If you interviewed a panel of consumers, undoubtedly most would be
able to identify Nike by its swoosh, Disney by its three circles forming
Mickey Mouse’s head and Microsoft Windows by its four-colored waving
flag. Branding and marketing go hand-in-hand; not just in the
marketplace but also for non-profit fundraising.
Rahim Kanani, contributor to Forbes Magazine, had an
informative interview with Nathalie Kylander, adjunct lecturer in public
policy at Harvard University’s John F. Kennedy School of Government and
a research fellow at Harvard’s Hauser Center for Nonprofit
Organizations. Kylander, along with Hauser Center Faculty Director
Christopher Stone, are authors of an in-depth research study on the role
of brand in the nonprofit sector. With more than a decade of nonprofit
branding research to her credit, Kylander brings some useful insight to
the subject.
First of all, why is branding so important to a nonprofit
organization? Kylander explains that, “traditionally, brand was
essentially viewed as a communication and fundraising tool,
but we found that a new paradigm was emerging where brand was
increasingly being considered in a strategic way, fundamentally anchored
in the mission and values of an organization and critical at every step
in the theory of change of an organization.
“We also found that the role that brand played internally was as
critical to many of the organizations we interviewed, as the external
role of the brand. Internally, a strong brand drives cohesion and helps
an organization build the capacity and skills to implement its social
mission. Externally a strong brand results in trust among its many
constituents, be they donors, beneficiaries, partners, or otherwise,
which enables the organization to have greater impact. However, what
makes a brand strong is the close alignment between internal brand
identity and external brand image, what we call brand Integrity.”
Can your donors easily identify your brand? Does your logo fully
symbolize your cause? When constituents see your organization, what
values and goals do they associate with it? “A brand is a psychological
construct held in the minds of all brand audiences, a promise, a
short-cut for decision making if you will. Strong brands in both sectors
enable organizations to build trust, gain resources, and establish
partnerships and access” explains Kylander.
A strong brand is needed especially when using social media networks
for online fundraising. With Twitter’s shorthand and Facebook’s
overwhelming traffic, a reliable brand makes the difference between a
glance at your comments and a click on the “donate” button. Let Fundly
help you create afree fundraising website today that can expand your social media fundraising and promote your organization’s brand!
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