Divine Integration
Social media is
just the latest way the International Fellowship
of Christians and Jews honors its leader’s
commitment to
innovation and a
multichannel approach to awareness and
fundraising.
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International%20Fellowship%20of%20Christians%20and%20Jews<%2Fa>,%20established%20in%201983%20to%20promote%20understanding%20between%20members%20of%20two%20major,%20often%20at-odds%20religions%20and%20build%20broad%20
support%20for%20Israel,%20was%20one%20of%20the%20first%20nonprofit%20organizations%20to%20devote%20a%20full-time%20position%20to%20social%20media.%0D%0A%0D%0Ahttps%3A%2F%2Fwww.nonprofitpro.com%2Farticle%2Fsocial-media-is-part-ifcjs-multichannel-integration-strategy%2F" target="_blank" class="email" data-post-id="10800" type="icon_link">
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While many nonprofits were scrambling to latch on to what the sector was lauding as the Next Big Thing, IFCJ calmly and methodically absorbed the new medium into its overall marketing, communications and fundraising strategy.
It's tempting to point to its commitment to social media as the cornerstone to IFCJ's stunning increase in contributed funds (from $50 million to nearly $100 million since 2005). While that would bring a smile to the faces of folks who are just itching to ditch direct mail and hitch their fundraising wagons to some quick, easy and seemingly cost-free star, it would be wrong and, perhaps, a matter of wishful thinking.
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Margaret Battistelli Gardner
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