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Resource round-up for June
Tuesday, June 29, 2010
June’s resource round-up includes the announcement and sign-up for our 2010 workshop, a resource page regarding the oil spill in the gulf, a recommended list of audit documents to have at the ready, a story about two organizations joining forces to offer greater service during the recession and a list of organizations sharing their words of wisdom on Twitter.
Google Grants Workshop 2010
Enter this year’s sign-up lottery by July 9th for a chance to participate in this year’s workshop which will feature AdWords sessions led by Google specialists, grantee best practices and presentations from other
Google Products for Non-Profits
teams.
Google’s response to Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill
Google’s crisis response team has a
page dedicated to information, resources and maps related to the oil spill
which also includes ways for all to help with the recovery. If your organization is involved in the clean up efforts and needs help managing increased traffic to your Google Grants AdWords account as a result, please
contact our team
.
IRS audit advice for non-profits
A small non-profit recently underwent an IRS audit and recommends keeping particular documentation on hand, in the event that your organization is selected for an audit.
Collaboration between non-profits leads to greater impact
About five years ago, two executive directors from similarly-focused organizations decided to collaborate in some key areas and have managed to thrive during the recession as a result. They offer up some of their hard earned lessons for other forward-thinking organizations considering a similar path.
26 Charities and non-profits to follow on Twitter
If you’ve become a part of the social media universe, you’re aware of the vast amount of tweets going on in the non-profit space. This list gives you examples of some 26 feeds worth following.
If you come across resources that would be useful to the greater non-profit community, feel free to post it to the appropriate topic in
our discussion group
so that everyone can benefit. If you'd like to review previous round-ups, you can search for "resource round-up" from the search box at the top of the page.
Posted by Jessica Vaughan, Google Grants Team
First Google Grants Workshop in Dublin
Thursday, June 24, 2010
A month and a half ago we had the pleasure of hosting 80 participants from 53 Irish charitable organizations for a full day Google Grants Workshop in Google’s European Headquarters in Dublin.
The day started with some refreshments and mingling amongst the Grantees before heading to an introductory session. Stephen Flanagan, Senior Product Specialist at Google, gave a presentation on Online Advertising and why it’s important to our Grantees, and this was followed by a thought provoking panel where four of our Grantees shared their experiences, tips and best practices with the group.
Even before deciding to host this event, we knew that we not only wanted to help our Grantees make the most of their AdWords Grants accounts, but also let them know about all the other Google products that they could be using to raise awareness and operate effectively. This is why before and after lunch we had two very informative fast-paced sessions, where we covered how to best use
YouTube
and
Google Apps
, and how to improve organic traffic with tips from
Webmaster Central
. On top of this, we held a session on communication goals using some of our free products and this was split into sharing, engaging, listening and asking. Below you can find the Google products covered in the four different areas:
Sharing:
Blogger
,
Picasa
,
Google Earth
,
Google Places
Engaging:
Google Groups
,
Google Translate
,
My Maps
Listening:
Google Alerts
,
Google Reader
Asking:
Google Moderator
,
Google Docs Forms & Surveys
Then it was time for the main part of the workshop. The 80 participants were split into four break-out sessions (Beginners and Advanced) where AdWords Specialists covered AdWords fundamentals, optimization tips and information on how to best improve account performance, analytics and other useful tools and reports. From there each organisation was paired up with their own individual AdWords Specialist for an hour long one-to-one session, where participants could go over their own Grants accounts, ask any burning questions and even optimize right there on the spot! Needless to say, this was the highlight of the day for both our Grantees and our over 50 Google volunteers.
It has now been more than a month since the Google Grants Dublin Workshop took place, and we are delighted to say that it was a major success. Not only have we seen an 13% increase in the spend in this month and a half of those organizations that participated, but also 95% of participants said they were satisfied or very satisfied with the workshop, and 90% said that they can apply what they learnt on the day directly to their jobs.
A few comments from our Grantees:
“Thanks I attended the course and it was really useful and I am about to do my very own first ever Google ad as a result - plus we have posted a video on YouTube which has had 210,000 views in one week and is in the top ten of most viewed NGO/charity ads in Ireland Mexico and Spain.”
“It was a very helpful, practical exercise. Also, the users panel was very useful - to hear how Google Adwords has worked for them."
“Overall the day inspired me to continue plugging away with our AdWords (despite limited resources!) and to look at the future possibilities of combining other Google apps into our overall digital marketing strategy. Thanks!”
We were delighted with how this first workshop and hope to be able to do more in the future!
Posted by Geraldine Sherrard, Google Grants Team
Announcing the 2010 Google Grants Workshop in Mountain View, Calif
Wednesday, June 23, 2010
Over the past few years, the Google Grants team has been working hard to help you, the grantee, make better use of your AdWords account to achieve your organization's goals. We've beefed up our educational resources, added new content to our
Help Center
, and much more to empower you. Towards the same end, we held
our first grantee workshop
last summer on our Mountain View, California campus, where 100+ grantees attended a two-day workshop focused on better use of their Google Grants account and awareness of other non-profit offerings from Google. Last year's event was such a success, that we will be holding a second two-day workshop in Mountain View this summer.
That's right - we are pleased to announce our second Google Grants Workshop, to be held in Mountain View in early September!
During the two-day workshop, grantees will attend AdWords sessions taught by in-house specialists, hear best practices from fellow grantees, and learn about
Google for Non-Profits' products
that can make an impact on their organization. As with last year's event, we will record workshop sessions and post the videos online from which all can benefit.
While we'd love to open this event to all our 6,000+ grantees, we do have a limited number of invitations and will not be able to accommodate everyone. Therefore, we'll be holding a lottery drawing to ensure that we issue invitations fairly. Also, since this workshop will feature similar content to last year's event, we ask that those who attended the previous workshop do not enter the lottery for the 2010 event.
If you're a current Google Grants recipient, are interested in attending the Google Grants Workshop this summer, and did not attend last year's workshop, please
sign-up
to enter our invite lottery by July 9th.
To take full advantage of this event, we ask for attendance from your organization's AdWords account manager and up to one additional representative per organization. Also, to help us better understand how we can help your non-profit, we'll ask you for some basic information and a brief statement about why your organization would benefit from attending this event. We'll be following up with all interested grantees after the July 9th deadline with the results of the lottery.
Have a great summer and we'll see you in September!
Posted by Kristie Mun, AnnMarie Hill, and Michelle Rosen, Google Grants Workshop Organizers
Walk A Mile in the User’s Shoes: Search Keyword Brainstorming for the National Leiomyosarcoma Foundation
Tuesday, June 22, 2010
When building a campaign, the starting point can be challenging. Beyond the organization name, what should the keywords be? Should you use specific or long queries, short or broad words? What will users search on, and where can we find a crystal ball to predict these queries?
AdWords in the Curriculum students at Michigan State University
worked with the
National Leiomyosarcoma Foundation
, and faced precisely this quandary. Leiomyosarcoma, a type of cancer, is a rare disease that affects 4 out of 1 million people.
Although
AdWords campaign tools
are helpful for estimating and brainstorming keywords, a preceding valuable starting point is to come up with a raw list of ideas using information about the target audience and non-profit mission.
“We tried to understand what the user went through in trying to find more information on the ailment,” explained MSU student Nupur Bihani. “It was complicated when we learned that the rarity of the disease meant that some doctors weren’t even aware of it.”
“We tried to put ourselves in the shoes of the patient, and walk ourselves through the learning process, and all of the scenarios one would find themselves in. It was really something of a humbling experience.”
Doing so led to a robust set of ideas for search keywords.
“We found that what drove the most traffic were people wanting to learn more about the disease, its symptoms and its cures. In short, people wanted to learn what they were dealing with,” said Kristyn Jones, also on the MSU team for the National Leiomyosarcoma Foundation.
“The website offers so many ways to help people who are suffering, not only through support, but also education, treatment and advancing the fight against the disease,” added Ray Lee, the third member of the team.
In addition to general awareness, the foundation hoped to drive more donations through the AdWords platform. To do so, they set up a separate campaign for ribbon sales. Alongside traditional e-commerce, the MSU team found creative ways to create a quantifiable success metric beyond clicks: Facebook. Membership on Facebook for the foundation doubled from 600 to over 1,200 since the AdWords campaigns started.
As a result of the AdWords campaigns and partnership with AdWords in the Curriculum, the NLMSF has seen a surge in awareness, site visits, and donations. Stepping into the shoes of their target audience became a key part of their strategy to think outside the box and get creative with queries. Thanks to the AdWords in the Curriculum student team, NLMSF’s campaigns have become a well-oiled machine to continue to drive exposure and ribbon sales.
Posted by Anita Varma, Google Ann Arbor
Why I Volunteer with Google Grants
Thursday, June 17, 2010
When I joined Google six years ago, I was excited to work for a company that genuinely
cared about making the world a better place for the people in it
. My previous employers, the good ones as well as the bad and the ugly, had focused on the bottom line to a sometimes alarming extent.
In my role on Google’s intranet team, though, I found myself an extra degree removed from that whole business of making the world a better place. My job was to make
Google
a better place for its employees by providing access to internal information—“Organizing Google’s information and making it universally accessible and useful to Googlers,” as we put it. By the transitive property, then, I was making it easier for other employees to get on with that whole improving-the-world business. But I wasn’t doing an awful lot of world-improving, directly.
Enter Google Grants. I remember the first email that came to employees about Google Grants, as
the program was just getting started
. That email asked for suggestions of worthy non-profits that might benefit from free advertising, and I was excited—here was a chance to get behind those most involved in helping the world! In fact, I could even nominate the organizations and causes I most believe in!
As the director of my own dance company (in my time outside Google), I know first-hand how hard it can be for arts organizations to get recognition and funding. So right away I nominated
a dance company and school
in nearby San Francisco that’s known for its services to the dance community and offers a variety of programs to showcase rising choreographers.
It didn’t take long for Google Grants to take off, and now thousands of organizations apply for grants; it’s no longer a matter of word of mouth among employees. Since the program began in 2003,
Google has supported non-profits worldwide
with more than $600 million in advertising.
I’m glad to have a continuing role in helping these non-profits accomplish their worthy missions. As a Google Grants screener, I review organizations every week to see if they meet
the guidelines for grant recipients
. And I have learned so much along the way. I had no idea what an amazing variety of services non-profits provide to their communities, and it’s fun and eye-opening to see what turns up each week in my list of applicants.
At Google, I still work on internal projects, but now I know that as well as helping Google in its mission to organize the world’s information, I can help a tiny bit in dozens of other areas—arts! education! public health! environment! youth mentoring!—at the same time.
Posted by Natasha Carlitz, User Experience Designer, Internal Projects
Search Engine Optimization (SEO) for starters
Tuesday, June 15, 2010
It’s a single
special sauce
that makes a Big Mac a Big Mac, and even Dr. Pepper has only
twenty-three flavors
. So it’s not without some pride that I say that Google uses over
200 signals
in order to decide how to rank websites in our search results. That’s almost twenty times as many secret ingredients as there are in
KFC’s original recipe
!
A lot of people want to know what they can do to be the top-ranked result on Google for a particular search. I can’t tell you exactly how to do that—if I did, everyone would be top-ranked and our search results would be a huge mess—but it’s no secret that the top-ranked non-profit sites tend to have useful and original content. That said, even the best content in the world will only take you so far if search engines have trouble accessing or understanding it. Resources like
Google Webmaster Tools
can help you make sure that your content is search engine friendly and easily found online.
Making Your Content Search Engine Friendly
Google crawls the web using a software program called Googlebot that visits websites and adds them to our search index (other search engines have similar programs). Googlebot is very smart and capable, but it’s no human. Googlebot can have trouble interpreting pictures or video, and can generally
only see text.
If the organization name on your homepage is just a big image, then you’ll want to make sure that the name is featured in the title of the page, or
elsewhere in text
so that Googlebot can find it. This holds true for images of event flyers, schedules, contact information, and any content that you want users to be able to find easily. Having this information available in text also makes your website more accessible to users who aren’t able to interact with your site visually.
Another thing you can do to help search engines understand your site is to use good
anchor text
. These are the words that are clickable for a web link—the words ‘anchor text’ in the last sentence are an example of anchor text. Anchor text gives search engines additional context about the content to which you’re linking. Search engine friendly (and user friendly) anchor text describes where the link will take you and doesn’t just say ‘click here.’
Unhelpful anchor text: For information about Google Grants, click
here
.
Awesome anchor text: To apply for a grant, visit the
Google Grants website
.
In the first example, it’s not immediately clear to the user if the link goes to the Google Grants website, or if it goes to a different site with content about Google Grants. The second example tells the user and Googlebot that the link is to the Google Grants website, and it lets Googlebot know that some people are referring to the page at http://www.google.com/grants as the ‘Google Grants website.’
These are just two quick tips to make your website easy for search engines to index. For more ways you can make your content search engine friendly, check out the
Google Search Engine Optimization (SEO) Starter Guide.
Using Google Webmaster Tools
To help you make your site search engine friendly, Google offers
Google Webmaster Tools
, a set of tools you can use to see how the Google search engine interacts with your site. You can see which search queries are causing your site to appear in Google’s search results, and also make sure that Googlebot is able to index your site successfully.
To get started, you’ll need to visit Webmaster Tools, sign into your account, and add your website. The sign-up process will walk you through the process of
adding your first website
, and if you hit a snag there’s a
Help Center
and a community of webmasters in the
Webmaster Help Forum
that are always willing to answer questions and help out.
Once you’ve added your site to Webmaster Tools, you can see all sorts of interesting information about your site, including
customized suggestions about changes
that will make your site more search engine friendly and a tool that lets you
see your website the way Googlebot sees it
.
Making your site search engine friendly is just one part of a successful online strategy for your organization, but it can pay off with increased visibility. Search engine optimization may not have the zing of a clever AdWords campaign or the spice of a nicely-designed site, but done well it can be a secret ingredient that helps people find and support your cause online.
Posted by Rob Thomas, Search Guru
How can a non-profit benefit from the Insights for Search Tool?
Thursday, June 10, 2010
Back in November
of last year, we mentioned a useful Google tool which could help identify trends on Google searches across a wide spectrum, including time frame and geographic location. This tool is called
Google Insights for Search
, and can provide AdWords advertisers with data to help make strategic decisions regarding keyword selection, ad text messaging location targeting and more.
What does it do?
Google Insights for Search analyzes a portion of worldwide Google web searches from all Google domains to compute how many searches have been done for the terms you've entered, relative to the total number of searches done on Google over time.
How can this tool help improve the success of my AdWords account through Google Grants?
So you may be thinking, “OK, this sounds pretty cool. But, as a non-profit, what can I use this tool for and how can I benefit from it?”
Examine seasonality trends
If your non-profit relies heavily on donations from your constituents, you may find that December is the time of year that you receive the bulk of your funding. But what month is the second highest grossing in terms of donations?
By using the Insights for Search tool, you can compare search volume for phrases such as ‘donate to charity’ or ‘charity donations’ for each month, year over year. Perhaps you noticed a trend of increased donations received in the month of February for the past two years. In preparation for another potential increase in search volume next February, you may increase the amount of ‘donation’ related keywords in your account, or have a campaign in your account dedicated to soliciting donations with its own budget.
Capitalize on Emerging Markets
You may be thinking that since you are a local non-profit and Google search is worldwide, this tool may be ineffective for you to hit your goals. On the contrary! Let’s take a look at an example for a local animal shelter based in Charlotte, NC.
One challenge you may encounter in working with your AdWords account is the inability to increase relevant traffic to your ads. You run and operate a medium-sized animal adoption shelter in Charlotte, and are targeting the city of Charlotte. You have been toying with the idea of increasing your location targeting radius to include all of North Carolina, but are worried about the negative effect on your quality score due to increased impressions.
Using Insights for Search, you can search for ‘
animal + shelters
’ in the state of North Carolina, and compare the data across the major regions. By doing this, you can get a sense of where interest for shelters within your state is more prevalent. From this data, you may wish to expand the regional targeting in your AdWords account to include areas such as Greensboro, where the distance between the two cities is minimal and the search volume in this close region is much higher.
Choosing the right messaging
One of the most common tips you will hear when trying to create new keywords for your account is to put yourself in the users shoes by asking yourself, “If I were searching for my program or services, what would I type on Google?” Insights for Search makes this tactic that much easier.
Within your target region, you may find that the user population interchangeably uses the terms ‘charity’ and ‘non-profit’. But which term is more commonly used?
Perhaps users in your target location search more for the term, ‘charity’, rather than the term, ‘non- profit’. If this is the case, you can use the data to ensure your ad text and keywords focus on this terminology specifically, and avoids the term ‘non-profit’.
To learn more about Insights for Search and how it can be a powerful tool for your organization, take a look at the video below. Happy searching!
Posted by AnnMarie Hill, Google Grants Team
Grantee best practices summary
Tuesday, June 8, 2010
This quarter we have a lot of great feedback about how grantees are using the power of analytics data to measure, optimize and report on the success of various initiatives. Grantees are also paying close attention to their specific success metrics and how seasonality affects their organization. See what you can take away to use at your organization and then share your tips in the
Optimization Tips and Tricks section of our discussion forum
.
Analytics
Conceptually, it’s fairly simple to understand the impact of paid search ads on your website’s traffic, but have you tried to dig deeper into the numbers? Some
grantees use Bounce Rate, Pageviews and Time on Site to understand more about the quality of the traffic coming to their site
via their paid search ads. They look beyond just the number of visits and see that the quality of their traffic improves (ie. more conversions occur) as Bounce Rates go down, Pageviews go up and Time on Site increases.
This is especially important to keep in mind when you launch new content on your site. If you
use conversions to
set benchmarks
for your initiatives, you’ll definitely want to keep them in place as you bring on new content. As one grantee shared, they’re migrating their Google
Analytics code and conversion goals from their old URLs to their new URLs so they can measure improvement once the new content is live.
Learn more about
how grantees are using analytics
.
Seasonality
We bring up
seasonality
frequently with AdWords advertisers because
knowing your organization’s seasonality traits can affect your campaign strategies
and be the difference between a successful campaign and one that appears to have fallen below the mark.
One grantee noted that, for their organization, March is typically a slow month for donations, so when they’re reviewing their analytics data, they expect the dip in conversions.
To optimize for seasonality, it’s a good idea to plan your marketing initiatives for times when seasonality indicates your traffic to be highest and/or conversions strongest
and use slower months as times to fine tune your campaigns and website content.
For one organization in the Grants program, they knew that their ads would see more traffic in April, around Earth Day, so they
created and optimized an Earth Day ad group in March and then saw a significant uptick in spend during April.
Metrics
Every organization has a different way of measuring success, and some of our grantees have shared their metrics and how they use them to drive their programs.
One grantee
follows new and repeat traffic closely, and defines their success metric by their donor
lifecycle
, which they’ve calculated at 6 months or more. So, new visitors traffic is excellent for them to see, but they know that they won’t see an uptick in donations from a percentage of those visits until they’ve visited the site a few times over the following six months.
Linking a new metric with an established one can also help improve your success rate
overall. One grantee used an established high traffic page on their site as the direct link from their related AdWords ad to then drive traffic to their new goal of increasing newsletter sign-ups.
A word of advice from one grantee: “Non-profit advertisers new to Google Grants AdWords should take note of the fact that if one of their goals is driving new users to their website -- which it is for most non-profit organizations -- they can
easily measure this progress using the Analytics '% of New Visits" tool.'”
Check back each quarter, or better yet, add our
RSS feed
to your
reader
, to get the latest in AdWords expertise from non-profits around the globe. You can read previous summaries like this by clicking
here
or searching this blog for "Grantee best practices summary". If you've had a recent success with AdWords or Grants that you'd like to share, please visit
our discussion forum
to share with other grantees right now.
Posted by Jessica Vaughan, Google Grants Team
Search Funnels Report: Part 3 of 3
Thursday, June 3, 2010
In the
second post of this series
, we saw how Search Funnels reports help you collect powerful data with regard to how conversions take place. In this concluding post on Search Funnel Reporting, we are going to take a look at answers to some
frequently asked questions
that will help you better interpret the data to which you now have access.
"Search Funnels reports show only a subset of all of my keywords."
Search Funnels will only show keywords from which an impression or click showed up on at least one conversion path. Keywords with impressions and clicks that never occured on a conversion path will show up in the main AdWords interface, but not in Search Funnels.
"I notice repeated brand keywords on conversion paths."
There may be several reasons for this:
Awareness of your brand could be driven by other offline / online advertising.
Existing users could be searching on your organization's name, like 'Direct Relief', while new users could be searching on generic terms, such as 'earthquake relief'. You can determine which users are driving these brand keywords from Google Analytics. It will help you to know whether new or repeat visitors are converting on your website via branded keywords.
Branded keywords may be performing well for your existing services. If you have recently diversified and also started aiding 'old age homes in Armenia' besides what you are known for, such as 'aid for orphans in Armenia', chances are that conversions from your brand name may still be related primarily to aid for orphans. You can set up different conversion paths for different projects you work with.
Search Funnels reflect existing keywords, so if you have not invested sufficient keywords in the funnel, you will not see a lot of interesting funnels at work.
"How do I optimize my site to make repeat visits more efficient?"
If you know that users are visiting your website multiple times before converting, consider optimizing for this behavior by re-engaging repeat visitors to get them to convert more quickly (e.g. targeted website content, clearly stating tax exemption, other offers, etc.). This would be perfect to test using the
Google Website Optimizer
.
"What is the difference between an Assist Click and an Assist Impression?"
An Assist Click is one where the keyword was clicked on the conversion path. On the other hand, an Assist Impression is one where the keyword was shown, but not clicked, on the conversion path.
"What is the difference between the Assist Clicks and Impressions report and the Assisted Conversions report?"
Assist Clicks, Assist Impressions, Click-Assisted Conversions, and Impression-Assisted Conversions characterize how campaigns, ad groups, and keywords play an assisting role. The differences between how these are calculated include:
Assist Clicks vs. Click-Assisted Conversions
Here's an example. For a conversion path like:
keyword 1 (clicked) > keyword 1 (clicked) > keyword 2 (clicked) > conversion
Keyword 1 would earn 2 Assist Clicks, but only 1 Click-Assisted Conversion
The same definition applies for the difference between Assist Impressions vs. Impression-Assisted Conversions.
"Am I actually getting more conversions? Should I add Last Click Conversions and Assisted Conversions together?"
You are not getting any extra conversions - you are only getting as many conversions as AdWords reports. Search Funnels shows additional information about the conversions you are receiving from Google.com search ads. Assisted Conversions describe that some of the conversions you are earned today had additional ad impressions and clicks on the conversion path prior to conversion.
If you want to discuss Search Funnels in more detail, start up a discussion in the
Google Grants forum
to see how other grantees and non-profits are using these reports to better account for their traffic. Check out the
AdWords forum
to see what other advertisers are asking and talking about with regard to Search Funnels.
Part 1
,
Part 2
Posted by Reema Prasanna, Hyderabad AdWords Team
Resource round-up for May
Wednesday, June 2, 2010
May's resource round-up includes some first-hand experience from Google Grantees on what to expect from your Google Grant from set-up to tracking, a word from an SEO on their approach to our program, advice on how to make social marketing work for your org and two successful use cases of organizations promoting their cause effectively through
YouTube for Non-Profits
.
The lifecycle of a Google Grant
This grantee
explains why Google Grants was helpful for her organization and what she experienced when setting up and using AdWords. Her advice: If you’re trying to cross “the invisibility threshold” for your little-known organization, you need an effective and aggressive marketing plan just like for-profit businesses, which might include Google Grants and other online outlets.
This SEO
sums up their method for negotiating the application and account building process and how to incorporate different features to make your strategy successful.
If you’ve ever tried to weigh the benefits and intricacies of AdWords Conversion Tracking and Google Analytics to see which was a better fit for your organization, this UK web solutions company has taken the time to list
the pros and cons
.
Make social media work for your org
Having a YouTube channel for your non-profit is a good start, but if you’ve wondered what really makes a good video, take a look at these examples of
successful social media campaigns
.
If you’re familiar with
Shauna Casey
, non-profit advocate and founder of
Voluntweetup
, you will likely find
these tips
for social marketing valuable as your org embarks on its own social marketing endeavors.
YouTube is working for non-profits
(RED)
, an organization working to eliminate AIDS in Africa, recently aired a documentary on HBO to raise awareness about the true impact of their mission. Immediately following the broadcast, they posted
the video
on their YouTube channel. If your organization has similar materials, newscasts in which you’ve participated or other broadcasts, add them to your org’s
YouTube for Non-profits
channel to increase awareness about your cause.
The Global Fund
, an organization focused on fighting AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria, is hosting
a petition
on their YouTube for Non-profits channel to negotiate funds to buy treatments to stop mother-to-child transmission of HIV. If your org gathers signatures show support for your cause or make change, you could try hosting a petition on your channel to showcase the importance of your cause to potential funders and decision makers.
If you come across resources that would be useful to the greater non-profit community, feel free to post it to the appropriate topic in
the
discussion group
so that everyone can benefit. If you'd like to review previous round-ups, just click
here
and read through previous months' round-ups or search for "resource round-up" from the search box at the top of the page.
Posted by Jessica Vaughan, Google Grants Team
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