively easy to set up. See JustTextGiving to do so; then all people need to do is text a campaign code and an amount to a particular number.

Quiz apps

This one went fantastically: Everyone loves a quiz, right? At least if it’s a nice short quiz that tells you something about yourself, anyway.

At the end of January 2013, the British Humanist Association launched the simple quiz "Are You a Humanist?"

Since then, it’s been taken over 70,000 times, and continues to be taken a few thousand times per month. This is important because many of the people who are taking the quiz had never heard of humanism before, but they have now. That was the quiz's objective from the start â€" to spread awareness to a new audience â€" which it continues to do.

The quiz has been taken so many times largely because it offers to share the results at the end:

Are You A Humanist? Quiz App

Not everyone shares their results. Many people don’t (and won’t) but there were and are still enough to keep it spreading, and therefore to generate new interest.

Some of the tweets made by people after having taken the quiz indicated their new realisation of humanism as a concept, and sometimes even their intention to become a member of the organisation.

The percentage scores are actually irrelevant in this quiz, and weren’t originally going to be included. However, people like scores. Scores make such things more shareable, and since the point in the quiz was to spread awareness of humanism with a bit of fun, scores worked best.

Your charity should think about doing something like this. Once you come up with the right quiz, meaning something that gives people results they’ll be happy to share, you can find a volunteer developer to help you build it into an app (there’s more about volunteers later).

Giving away content for social shares

Every online marketer looks for existing resources to utilise or recycle. One of the first things you’ll do if you start a new in-house position is poke around in archives both online and offline â€" in storage cupboards for forgotten leaflets or on the old network drive for forgotten PDFs. Usually, somewhere, there’s some great content lurking about that people will like and share.

On to my example â€" The charity I worked for gave away hard copies of an interesting book at events, and also to new members. The aim of the book wasn't about profit, it was about awareness and education, so giving the books away suited just fine. Of course there were limits as to how many could be given away, because printing and binding the book cost money (and so did sending it), and then there were only so many event attendees and new members to whom the book could be given away.

However, it turned out we had it in PDF format, too. So, we set it free as a PDF eBook and offered it via the Pay With a Tweet system. Using Pay With a Tweet meant the only thing people had to do was tweet (or share on Facebook) about the book, and they got a free copy to download. A win-win situation. One click of a button and the user gets a free, interesting eBook, and the charity gets to see more of its books being read. It’s a great book actually, and chances are that at least some of the people who read it will agree with its philosophy enough that they use the included membership form to join the charity.

There’s been over 7,700 downloads since it was launched in October 2012, and hopefully there will be many more downloads in the future, too.

If you want to see how it works by downloading a copy and paying with a tweet, grab it from here: Humanism: A Short Course.

Getting into Google News

Whether or not you currently release news, you should. If you want publicity for your charity and its work, it’s important to get yourself in front of other news sources, and Google News is a great way to do that.

Here are some benefits to being in Google News:

  • It can provide high search engine rankings, potentially bringing your site more visitors (the right visitors, too, if they’re arriving because they clicked on your news result after searching something relevant).
  • It can mean your content gets republished elsewhere. Other publishers use Google News to draw inspiration on what to write about. This could be anything from bloggers with a small but targeted audience to journalists from national media outlets. Lots of news sources monitor Google News to see recent developments, and often they will pick up stories to run with themselves.
  • It may gain you some backlinks to your website (which can help your website with its traffic, and its search rankings overall, especially if the links are coming from a large and popular news site).

Getting into Google News is easier said than done, as Google has strict guidelines as to what passes as acceptable news and it can take a while to get your news pieces right. When submitting your news to Google to appear in Google News, you will provide the URL for the news section of your site, and then you will likely need to wait up to several weeks before being accepted or rejected.

Reasons for rejection may include format, the type of news, or many other issues including being "overly self-promotional." Now, the overly self-promotional issue is a problem for a lot of charities since they are by their nature releasing news about campaigns and causes they are undertaking themselves. For example, if a charity were to challenge an unjust law at the ECHR then the news is that the charity is fighting the government over a policy at court, for the charity to then exclude itself from that news would be difficult.

One way of dealing with this is to divide your news through categorisation or tagging. On your website's news section, you can tag or categorise less "promotional" articles to appear under a particular URL away from the rest, then submit only this URL to Google.

Your news releases may well be made up of your general press releases. From my understanding, this won’t work with Google News submissions, and press releases will need to be rewritten as news items in order to get in.

Content and sharing

There can obviously be a lot of impact from having celebrities tweet about your campaigns and charity work, and some charities are very fortunate in having celebrity support for their causes, but of course there are limits to how much you can ask for help from high-profile individuals (especially as many of these people are inundated with requests from charities every day).

The right content on the right subject can still get plenty of traction on Twitter, Facebook, and elsewhere without the need for celebrities (although it helps, of course). Charities are in a great position when it comes to getting social shares because their content is often naturally interesting â€" maybe controversial in some way â€" and likely to trigger some kind of emotion in people (whether it makes them happy, sad, or angry, if it triggers an emotion then people will want to show it to others). However, you still have to do what businesses do, and think about how you’re going to present this content in the first place.

Due to the nature of charity work, a lot of the content to share will come naturally, through stories of campaign successes or losses. There’s bound to be other stuff you can share, too. The trick here is to keep an eye on what others are sharing and how successful their content is on social media platforms. This would be a large and complex task if done manually, but there is a tool for it, and it’s free! Yousaf Sekander of RocketMill created a tool called Social Crawlytics which allows you to enter a web address, and provides you with information on content from the website such as how much it has been shared and on what platforms. Doing this will show you examples of what works, and what doesn't, so you can adapt similar content strategies for yourself!

Also, have a look at the 2012 Nonprofit Social Network Benchmark Report, which offers up tactics that have proven successful for other charities along with data about which channels have been most effective for various types of fundraising and campaigning.

Tracking your success with Google Analytics

In order to know what’s working and what isn’t, you need to track your campaigns. I’ll assume you already have some analytics software such as Google Analytics installed on your website. You can see a lot with that, but you can see and organise far more by using the Google Analytics URL Builder.

How to use the URL Builder is beyond the scope of this article, but here are a couple of posts from Chris Gilchrist of HitReach if you’d like to learn more:

Your authority staff as a marketing asset

Someone in your charity is an authority on the issues you’re campaigning for. You need to use that. It’s important that they’re getting out there in front of people on every possible occasion.

Referring back to the charity I worked for, the CEO Andrew Copson was very good at this. He seemingly worked 168 hours per week, what with running the organisation and travelling around the country (the world even) to give talks and feature in debates. When it comes to the charity and its causes, he is an authority. That means when secular issues come up in the news, journalists want to hear from him. For that reason, he’s often quoted in newspapers, interviewed on TV and radio, and asked onto panel shows to discuss current issues. This exposure of course means more people get to hear him, and if they agree with him (he’s so very reasonable it’s hard not to), it brings more awareness to the charity.

Rand Fishkin gave a talk on using your CEO to spread awareness at the 2013 LinkLove Conference. Normally you’d have to buy this video, which isn’t actually even available to buy yet, but since you’re reading this article, you get to access the video right now, and for free (It’s a must-watch!). Just follow the steps below.

Rand Fishkin LinkLove 2012

  1. Go to How to Transform Your CEO into a Link Building, Social Sharing Machine
  2. Click ‘Buy’ (Not buy as bundle). Don’t worry, you won’t be charged.
  3. If you have an account, sign in. If you don’t have an account, create one (it’ll only take a minute).
  4. Enter this code: MOZSL2013RANDFISH
  5. Watch the video and have a notepad to hand, there’s some great tips in there!

Note: If you enjoyed the video, Distilled is hosting another conference in SearchLove San Diego three weeks from today! This will be our first time heading West, and we'd love for you to be there. Early bird pricing on tickets ends soon, and the kind folks at Moz have even lined up a discount for your ticket over on the Pro Perks page.

Finally, make sure you film every time your CEO (or whoever they might be) talks at any event!

Look at what happened with Philip Wollen. He gave an impassioned speech which went viral on YouTube (there are many videos of the whole debate but here’s one with just the speech to save you time). Lots of people became a fan of his after seeing that, and it brought a lot of attention to The Kindness Trust and all of the charities he supports through it.

Getting volunteers to help with your online marketing

Many of the recommendations in this article are relatively inexpensive, but some funding may still be needed to hire copywriters, developers, designers, a video agency, etc. You don’t have to spend a fortune for this though â€" not if you get volunteers.

If your charity has followers, fans, connections, and whatever else on its social platforms, use them to recruit volunteers. You may well be doing this already, but remember there’s a difference this time: The types of professions you’re looking for in this case are technology based, meaning there’s a greater chance of them being accessible online than with a lot of other professions.

Tweet for help, and there’s a good chance it’ll get retweeted. The same with Facebook; people may not be able to help with certain tasks but they’ll often tag others into a response who they think might be interested, such as their friend who makes apps and is a keen environmentalist. Many tech savvy professionals will use software to monitor social media channels and alert them when there are mentions offering work. A tweet asking for a copywriter recommendation will often result in copywriters tweeting back because they’re watching any tweets that have that keyword of ‘copywriter’ in it.

There are also websites that may be useful. Reach exists to hook up volunteers from different professions with charities in need of specialist help. Get yourself listed on there and provide a description of what you need, and someone may well get in contact with the expertise you’re looking for. Reach is a UK organisation, so if you’re in America, try CatchaFire instead. I’m not sure about other locations but I’m guessing there will be similar organisations in other countries.

Build a contacts list, and do outreach

Regular Moz.com readers and those in the industry know this well, but if you’re reading this as someone who is volunteering or working at a charity and don’t have much experience in online marketing, then this is important for you.

Remember the two videos above, where one had a lot more views than the other? If you have a great piece of content, whether it’s a video, an app, an eBook, or anything else, tell people about it! Too often there are great pieces of content that get uploaded somewhere on the web, tweeted or shared by a couple of people, and then left without any real promotion (many businesses are guilty of this too).

Build your list of contacts. Find relevant blogs, forums, Facebook groups, Twitter accounts, niche news sites, or anything with an online community, and send them a polite message about your content. If you do it right and your content is related to the type of thing they usually post or share, then there’s a good chance they will publish or share your content, too.

Build your outreach list larger and larger over time, and the contents of the list will often help to get the ball rolling for many of your campaigns. Look after it, don’t abuse it, and keep it secure (it’s a contact list and it contains people's data, so just be careful with it).

Got any tips to add? Let me know in the comments... :)


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Oferta de 200 RON pentru publicitate pe Google AdWords

Google

Hello de la Google,

Vă mulţumim pentru interesul dvs. faţă de Google AdWords. Mai jos veţi găsi voucherul dvs. în valoare de 200 RON, pentru publicitate Google AdWords.* Pentru a-l valorifica, urmaţi aceste instrucţiuni:

  1. Faceţi clic aici pentru a crea un cont AdWords.
  2. Urmaţi paşii pentru a crea anunţul şi a alege cuvintele cheie.
    (Pentru mai multe detalii, consultaţi sfaturile noastre privind înscrierea.)
  3. Introduceţi acest cod 6LPPL-XYNEY-GGHM şi informaţiile dvs. de facturare.

Nu uitaţi să utilizaţi voucherul înainte ca acesta să expire, în data de 02 septembrie 2013. Reţineţi că pentru a beneficia de această ofertă trebuie să cheltuiți minim 50 RON în contul dvs AdWords în termen de 31 de zile de la data introducerii codului în secțiunea de billing din contul dvs. Puteţi să începeţi sau să încetaţi campania oricând doriţi.

Aveţi nevoie de mai mult ajutor? Sunaţi-ne la 0800-896-734**, iar unul dintre experţii noştri vă va ajuta să creaţi prima campanie.

Cu stimă,

Rares Rusu
Marketing Manager, Google Romania

* Creditul promoţional trebuie aplicat unui cont AdWords nou, în maximum 15 zile de la deschiderea acestuia şi este valabil numai pentru clienţii Google AdWords care au conturi deschise individual. Pentru a activa această ofertă trebuie să introduceţi codul promoţional în fila de facturare (Billing) din contul dumneavoastră.Codurile promoţionale nu sunt purtătoare de valoare, completarea codului promoţional servind doar pentru calificarea pentru creditul aferent. Calificarea dvs. pentru creditul promoţional depinde de cheltuirea unui buget inițial minim de 50 RON în contul dvs. în perioada de 31 zile care începe în momentul în care introduceţi codul promoţional. De exemplu, dacă introduceţi codul promoţional pe 1 Noiembrie, calificarea dumneavoastră pentru creditul promoţional se calculează pe baza cheltuielilor acumulate în cont între 1 Noiembrie şi 1 Decembrie inclusiv până la valoarea minimă cerută pentru calificare, de 50 RON. Contul dumneavoastră trebuie să fie facturat fără probleme de AdWords şi să-şi păstreze solvabilitatea pentru a vă califica pentru un credit promoţional. Creditul promoţional va fi aplicat în termen de aproximativ 5 zile lucrătoare de la îndeplinirea cerințelor de calificare, cu condiţia de a vă fi activat contul folosind codul promoţional şi de a fi eligibil pentru ofertă. După aplicare, creditul promoţional va apărea pe pagina de sumar facturi (Billing Summary) din contul dumneavoastră. Citiţi termenii şi condiţiile complete, aici: http://www.google.ro/intl/ro/adwords/coupons/terms.html. Oferta este condiţionată de aprobarea anunţului, de o înregistrare valabilă şi de acceptarea termenilor şi condiţiilor standard ale programului Google AdWords. Creditul promoţional nu este transferabil şi nu trebuie vândut sau folosit în barter. Oferta poate fi revocată oricând şi pentru orice motiv de către Google Inc. Un singur credit promoţional pe client. Oferta este valabilă numai pentru clienţii cu adrese de facturare în Romania. Oferta nu este valabilă în cazurile interzise prin lege.

** Serviciu gratuit. luni – vineri, 9:00 – 18:00. Oferta este valabilă numai pentru agenţii de publicitate noi din Romania. Asistenţa este disponibilă numai în limba romana şi este oferită doar companiilor şi site-urilor eligibile.

© 2013 Google Inc. 1600 Amphitheatre Parkway, Mountain View, CA 94043

Aţi primit acest e-mail deoarece aţi acceptat să primiţi, ocazional, ajutor şi sfaturi privind modul în care puteţi începe să utilizaţi programul Google AdWords sau promoţii legate de AdWords. Dacă nu doriţi să mai primiţi astfel de e-mailuri pe viitor, puteţi face clic aici pentru a vă dezabona: http://www.google.com/appserve/mkt/optout/260iGYKGZMszKPK6B0QODHMiXROsZeOZC?e=e0nstar1.blog%40gmail.com&hl=ro

Iniţiere în Google AdWords

Compania Google vă salută,

Felicitări! V-aţi înscris pentru AdWords!Codul dvs. de client este:
423-746-6524

Este momentul să vă activați contul pentru a putea ajunge la clienți online:

1. Conectaţi-vă la contul dvs. la adresa
http://adwords.google.com/um/StartNewLogin
2. Dați clic pe butonul Creați prima campanie. Procesul de creare a
campaniei durează numai câteva minute și presupune patru pași simpli:
- Alegeţi bugetul
- Creaţi anunţuri
- Selectaţi cuvintele cheie care asociază anunţul dvs. clienţilor potenţiali
- Introduceţi informaţiile dvs. de facturare

După ce parcurgeţi aceşti paşi, contul dvs. va fi activat.Dacă aveți nevoie
de ajutor la crearea campaniei, ne puteți apela la numărul . Pentru o
listă a numerelor de telefon din alte țări, consultați pagina:
http://adwords.google.com/support/aw/bin/answer.py?hl=ro&answer=1722029

Vă recomandăm să consultați și ghidul pas cu pas pentru agenții de
publicitate noi:
http://adwords.google.com/support/aw/bin/topic.py?topic=1713937&hl=ro

Ghidul nostru pas cu pas vă va oferi informații despre:
- accesarea contului,
- crearea unei campanii,
- modul de funcționare a facturării,
- modul de identificare a primului anunț.

Ne face plăcere să vă urăm bun venit la Google AdWords.

Ne vedem online,
Echipa Google AdWords



------------------------
Notă importantă: examinăm periodic conturile, din considerente legate de
siguranță și pentru a verifica informațiile de facturare. În cazul în care
contul dvs. este supus unui proces de examinare, anunțurile nu vor fi
afișate pe durata acestuia. Acest proces este creat pentru a vă proteja și
pentru a menține calitatea și siguranța programului AdWords. Anunțurile
dvs. vor fi eligibile să apară imediat ce se finalizează examinarea
contului, de obicei, în maximum 3 zile lucrătoare. Cu toate acestea, dacă
anunțurile dvs. tot nu se difuzează după această perioadă de timp, ne
puteți contacta direct:
http://adwords.google.com/support/aw/bin/request.py?display=categories&hl=ro

Seth's Blog : "Do you have three minutes?" The conservation of mental bandwidth

 

"Do you have three minutes?" The conservation of mental bandwidth

It's not the three minutes it will take to do this favor for you. Everyone has three minutes.

And it's not even the noise and the wear and tear of the mental clutch as we shift from one task to another.

For me, and for many people, it's the leakage of mental bandwidth.

Fear is the enemy of creativity and innovation and of starting things. The resistance hates those things—they are risky, they might not work, so the resistance pushes us not to do them.

On the other hand, it loves the notion of to-do lists and favors and multi-tasking and yes, continual partial attention, because those are perfect hiding places, perfect places to avoid the scary work but still be able to point to a day's work, well done.

But if you have nothing else due, nothing else to do, no other measurable output but that thing you've promised yourself, if all your mental bandwidth is focused on this one and this only, then yep, you can bet that you will get more brave.

Before internet connectivity poured from the sky, I was able to get on a train, plug in my Mac and have nothing to do for four hours but write. And so I wrote. I once bought a round trip ticket to nowhere just to eliminate every possible alternative... pure, unadulterated mental bandwidth.

Plenty of places to run, plenty of places to hide. None of them are as important as shipping your best work today.

       

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