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How
Nonprofits Can Successfully Launch and Maintain a Blog on
WordPress Date: Tuesday, July 10, 2012 This webinar covers how to successfully launch and maintain a blog for your nonprofit on WordPress.com. Click-by-click, attendees will learn how to use Themes, Widgets, and basic HTML to design a blog that matches your website and helps recruit new e-newsletter subscribers, online donors, and supporters on Facebook, Twitter, etc. From basic to advanced, this webinar thoroughly explores the WordPress.com toolset. Attendees learn how to insert images and videos into blog Posts, monitor stats and comments, and strategically create Pages. Blogging best practices in terms of post frequency, tone, and SEO (Search Engine Optimization) are also covered in detail. The webinar then closes with a discussion of 15 blog content ideas so you'll never suffer from writer's block, thus enabling you to maintain a consistent and effective blog for your nonprofit. The webinar will be given by Heather Mansfield (bio) who blogs at Nonprofit Tech 2.0. She is the author of Social Media for Social Good: A How-To Guide for Nonprofits and creator of the Nonprofit Organizations Twitter Profile, the Nonprofit Organizations Facebook Page, the Nonprofit Organizations YouTube Channel, and the Social Media for Nonprofit Organizations LinkedIn Group. To date, Heather has given over 400 webinars and trainings on how nonprofit organizations can successfully utilize social media and mobile technology. A firm believer in putting your money where your mouse is, Heather also donates 10% of the proceeds from her webinars to her favorite nonprofits.
Please Note: This webinar is packed with practical, how-to information and does take the full 90 minutes. There will be a 5-minute break half way into the presentation and Q&A is done via Chat at the end of the webinar. Attendees are provided very comprehensive notes of the webinar within 24 hours of the presentation. No toll free number is provided for the webinar. Attendees can either call a long distance phone number (in most cases) or listen over their computer speakers.
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