Blattner Brunner Brand Energy Workbook: The Non-Profit Marketing Plan Walkthrough
Blattner Brunner Brand Energy Workbook: The Non-Profit Marketing Plan Walkthrough
Blattner Brunner Brand Energy Workbook: The Non-Profit Marketing Plan Walkthrough
presented by
re-energizing brands.
Table of Contents
Introduction...............................................................................................................................3
Copyright Information................................................................................................................................... 3
About Blattner Brunner................................................................................................................................. 5
Glossary....................................................................................................................................7
Marketing Walk-thru.................................................................................................................8
.0
1 Executive Summary......................................................................................................................... 8
.0
2 Situation Analysis............................................................................................................................. 8
2.1 Market Summary............................................................................................................................. 9
2.1.1 Market Demographics and Behaviors............................................................................................... 9
2.1.2 Market Needs.................................................................................................................................. 9
2.1.3 Market Trends and Growth............................................................................................................. 10
2.2 SWOT Analysis.............................................................................................................................. 10
2.2.1 Strengths....................................................................................................................................... 11
2.2.2 Weaknesses.................................................................................................................................. 11
2.2.3 Opportunities................................................................................................................................. 12
2.2.4 Threats.......................................................................................................................................... 12
2.3 Competiors and Alternative Providers............................................................................................. 13
3.0 Marketing Strategy......................................................................................................................... 13
3.1 Marketing Objectives..................................................................................................................... 14
3.2 Target Markets............................................................................................................................... 14
3.3 Positioning and Messaging............................................................................................................ 15
3.4 Marketing Execution...................................................................................................................... 15
3.4.1 Tools.............................................................................................................................................. 16
3.5 Your Marketing Model.................................................................................................................... 17
4.0 Ongoing Marketing........................................................................................................................ 18
4.1 Frequent Purchaser Retention Strategy.......................................................................................... 18
4.2 Business Partner Outreach............................................................................................................ 19
Appendix D: DMOZ.................................................................................................................31
In an environment where multiple organizations are chasing the same dollars, business
sponsors and volunteers, standing out among the crowd is critical to success. What’s
more, nonprofits struggle against a tide of decreasing operating budgets and limited
resources, often relegating marketing to a mere afterthought. Fortunately, there are
simple, affordable and effective solutions to differentiating your offering and effectively
reaching your target audience.
• Marketing experts from Blattner Brunner will be onsite to guide you step by step
through the elements of a marketing plan
• You’ll be given this workbook that will provide you with the core elements of a marketing
plan so that you can walk out of this training armed with the knowledge and outline for
creating your own plan
• The walkthrough will also include very specific interactive marketing tactics that will
enable your organization to utilize and maximize the internet to reach your audiences for
little to no out of pocket costs
Copyright Information
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For any reuse or distribution, you must make clear to others the license terms of this work.
The best way to do so is by linking to: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/us/
Any of the above conditions can be waived if you get permission from the copyright holders.
Thousands of volunteers, 300+ nonprofit organizations and 350 businesses are all part of
Greater DC Cares’ network of partners. Working together, we create:
Greater impact. This bold new approach enables our partners to create positive social
change in our region. Conservatively, we estimate that our efforts infuse more than $4
million worth of labor and expertise into the region annually!
Greater value. Our partners contribute in ways that add huge value to our communi-
ties. Volunteers provide time, energy and skills. Businesses donate not only financial
resources but also community assets other than dollars. Nonprofits tap into our “bank”
of community assets, increasing their capacity to fulfill their critical missions.
Greater flexibility and ease. We identify the right resources to meet the needs of our part-
ners, and help forge relationships that are beneficial to all. We engage the time, energy,
skills and interests of the available resources, and match them with the greatest needs.
We do our work in ways that develop the capacity of all our partners – building powerful
nonprofits, strengthening businesses, and increasing volunteer activism and leadership.
And we are driven – above all – to solve the key social needs
of the Washington, D.C. region and its people.
Our Services
Key Strengths
Building a brand in a commoditized marketplace—We are particularly adept at
building brands that are differentiated, meaningful and deliverable: re-energizing them to
rise above the clutter of commoditization.
Establishing a passionate connection between the brand and the target audience—
Whether they are employees, employers, stakeholders, existing or prospective volunteers,
brand advocates are the key to true and sustainable growth. It’s about acquiring new
believers; it’s also about keeping and growing the ones you already have. We don’t just
want them to continue to believe in your brand, we want them to tell others about it. It’s
the best form of advertising we know.
Demographics
Selected population characteristics as used in government, marketing or opinion
research, or the profiles used in such research. Commonly used demographics include
race, age, income, mobility (in terms of travel time to work or number of vehicles available),
educational attainment, home ownership and employment status.
Psychographics
Any attributes relating to personality, values, attitudes, interests or lifestyles.
SWOT Analysis
A strategic planning tool used to evaluate the Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities
and Threats involved in a project or business venture, or in any other situation where an
organization or individual must make a decision in pursuit of an objective.
Word of mouth
A reference to the passing of information by verbal means—especially recommendations,
but also general information—in an informal, person-to-person manner. Word of
mouth is typically considered a face-to-face spoken communication, although phone
conversations; text messages sent via cell phones; and web dialogue, such as online
profile pages, blog posts, message board threads, instant messages and email are often
now included in the definition of word of mouth.
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1.1 Mission
The mission statement of your organization should be a few sentences that provide a
reason to believe in your product/service. If your organization didn’t exist, what would
the market lose?
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2.2.2 Weaknesses
Examples of weaknesses:
• Lack of overall awareness about the organization has hampered growth
Capitol requirements are exceeding donations
Low word of mouth (WOM) about the service/organization
• Ability to accurately track/capture how a donor/volunteer heard about the service/
organization
• Lack of a nimble, overall integrated marketing effort
• Overworked staff with limited resources
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2.2.4 Threats
Examples of threats:
• Declining DC market for product/service over the past two years could potentially
indicate a market saturation/declination point
• Economic impact of bad client reviews is strong and needs to be neutralized through
effective PR
• Declining donations to this type of organization is in line with the national trend
• Client retention is a issue
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Also include your final objective (i.e. raise $50,000 through 6 special events).
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These words are the basis of a brand personality. What is your brand’s personality and
what do you want it to be?
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• Message boards
• Viral marketing
• Online community outreach
• Loyalty programs
• Outreach teams
• Onsite and off-site events
• Giveaways
• Seminars
• Open houses
• Testimonials
• Podcasts/RSS
• Direct mail and email/e-newsletters
• Content partnerships
• Strategic partnerships with organizations that share your interests
• Games/contests
• Ads
• Search engine marketing
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Infrequent donors / • Increase awareness • Acquire some referrals via passive • Some direct mail and email • R ealize a 25% increase in new blog
volunteers • Improve understanding pass along when they won’t • Ads and radio around key outreach times commentators and positive blog reviews
of brand value donate/volunteer again, but will • Ongoing online (e.g., SEM and social networking) • Increase retry/winback rate by 25%
• Form closer connection forward to a friend • WOM buzz events with larger ones between key • Increase volunteers by 30%
• Broaden product/service • E ncourage blog reading and outreach times • Increase new donations from people
consideration writing from them or the referred • News coverage around buzz events who donate to competitors
• Increase market share friend • Open houses during downtimes but shortly before
• Winback! Get them to • Convert them and/or friend to key outreach periods
donate/volunteer again become an occasional donor/ • Ads in other relevant pubs.
or refer a friend volunteer
Frequent donors / • Deepen loyalty • Convert them to premium dona- • Heavy direct mail and email from existing database • R ealize a 25% increase in new blog
volunteers • Deepen engagement tion / volunteer program (board around key outreach times commentators and positive blog reviews
membership?) • Ads and radio around key outreach times • Increase retry/winback rate by 25%
• Acquire many referrals via active • Ongoing online (e.g., SEM and social networking) • Increase volunteers by 30%
pass along that they use with a • WOM buzz events with larger ones between key
friend(s) outreach times
• News coverage around buzz events
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Businesses are especially powerful because they come with their own built-in network of
talkers and they are involved, organized and have ready-to-go communication channels.
When you connect with partner businesses in the right way, everyone in that business
has a reason to talk you up.
There are many ways for a business to donate; they can provide skilled volunteers, hands-
on volunteers, nonprofit board members, in-kind goods and services and more. The key
is to speak the language of ‘adding benefits’ and providing ‘return on investment’ as a
part of why a business should partner with your organization.
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•P
ay per click. Uses sponsored search engine listings to drive traffic to a web
site. The advertiser bids for search terms, and the search engine ranks ads based
on a competitive auction as well as other factors.
Source: Wikipedia
Goal—build awareness, attract first-time donors, provide site visibility for searchers.
1) Define five “major” keywords, five “minor” keywords and one major keyword phase.
2) Ensure your site architecture and navigation is based on your keyword research (i.e.,
make sure these keywords are used in your site copy and navigation headers).
3) Drive these keywords home in all marketing copy, including the web site and
especially the title, meta keywords and meta description tags of your site’s source
code (See Online Appendix A: 3 Key Areas for SEO).
• Using your keywords in offline marketing copy is important because your
audience will use that language to search for you on the web.
• Keywords should be selected with the audience in mind. Your target audience
will read the SERPs, which the search engine produces by crawling your site (See
Online Appendix B: Sample SERP).
4) Create a site structure and content that is “link-worthy” and “link-friendly.”
• Link-worthy: Web content should be easily referenced by online newspapers
(www.washingtonpost.com), blogs and other sites. Create compelling content
that is packaged in such a way that interested parties will link directly to relevant
content that they are writing about. Long scrolling pages are not link-worthy.
• Link-friendly: This applies to all internal pages on the site that speak directly to
product content, all the way down to the directions page of the office/stores.
SEO friendly link: http://www.digg.com/politics/Crisis_Mode_Grips_World_
Bank_Headquarters
SEO unfriendly link: http://www.ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=37434
5) Be proactive in garnering new links.
• You can create links by engaging in a branded tagging methodology (See Online
Appendix C: Branded Tagging).
• You can request links from bloggers/site owners directly.
• You can include yourorganization.net in all relevant directories.
Submit to DMOZ.org.
About DMOZ (See Online Appendix D: DMOZ)
n
http://listings.local.yahoo.com/basic.php
n
http://add.yahoo.com/fast/add?96588988
n
robust/user-friendly tools and will enable you to garner adequate new qualified visitors.
The best thing for an advertiser who is getting its feet wet with paid search to do is to
focus on using Google. Once a campaign has been run successfully, you can expand to
other search properties. The following five areas of focus are necessary for a successful
campaign:
• Divide the keywords into three buckets: Branded Keywords, Specific Keywords
and General Keywords.
2) Budget allocation is a process that enables you to establish specific spending levels
for year-long and/or show-specific PPC advertising.
• Divide the campaigns into three buckets: Branded Keywords, Specific Keywords
and General Keywords.
• Set spending levels for each keyword and each of these campaigns.
• Spending levels will be informed by Google’s traffic estimator tool and based on
the final budget allocations and traffic estimations, certain expensive keywords
may need to be deactivated prior to the campaign launch.
Traffic Estimator Link: https://adwords.google.com/select/
TrafficEstimatorSandbox
3) Ad creation is a process that should be completed by your agency or marketing
team. Your ads will be displayed as text on the Google SERP.
• Text ads are not the only type of ad available, but are the main placement
recommended at this time due to the fact that they are the most cost effective
and least expensive to implement. In addition to text ads, we recommend creating
a Google Maps ad.
• Text ads should be written in the Google ad tool creation tool, as there are very
strict guidelines regarding copy length.
• Google also powers a massive content network where your ads have the
opportunity to be displayed next to relevant content (e.g., next to relevant articles).
However, the content network is not recommend at this time as it is cost-
prohibitive and underperforms compared to ads on Google’s SERP.
• Text ads should be keyword-specific if possible.
Branded keyword ads should speak about your organization in general.
Specific keywords should speak about specific products/elements of your
organization.
General keywords may require a combination of copy used in branded and
specific keyword ads.
• Ads should be geo-targeted to the DC market in order to avoid media waste and
competition for out-of-market bidders (if DC is the only market you sell to).
• Specific keywords can be activated/deactivated according to your direct mail and
print advertising schedule.
• Specific keywords should be activated/deactivated according to sales tracking.
• Brand keywords should run 24/7/365.
• General keywords should run 24/7/365.
4) Click-to-conversion optimization is necessary for specific and general keywords but
not branded keywords.
• A click-to-conversion path can look like this: a user searches for a keyword
> google displays a SERP with your ad > user clicks on the ad > user ‘lands’
on your homepage or an internal landing page > user browses content > user
donates/signs up to volunteer.
• This process can be tracked via web analytics from start to finish.
The use of Google Analytics is recommended for its ease of use and integration
with Google PPC (aka Google Adwords).
Marketing 101 Page 23
foundational interactive strategies
Social Media
Social media is a type of content that is enabled by technologies that make the
content sharable, ratable, re-mixable and/or able to be interacted with at the user level.
Examples of social media include videos on YouTube, posts on a blog, and articles in
a wiki. Social media is a crucial element of the web for marketers, as it represents a
previously impossible opportunity for users to engage with a brand.
Tactics
The following tactics can engender a greater engagement with the your audience and,
as a result, increase sales:
1) Blogging
• A blog can be used to post text, photos and videos.
• This content can be used to sell products, attract employees, volunteers,
sponsors and/or facilitate corporate partnerships.
• Posting should be at least monthly if not weekly. Ideally, posts should be shorter
for ease of reading, ease of authorship and link-worthiness.
• Blog should be registered with technorati.com—the leading blog aggregator.
This will enable fresh post to be immediately indexed by Technorati and therefore
discoverable by Technorati and search engine users.
• Subscribe to Technorati’s RSS feed of your keywords so you can monitor the
conversation about your brand.
Technorati Search Link: http://www.technorati.com/search/your+brand
RSS Link: http://feeds.technorati.com/search/your+brand
• Subscribe to Google Blog Search RSS feed of you keywords so you can monitor
the conversation about your brand.
Social Networking
Social networking is the area of interactive marketing where some marketers have the
greatest chance to garner customers and brand advocates. We sometimes recommend
creating a branded profile on leading social networks, like myspace.com and facebook.
com.
Success metric—reach the 500-friend level within three months of profile creation.
Attract 20 percent of these friends to donate/volunteer etc. within six months of profile
creation.
Tactics
The process for creating profiles on Facebook and Myspace is straightforward and
can be done by a staffer in less than an hour. The more difficult task is connecting with
friends. These following bullets include ways to grow your network:
Search Engine Marketing and Social Media are just two elements of an interactive
marketing mix. Some of you may benefit from online media campaigns or other
executions, but the scope of this document is meant to show you how to address and
potential opportunities rather then explain each one.
Page title:
The title of the HTML page should be relatively short and describe the page content
accurately. Wherever possible, try to include keywords (without distorting the true
purpose of the title). For example:
<title>Woolly Mammoth Theatre Company: Defy Convention!</title>
Meta tags:
Use the description and keywords meta tags in the head of each web page. Make
these tags different on each web page.
<meta name=”description” content=”Suppliers of quality office furniture and
accessories at discount prices.”>
Parameters:
• Keyword meta tag = 5 major keywords, 5 minor keywords, 1 major keyword phrase
and one minor keyword phrase
• Page TITLE = 5 to 8 words max
• Description meta tag = 25 words max
*These numbers vary by search engine and many SEO firms differ on recommend meta
tag count
Additional Reading:
How To Use HTML Meta Tags
The following example uses the www.lowermybills.com and the SERP for “lower my
bills” because www.lowermybills.com has a robust and ongoing SEO implementation
for attracting traffic to this website.
<html>
<head>
SERP displays the title tag contents as the “Headline” of a search result. Our assumption
is that lowermybills.com has decided that the additional SEO benefit of having their title
tag contain only keywords is a greater benefit than if the title tag were a “sell line” like
“Looking to lower your bills, refinance with us today!”
So what is Branded Tagging anyway? Well, as you may already know, tagging is a
methodology associated with Folksonomy and is a way of identifying content with a
certain keywords.
Examples:
Negative Brand Tagging: A web user reads an article about how SUVs are exacerbating
global warming. In their del.icio.us account that user can tag that content with “Hummer”.
The tag in del.icio.us for the keyword Hummer just shifted a little towards the negative
side.
Positive Brand Tagging: A user visits www.adrants.com, reads a post about something
the author felt compelled to write about, and comments on it. Within that comments
section the commenter’s name could either be his own, or the brand he’d like to attached
to that comment/article. Namely, you could comment with “Blattner Brunner” as the
commenter name so that people will associate that knowledgeable comment with the
agency - better yet, the user can link that branded tag to the Blattner Brunner homepage.
One more inbound link for blattnerbrunner.com.
The point is that content can be associated with brands whether those brands like it or
not. More than ever consumer have control over the brand.
The Open Directory Project is the largest, most comprehensive human-edited directory
of the Web. It is constructed and maintained by a vast, global community of volunteer
editors.
It is the most important directory on the web as it powers the directory listing of Google,
AOL Search and others. DMOZ provides directory results according to the Green arrows
below.