Beyond Logos: Creative Sponsorship Marketing Ideas to Showcase Your Sponsors

Beyond Logos: Creative Sponsorship Marketing Ideas to Showcase Your Sponsors

Beyond Logos: Creative Sponsorship Marketing Ideas to Showcase Your Sponsors

Sponsorship is a part of every nonprofit organization. It could be in relationship to an event, program or service or annual support from a corporation for you operation expenses.

With any sponsorship agreement, there is an exchange of marketing by the organization for the dollars. The obvious is logo placement on your website and at the event or program, but there are other creative ways you can increase exposure, and from that increase the value and cost of your sponsorship packages.

Here are some unique sponsorship marketing ideas to feature your sponsors:

Customized Social Media Campaigns

Social media is a great platform to promote your sponsors. You can create customized social media campaigns that showcase your sponsors in a unique and engaging way. For example, you can create a “sponsor spotlight” series that features one sponsor every week or highlight their products in your social media posts.

In the reverse, you can create graphics and copy for sponsors to share on their feeds showcasing their support for your organization. By making it easy for them to share it increases the likelihood that they’ll actually share it.

Sponsored Content

Sponsored content is another excellent way to showcase your sponsors. This can be a one-off element or something that adds value to your sponsor package. 

Sponsored content looks like a dedicated blog post or video, static social media posts or short form video, or a guest podcast or YouTube video that features them. Ensure that the content is on brand and that messaging aligns with your organization. 

Event Activation

If you’re hosting an event, make sure to create activations that feature your sponsors. For example, you can create a photo booth with your sponsor’s logo in the background or create a product sampling station. Make sure the activations are fun, interactive, and align with your sponsor’s brand values.

This is a great opportunity to get really creative. Some fun unique ideas include; VR experiences where people can experience something about that brand, live performaces that allow members from that company to introduce, perform with, or engage from the stage, or branded games like corn hole or darts that have the sponsors logo all over them.

Influencer Marketing

Influencer marketing is a popular sponsorship marketing idea that can help you reach a wider audience. Partner with influencers who align with your sponsor’s brand values and have a significant following. You can create sponsored content with the influencers or have them promote your sponsor’s products on their social media channels.

Working with micro-influencers that align with your mission can also be really impactful. Remember its not about having the biggest following that matters, its about someone that aligns so that their audience will care about what you’re trying to do.

Bring in your corporate sponsors by allowing them to engage with the influencer as well for an added benefit.

Customized Sponsorship Packages

Creating customized sponsorship packages is an effective way to feature your sponsors. Instead of offering standard sponsorship packages, create customized packages that align with your sponsor’s goals and objectives. This is great for higher priced packages and making your sponsors the VIP. Or if you’re trying to create an annual sponsorship that includes multiple events and programs.

For example, you can offer a package that includes social media promotion, sponsored content, and event activations. Pay attention to what they value and get creative! We don’t recommend doing this for too many sponsors as it can be hard to track and manage. You know who the right partners are for something like this.

Brand Integration

Integrating your sponsor’s brand into your products or services is another great way to showcase your sponsor. For example, if you’re a food company, you can create a signature dish that includes your sponsor’s product. Or if you’re an after school program use sponsor branded folders, pens and other office supplies.

Another great idea could be branding a special newsletter that has tips and resources. Let’s say you’re a music program and you have a local music store as a sponsor. You could send out a monthly newsletter that has a tip for your students and it is always branded with that local store.

Conclusion

Featuring your sponsors in your marketing campaigns is essential to creating win-win partnerships. Try these creative sponsorship marketing ideas to stand out and create memorable campaigns. Remember to always align your marketing efforts with your sponsor’s brand values and goals.

Want more ways to feature you sponsors on your website? Check out episode 197 of the Digital Marketing Therapy Podcast | Creative Ways to Feature Sponsors on Your Website

The Psychology Behind Great Menu Navigation: How to Keep Users Engaged and Happy

The Psychology Behind Great Menu Navigation: How to Keep Users Engaged and Happy

The Psychology Behind Great Menu Navigation: How to Keep Users Engaged and Happy

Your menu navigation is critical for people being able to get where they need to go and can make or break the user experience. Just think about your behavior when you land on a website that has a busy navigation. Do you get frustrated? Do you bounce? 

Time to review your own navigation to see if it’s serving your users or causing them to leave without donating. 

Understand User Behavior and Preferences

It’s all about user experince and what they need, not you! Think about what they are looking for so they can get their easily. Use words that they would understand instead of cutsey terms. When you really understand the journey people take on your website you can prioritize what goes in your main navigation. Remember that once they get to those pages you can continue to guide them with calls-to-action (CTAs) on those pages.

Here’s a grea tway to test. Think about the priorities you have for your organization. Then ask someone if they can find that information from your navigation. If it is simple and easy then you’ve done your job. The beauty of a menu is it is very easy to change, no matter the platform your website is built on.

Simplify Navigation Labels and Hierarchy

To ensure that your website’s menu navigation aligns well with user behavior and preferences, it’s important to simplify navigation labels and hierarchy. When labels are clear and easy to understand, users can quickly find what they’re looking for, without getting lost or frustrated. Hierarchy, meanwhile, helps to organize the menu navigation in a logical manner, making it easier for users to follow. Try and keep your menu to less than 7 items and remember that our eyes are drawn to the outside elements.

To further enhance navigation, consider using visual cues, like icons or color coding, to help highlight important sections or pages. This can be especially useful in highlighting your donation page. 

Finally, minimize dropdowns. They are harder to use on mobile devices and most people are accessing your website from their phones. They also give people many options which can be overwhelming. 

Align Navigation with Business Goals

The menu can be a great way to guide people to the right place and the action you most want them to take. It should guide users to specific sections or pages that align with your business objectives. Therefore, it’s essential to implement navigation strategies that are in line with your business goals.

To ensure that your website’s menu navigation aligns with business goals, you need to consider the following steps. First, identify the primary goals of your website. Is it to get donations, generate leads, or for brand awarness or cause awarness? Once you’ve identified your goals, determine which pages on your website contribute the most to these goals. Make sure these pages are prominently displayed in your navigation. Again, remember that this can be changed throughout the year as your priorities change.

In some cases, you may have multiple goals for your website, such as getting donations and awareness for your services. If this is the case, you’ll need to prioritize your goals and structure your navigation accordingly. For example, you could create an announcement bar above your menu to call out another priority. Or create a secondary menu to highlight more items.

By aligning your website’s navigation with your business goals, you can make it easier for users to find what they’re looking for and take desired actions. This, in turn, can increase conversions, improve visitor satisfaction, and ultimately boost your website’s success.

Use Visual Cues to Guide Users

Visual cues can be incredibly helpful in guiding users to the information they’re looking for on your website. For starters, simply using different colors or fonts for your clickable links can make them stand out more, drawing attention to the most important areas of your site. Additionally, icons or images can be used to represent different categories or pages, making it easier for users to quickly understand the purpose of each link. If you’re using icons or images, make sure they are universally understandable so people know where they’re going and what to expect on those pages.

Beyond these basic visual cues, you can also use more advanced techniques like drop-down menus or hover-over effects to further guide users’ navigation. These can be especially helpful for websites with a lot of content, as they allow users to easily see all their options without feeling overwhelmed. Be very selective with these options as they can get out of hand quickly. Drop downs should ONLY be used if the pages under there are also critically important to the goals of your website.

Of course, it’s important to strike a balance when using these visual cues. Too many can be distracting or confusing, while too few can make it difficult for users to navigate your site. By testing different approaches and analyzing user behavior, you can find the right balance for your specific website and audience.

Monitor and Analyze User Activity

By tracking how users interact with your navigation, you can gain valuable insights into their preferences and behavior. For example, you might notice that users tend to click on certain categories more frequently, or that they tend to use the search bar more often than the dropdown menus. Armed with this information, you can make informed decisions about how to optimize your navigation to better meet your users’ needs. A great way to see how people are interacting with your navigation, and website in general, is HotJar.

Analyzing user activity can also be a great way to determine what should be in your menu navigation. Reviewing your analytics to see what pages are being visited most often will help you determine the organization of your website and navigation.

In addition to monitoring user activity, it’s also important to solicit feedback directly from your users. By asking for user input and incorporating their suggestions, you can create a navigation experience that truly meets their needs and preferences.

Conclusion

In today’s fast-paced digital world, users have high expectations for website navigation. To keep them engaged and happy, you must understand their behavior and preferences. Simplify your navigation labels and hierarchy, use visual cues, monitor and analyze user activity, and align navigation with business goals. Effective menu navigation can make or break a user’s experience on your website. Remember, “the road to a satisfied user is paved with good menu navigation.” So, take action and optimize your website today!

5 Ways Copy is Hurting Your Website

5 Ways Copy is Hurting Your Website

5 Ways Copy is Hurting Your Website

Website copy is critically important when it comes getting your visitors to dive deep, get more connected and take action. It can feel difficult to figure out the best words or how to articulate what your organization does. Or you might be struggling with prioritizing what it is that you need to say because you do so many incredible things.

Here are five mistakes you may be making on your website. Read this blog post and review your website to see if you need to make any adjustments.

Mistake #1 – Making it About You

It’s a natural thing to want to sing our own praises. Afterall – you do great work and should shout it from the roof tops. However, instead we want to make it about our visitors.

Encouraging people to donate or sign up for our services means we have to meet them where they are and not talk AT them about how great we are. The easiest way to think about this is starting with your ideal customer or donor. Think about what their motivations are and what they care about. What is their pain point and how do you solve it.

For those you provide services to this might be a little easier. For example, let’s say you’re a pet adoption organization. Your website copy should reflect on the reasons why people are looking to rescue. It could include things like:

  • Reminding them of memories from pet adoption when they were kids.
  • Talking about how pets can provide anxiety relief.
  • Sharing how pets can be great companions for seniors.

Whatever you think will resonante most with visitors, make sure your website copy reflects that.

Let’s say you’re reaching out to donors and you know that your ideal website donor is 35 – 50, female, has a two rescue animals, two kids and works from home for a Fortune 500 company in sales or marketing. 

This information can be used to craft the language on your donation page, setting a variety of levels that speak to their motivations. You can also use this to craft copy on the homepage talking about family adoption stories or how pet adoption has made an impact on their kids. 

Remember people aren’t going to make the decision to participate with your organization right away so each page the visit helps them get closer and closer to conversion. 

Mistake #2 – Not Tying it To Your Goals

No organization does just one thing so it can be tricky trying to figure out what to put on your home page especially. Remember that your website doesn’t need to stay the same all the time. In fact, it should be changing in line with what the priorities are for your organization. 

While, in theory, you can’t have too much copy on your website, it’s the way you prioritize the copy that matters. In editorial terms, you don’t want to bury the lead. Keeping the most important copy at the top is helpful. 

This can also be useful when thinking about your menu navigation. The far left and far right elements are the most obvious to the human eye. It may need to change as priorities change throughout the year. For example, events, specific giving campaigns, enrollment periods, etc.

Mistake #3 – Using Too Much Jargon

Remember what was stated in mistake #1? You know more about your organization than most pepole do. If you think you aren’t using jargon, you probably are. In general, you want to write at a third grade level and in words that anyone can understand. It will help people process the information more quickly and easily and make decisions about their next steps. My favorite editing tool is the Hemingway Editor. It helps you with readability and grammer to make it easier to process.

This becomes even more important with more technical or sensitive topics. It can feel like you need to have very scientific approach to your writing to ‘sound’ like you know what you’re talking about. Remember to go back to your ideal audience first and see if that style of alignment is going to connect with them. If not, consider changing it.

Mistake #4 – Ignoring the Design

Humans are now scrolling websites, stopping to read when they think they’ve found something interesting. If you don’t lay out the text you’ve so carefully crafted in a way people can scroll then it was all for nothing. Break up your text with:

  • appropriate H1, H2, H3 tags.
  • bullets.
  • graphics or icons.
  • quotes

Anything that can call out the important elements of your content so people can quickly identify what they’re looking for and dive deeper.

Mistake #5 – Relying Too Much on AI Tools

AI tools are all the rage and can be a great time saver and way to research. Using an AI tool to help you generate outlines, ideas, etc can be great. However, they won’t be able to duplicate your tone or personality. Be sure to rewrite the copy AI tools generate to ensure it still resonates with your audience. 

Go back to ideal donor or audience that piece of content or page on the website is for. Yes you can ask AI to write for that type of audience, but again it won’t be in your voice.

Conclusion

Copy on your website is critical to getting the right people to take action. Just as importantly, it is helpful in allowing people to determine that you aren’t the right organization for them. While this might seem counterintuitive it helps you bring in more of the right people and not waste time on the wrong ones!

What is a Call to Action and How Do I Use Them?

What is a Call to Action and How Do I Use Them?

What is a Call to Action and How Do I Use Them?

Your website is a critical component to the growth of your organization. It builds trust, helps you communicate your mission, and most importantly, helps you generate revenue from donors and your services. Part of your marketing strategy is likely pushing traffic to your website so people can learn more. Once they’re there, are you guiding them with the best next step for them? Even though you aren’t there 1:1 with them once they visit your website, you can still be their guide!

The best way to do this is using calls-to-action!

What is a call-to-action (CTA)?

A CTA very simply, is prompt you give people to take that next step. You might be encouraging them to donate, buy a ticket to your event, join your email list, or even just learn more.

You’re probably very comfortable with this in your offline fundraising. It might look like:

  • raising your paddle at an event.
  • scheduling a follow up call after a coffee chat.
  • asking for an introduction to someone.

In the online space its no different. You don’t get what you don’t ask for so we want to do the same on our social media, websites, in our emails, etc.

How do I use CTAs on my website?

There are SO many types of CTAs you can include on your website. These can include:

  • donate buttons.
  • email newsletter sign up.
  • social share buttons.
  • contact forms.
  • learn more – directing them to the next best place.
  • giveaway.
  • quiz.
  • register for an event or service.
  • buy tickets.
  • announcement bars.
  • pop ups and slide ins.

Before you go crazy and start putting things everywhere, here are a few things to consider.

Reverse engineer your customer journey.

Be thoughtful about what CTA you use where. Remember that people are bombarded with so many different messages and are likely scrolling your pages. Your CTA should be the most important element so they don’t have to think too hard about where to go next. The best way to think about this is really understanding the purpose of the page and how it fits in to the customer journey.

For example, if it’s a blog post meant to introduce people to your organization, you would want to guide them to join your email list or another post where they can diver deeper. You probably wouldn’t send them right to your donation page.

This doesn’t mean you can’t use multiple CTAs on one page. Just pay special attention to the purpose and make sure it makes sense.

As another example, if you have a longer post, it might make sense to put a CTA in the middle of the post guiding people to a downloadable or save it to their Pinterest board for future easy access! Then you will probably have another CTA at the bottom that’s different and takes people to the best next step.

On your home or services page you’ll probably have multiple CTAs in the frame of buttons guiding people to pages where they can dive deeper.

Make a list of the CTAs that will be helpful.

As your organization grows so will your CTAs. You’ll also find that certain elements will come and go as you test what your audiences likes. You might also have some that are time sensitive like events or registration for your programs.

Create an easy spreadsheet that has your CTA listed and then has the pages that it’s on. That way when you make a change you know where on your website you need to make adjustments. It will also help you have a clear picture of where things are and if you’re making the most important actions the priority.

Get the right tech tools to help you

Some ways of creating CTAs are easy, no matter the platform. The most obvious is a hyperlink in your text. Another easy one is creating buttons to call out the action you want them to take.

In order to do some of the other elements, tech tools are required. Since there are so many different platforms out there, we don’t know ALL the solutions that are out there.

Here are a few of our favorites when it comes you Divi by Elegant themes*.

  • Social Shares are made easy using Monarch. You can see that right here on this page with the social links that scroll on the side.
  • Email optins can be made beautiful and also tracked easily with Bloom. This easily syncs with your email service provider so when people sign up they are automatically added. We also use this for pop ups and slide ins.

We love a good announcement bar to have at the top of your website. Hello Bar is a great free option and can also allow you to do things like slide ins, alerts, etc.

Want to connect more people to your social media? Setting up your social feeds using something like Spotlight, makes it super easy you showcase your beautiful Instagram feed on your WordPress site!

The options are endless so don’t stuck going down the tech rabbit hole. It is more critical that you take a look at what you actually need and then find the solutions to showcase them on your website.

Test type and text of your CTAs.

The words you use will also impact how people are clicking through and taking that action. For example, donate vs give today or join us vs register. There is no right or wrong here, it’s all about testing with your audience. Some tech options will have A/B testing built in but you can also do it more manually if need be.

Similarly, think about how you’re providing value. An email optin that say, “sign up for our email newsletter” isn’t going to convert as well “get first notice of new cats and dogs available at our location” or “receive monthly stories of impact from the families we support.”

Pop ups are a great way to get people to take action. You can choose. how you want them to show up (ex. after a certain amount of time or scroll, exit intent.) Testing how this shows up will be critical to conversion. You don’t want to be too in visitors face while also making sure they see it before they leave your website.

Other places to use CTAs in digital marketing

Social Media

A call to action on your social posts is going to most likely be text asking them to do something. People are more likely to take action like commenting, sharing, liking, if you ask them to! Always remember to go back to the purpose behind the activity you’re doing.

  • ask them to share their experience.
  • how do they feel with a GIF.
  • ask a question.

You can also add the CTA into the graphic you’re creating to add to your post.

Email

Your email signature is a great place for CTAs. Again keep the priorities front and center knowing that it can always be changed and adapted.

When it comes to your newsletter, think about it as one BIG call to action. The purpose of a newsletter isn’t to tell them everything, but to peak their interest and encourage them to learn more.

Again, a combination of hyperlinks and buttoms to help people see what to do while they’re scrolling can make a big impact.

Conclusion

A well created, purposeful call-to-action can help make the most of the marketing that you’re putting out there.

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