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Overview: A Communications Plan That Promises Less Work but More Supporters

February 1, 2018 | Read Time: 2 minutes

Joe Williams is the volunteer of nonprofit dreams. A few years ago, while he was working at a public-relations agency, his pro bono work for charities whetted his appetite to do more. A friend introduced him to Rebecca Butler, a staffer at Family Lifeline, a Richmond, Va., social-service group, and they met for a beer.

In short order, Williams, 29, joined the organizationโ€™s young-professionals group. Then he became president of the group. Then he joined the board. โ€œI have fully invested, personally and emotionally,โ€ he says.

Under Williamsโ€™s leadership, young professionals have energized Family Lifeline with new volunteers and a raft of strategic, innovative ideas. Notably, Williams and the group persuaded the board to reinvent its annual springtime luncheon as a โ€œSpring Give,โ€ complete with a first-ever direct request for donations. The newly branded event raised $28,000 in its first year.

Williams also has put his professional skills to work designing a communications strategy for the organization. โ€œWe had wanted a professional communications plan for a long time,โ€ Butler says. โ€œWe hadnโ€™t been able to come up with the money to hire a consultant.โ€

R - Gears Comm pic


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Williams gave Family Lifeline what he calls the โ€œsupporters gearsโ€ model. It suggests communications should focus on four tasks: acquire new supporters; engage them; use them to advance the mission; and then deploy them as ambassadors.

Williams has since talked about his communications model with other nonprofits. Too often, he says, groups focus on only one or two of the four โ€œgears.โ€ They often pour enormous effort into donor acquisition, for instance, but ignore supporters or donโ€™t engage with them smartly.

Ultimately, the mature supporters who become ambassadors for the organization carry the weight of the work of acquiring new donors. โ€œIf you get all four gears going at once,โ€ he says, โ€œit becomes a cycle that feeds itself.โ€

Williams shares his outline of the gears model here, with details about a social-media strategy, comparisons to Apple and Starbucks, and more.

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About the Author

Senior Editor, Special Projects

Drew is a longtime magazine writer and editor who joined the Chronicle of Philanthropy in 2014. He previously worked at Washingtonian magazine and was a principal editor for Teacher and MHQ, which were both selected as finalists for a National Magazine Award for general excellence. In 2005. he was one of 18 journalists selected for a yearlong Knight-Wallace Fellowship at the University of Michigan.