How to Reach New Audiences With Your Nonprofit’s Message

Want to reach new audiences to expand your nonprofit’s supporter base? Explore these ideas to engage with new groups of potential supporters. 

By Jay Love

Is your nonprofit looking to reach new audiences with your fundraising appeals, volunteer events, and advocacy opportunities? You’re in the right place!

Reaching new audiences is critical to growing your organization’s supporter base and fostering reliable revenue to fund your cause. In this guide, we’ve compiled a list of top ideas to help expand your reach and introduce prospective new supporters to your mission. 

The goal here isn’t that you should immediately start participating in every activity we’ve listed. Instead, browse these ideas to select a handful that would work best for your unique audience and staff capacity. 

1. Set up a giving referral program. 

Establishing a referral program for your giving opportunities incentivizes existing donors to engage with new supporters on your behalf, allowing you to leverage more extensive networks. If your nonprofit has a monthly giving or membership program, you can recruit current participants to promote the opportunity to their family members and friends. 

Offer incentives to current donors to encourage participation, such as:

  • Complimentary nonprofit-branded merchandise
  • Gift cards
  • VIP event access

Thank donors who participate in the program with a personal appreciation message and recognition on your social media pages and email newsletters. 

2. Participate in cross-blogging.

Cross-blogging opportunities require your nonprofit to partner with similar organizations to write posts for their online blog audiences. By participating in these blogging opportunities, you can introduce your mission to a new audience and show them why your organization is worthy of their support.

Reach out to other community organizations in your area, such as nonprofits or civic organizations, to ask if they’d be interested in a cross-blogging partnership. Outline the mutual benefits of this opportunity—by writing posts for your nonprofit’s blog, your partners will also be able to reach a new audience. 

In your blog posts, share engaging stories that illustrate your nonprofit’s mission. Make the stories more impactful by incorporating your unique perspective, referencing recent statistics, and including quotes from your beneficiaries. Include links to your organization’s website so readers can get more information. 

3. Engage with peer-to-peer fundraising donors. 

Peer-to-peer fundraisers allow your nonprofit’s supporters to raise money for your mission on your behalf, expanding your fundraising reach and engaging new audiences. Many organizations send a simple thank you message to new donors and leave it at that. However, we recommend actively engaging with peer-to-peer donors to show them the impact of their gifts and increase the chances they’ll become recurring donors. 

Qgiv’s peer-to-peer fundraising guide offers ideas for increasing retention by inviting new donors to:

  • Volunteer with you
  • Sign up for your email newsletter
  • Complete a survey to provide suggestions on the giving process

Asking new donors to complete a survey can be particularly effective, as you can uncover their giving motivations. While many donors likely gave to support their loved one’s peer-to-peer campaign, some may have a genuine interest in or passion for your mission. These donors are the most likely to stay engaged with your organization after the fundraiser ends. 

4. Offer valuable educational content through your website.

Whether you work in the environmental, healthcare, or community sectors, your nonprofit may have unique insights or information to share about your cause area. By featuring valuable educational content on your website, you can improve your site’s reputation and reach new audiences of visitors interested in the information you have to share. 

Filling your website with rich educational content can also improve your SEO results, increasing the likelihood of your pages appearing higher on search engines. 

Focus on educational content like: 

  • Educational courses
  • eBooks
  • Informational videos
  • Virtual webinars or panel discussions

Be sure to work with your organization’s subject matter experts (SMEs) to design your educational content and ensure its accuracy. Ask them to review your content and make updates as needed. 

5. Host community classes or workshops.

Community classes bring people together to learn a new skill or meet new friends in their area. These workshops are a valuable public service your nonprofit can provide to foster new connections and draw attention to your mission. 

Host classes that align with your nonprofit’s purpose. For example: 

  • A local animal shelter may host puppy yoga or dog training classes.
  • A local community garden nonprofit can host healthy cooking, gardening, or plant identification classes.
  • A nonprofit focused on helping community members gain technology skills can host a digital literacy workshop or coding classes.

These opportunities are also effective for engaging with various volunteers, some of whom may be new to your organization. New volunteers will be more likely to increase their involvement when your classes and workshops are fun and have interesting topics. Plus, volunteers are 66% more likely to donate to the organization they volunteer with than non-volunteers, meaning these individuals can be valuable potential donors. 

6. Collaborate with influencers.

Influencers are individuals who have large followings on online platforms like social media or blogs. They are regarded as authoritative figures on specific topics and can sway their audiences’ opinions with recommendations and endorsements. 

By working with an influencer, your nonprofit can reach its large, engaged audience to share your message and drive engagement with your involvement opportunities. Find an influencer relevant to your nonprofit’s mission to ensure their audience aligns with your existing one. For example, a nonprofit that helps fund school band programs could partner with a musician with a large TikTok following. 

Provide your influencer with the messaging you’d like them to use when discussing your nonprofit and a link to your website or online fundraising page. Also, research disclosure regulations so you comply with marketing laws.

7. Take an active social media approach.

In addition to working with an influencer, another way to engage with a wider online audience is to be more active on social media. Engage with your current audience and reach new potential supporters by following these tips: 

  • Comment on and share posts about your organization. Use social listening tools to track social media conversations about your nonprofit. Bloomerang’s nonprofit software guide highlights Buffer and Hootsuite as two social listening options. Then, engage with those posts by liking, commenting, and sharing them when appropriate. 
  • Post regularly. Use a social media scheduling platform to create posts in advance and schedule them to be published at regular intervals. For smaller organizations, posting around three to five times per week tends to be the most feasible. 
  • Host challenges with unique hashtags. Social media challenges can effectively engage your followers in fun activities and inspire them to share posts about your nonprofit with your followers. For example, you could start a #SelfiesforSeahorses challenge to encourage followers to share pictures of themselves using the hashtag to spread awareness of your organization’s sea life conservation efforts. 

When creating social media content, remember the 5 Cs of good nonprofit communications. Your messages should be clear, concise, conversational, and compelling, and they should establish a connection. Workshop your social media content with your nonprofit’s team to strike the right tone that aligns with your brand. 

8. Co-host events with community organizations. 

Partnering with other organizations in your community can offer mutual benefits. Your nonprofit can reach a new audience while providing your partners similar access to your existing supporter base.

Reach out to other organizations to see if they’d be interested in co-hosting events with your nonprofit. These organizations may include: 

  • Businesses
  • Other nonprofits
  • Civic organizations and clubs
  • Local schools and universities

With your community partners, you can host workshops, classes, silent auctions, fundraising 5Ks, festivals, chili cookoffs, or bake sales. Create branded event marketing materials for you and your partners to ensure consistent and professional branding. 

9. Host cause-merchandise fundraisers.

Branded merchandise can help your nonprofit reach prospective new donors without lifting a finger. When supporters wear or use your branded merchandise, they’ll spread awareness of your organization’s logo, colors, and other brand elements. 

Therefore, you should ensure the merchandise you create is highly visible. For example, you could sell: 

  • Branded t-shirts
  • Tote bags
  • Baseball hats
  • Mugs or water bottles
  • Bumper stickers

Promote your merchandise using social media, website, and email platforms to encourage supporters to purchase your products. You can even start a social media campaign asking supporters to share photos of them using or wearing your merchandise. Create a unique hashtag for that campaign.


As you can see, there are plenty of ways to connect with new audiences and spread your nonprofit’s message—it just takes some creativity and outside-the-box thinking. 

No matter which strategies you choose, track metrics to evaluate your progress. You can track social media engagement rates, merchandise sales, event revenue, new donor acquisition, and other relevant data points to better understand which strategies drive the most engagement among new audiences. 

Jay Love is a Co-Founder and current Chief Relationship Officer at Bloomerang.

Jay has served this sector for 33 years and is considered the most well-known senior statesman whose advice is sought constantly.

Before founding Bloomerang, he was the co-founder and CEO of eTapestry for 11 years, which at the time was the leading SaaS technology company serving the charity sector. Jay and his team grew the company to over 10,000 nonprofit clients, charting a decade of record growth.

He is a graduate of Butler University with a B.S. in Business Administration. Over the years, he has given more than 2,500 speeches around the world for the charity sector and is often the voice of new technology for fundraisers.


4 Key Lessons Nonprofits Should Learn from Businesses

Although nonprofits and businesses seem different, they share many similarities. Discover lessons nonprofits can learn from their for-profit counterparts here.

By Kyle Cannon

Although businesses and nonprofits operate in two different worlds, governed by their own unique rules, these organizations are more alike than one might initially think. Certain strategies apply to organizations in both industries—and nonprofits can experience major benefits from following in the footsteps of certain successful businesses.

To help your organization thrive long-term by building up good habits, this guide will cover four key lessons nonprofits should take from businesses. With these strategies, you’ll be well-positioned to secure loyal supporters, inspire increased generosity, and continue furthering your mission for years to come.

1. Give supporters a compelling reason to donate.

Much like a massage practice needs to convince customers to patronize its business, your nonprofit needs to give supporters a compelling reason to donate. While your organization isn’t necessarily focused on selling a specific product or service, your purpose is what supporters buy into. And it’s not enough to simply be a charitable organization—with over 1.8 million nonprofits registered in the U.S. alone, your organization needs to seriously consider how to set itself apart from others.

Here are a few tips for demonstrating that your nonprofit is deserving of support:

  • Emphasize your mission’s importance. For example, let’s say your animal shelter’s mission is to provide a second chance to animals in need by finding them loving families. You might explain that your mission is important because all pets deserve to be cared for and have a good quality of life.
  • Establish the issue you’re trying to address. Clearly outline what the issue is and why it’s important to fix it now rather than later. The animal shelter above might highlight high rates of animal abandonment in local communities and the negative impact these animals have on local wildlife to emphasize why it’s essential to rescue these animals and provide them with safe shelter.
  • Outline your impact. Explain how your nonprofit has already made a positive impact on its community. The animal shelter above might state that it has rescued over 5,000 dogs and cats since its inception and actively cares for over 300 animals at any given time.

If your nonprofit is well-established and has a base of loyal donors, research their giving motivations for key insights into why they support you. You can do this by sending out surveys or examining the data in your nonprofit constituent relationship management system (CRM). Use this information to improve the language you use around donating and make giving even more compelling.

2. Provide a positive supporter experience.

A crucial part of convincing consumers to make a purchase is the customer experience. Just think about how businesses offer generous return policies, leverage easy-to-use e-commerce platforms, and train employees to provide excellent service. Companies risk losing business when customers don’t enjoy the buying experience.

Your nonprofit can learn one key lesson from this: It’s crucial to establish a positive supporter experience that makes it easy for them to continue interacting with your organization. To that end, streamline how supporters:

  • Donate, such as by designing a responsive, mobile-optimized donation page that accepts various payment types
  • Volunteer, such as by offering a variety of volunteer opportunities that appeal to individuals with varying availabilities and commitment levels
  • Attend events, such as by creating an event page where supporters can RSVP and ensuring that your event-day check-in process is smooth and streamlined
  • Receive messages, such as by communicating with supporters regularly and through their preferred communication channels, whether that is email, social media, or something else

You may want to invest in software that helps you implement these best practices. This is also a key lesson your organization can learn from businesses—they’re not afraid to invest in tools that make their operations easier. Just as a spa might purchase massage software, your nonprofit can invest in a robust fundraising platform, nonprofit CRM, volunteer management software, or any other solution that aids you in your work.

3. Build a strong brand.

Branding is everything to businesses—it’s how they build recognition of their company and products. Just think about McDonald’s iconic golden arches or the stylized font of the Coca-Cola logo. As a nonprofit, you can follow the lead that businesses set and also focus on your branding to improve awareness for your mission.

According to MassageBook, there are two types of branding:

  • Visual. This includes your nonprofit’s logo, colors, and typography—essentially, any branding elements you can see.
  • Verbal. This refers to written choices you make, covering your mission statement, values, tone, grammar, and more.

Establish a thorough branding guide that describes how you’ll handle both visual and verbal branding elements. With the right strategy, you can help your nonprofit stand out in a sea of other charitable organizations. After establishing what your branding will look like, don’t forget to incorporate it into all of your marketing materials in a uniform manner to ensure that your audience immediately associates the material with your nonprofit.

4. Partner with like-minded organizations.

Businesses have long learned that partnerships with other organizations help them expand their reach, acquire more customers, and ultimately generate more revenue. Your nonprofit can similarly benefit from partnering with other mission-aligned organizations.

Here are a few types of organizations you should consider working with:

  • Other nonprofits. Other nonprofits with similar or adjacent missions may be happy to partner with yours to boost awareness of both your causes. For example, an environmental conservation nonprofit might work with an ocean conservation nonprofit to help the latter promote its upcoming event.
  • Foundations and grantmakers. Foundations and grantmakers provide financial support to nonprofits. To secure their support, you’ll need to undergo a grant application process and convince them that your nonprofit is worthy of their funds and will put them to good use.
  • Businesses. Corporate sponsorships aren’t limited to businesses—your nonprofit can also benefit from them! According to 360MatchPro, you can identify potential sponsors by exploring your network, researching local businesses, and using dedicated prospect research tools.

Keep in mind that a partnership should be mutually beneficial. As a nonprofit, this usually means that you’ll promote your partner’s brand, products and services, or mission alongside yours. For example, if you’re partnering with a nonprofit, you might host a co-branded awareness campaign to boost advocacy for both your causes. If you’ve acquired a corporate sponsor, you can include their branding on your event materials and specifically thank them in your end-of-event speech to help them get the word out about their brand.


And there you have it—four lessons nonprofits can take from businesses. Consider whether or not your organization is following these best practices and how you can implement them into your strategies to broaden your reach, acquire more donations, and work toward your mission more effectively.

Kyle Cannon is the product evangelist at MassageBook. He’s spent the past 8+ years developing a deep understanding of the joys and struggles massage therapists face daily, and he’s committed to helping them simplify and grow their practices every step of the way.

How to Form Mission-Aligned Partnerships for Your Nonprofit

Partnerships with organizations that share your values can yield much-needed support for your nonprofit. Learn how to find a like-minded partner in this guide.

By Casey Dorman

In 2022, 360MatchPro reports that companies donated $21 billion to nonprofits, and 88% of all public companies have Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) initiatives. Clearly, giving back is important to many businesses and their stakeholders. So, nonprofit organizations like yours should capitalize on this trend by building relationships with like-minded businesses and nonprofits.

When you look for a community partner, it’s important to choose one that aligns with your mission. For example, if you run an animal shelter, working with a pet business like a dog groomer makes sense as you both have a passion for animal welfare. 

In this guide, we’ll explore some of the simple steps your nonprofit can take to find a partner that shares your values and can provide the support you’re looking for.

What are the benefits of building community partnerships?

The most obvious benefit to a partnership is the possibility of additional funding—but these collaborations have much more to offer. Some of the other top benefits of community partnerships include:

  • Extended reach. Engage donors from audiences your nonprofit wouldn’t otherwise have. For example, working with a K-12 school will expose your nonprofit to students and school staff, as well as parents, grandparents, and other family members.
  • Access to more resources. Your partner may share more than just funding with you. Industry expertise, access to their professional network, in-kind donations, and volunteer support are just a few examples.  
  • Boosted credibility. Working with a reputable, respected organization can boost your reputation in the community. This fosters trust between you and your supporters, leading to sustainable, lasting relationships.
  • Exposure to diverse perspectives. This fuels innovation, helping your nonprofit get out of unproductive ruts. A more business-oriented approach could reveal new solutions to issues you may have wrestled with for a long time. Or, a fellow nonprofit could share some of their effective fundraising and donor engagement tips.

Working with community fixtures like beloved, decades-old restaurants or the charming local library shows that you want to connect with and serve your community. Community members will be more likely to support your organization when they know they’ll see the direct impact of your work on their town.

What are some tips for finding like-minded partners?

Expand your search to a variety of organizations.

You may think that only businesses are interested in partnering with nonprofits. While businesses are often willing to support nonprofits to further their Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) efforts, there are a variety of community-based organizations you could pair up with. Some of these organizations include:

  • Fellow nonprofits and grantmaking organizations like foundations
  • Educational institutions, including K-12 schools, universities, and libraries
  • Cultural institutions, like museums
  • Churches and other faith-based organizations

Broadening your search beyond businesses will not only give you more collaboration options but also help you reach different audiences and provide more diverse resources. These relationships are often founded on the basis of mutual support which can make the partnership more sustainable.

Perform thorough interviews.

Communication is key in a partnership, and it starts with being clear about your expectations from the start. To find a partner who shares your passion for your cause, ask questions like:

  • What are your organization’s core values or mission? Businesses (like Patagonia) often list their values on their website, but it’s still important to ask. This way you can learn what each value means to the organization and how they apply it to their practice.
  • Have you worked with nonprofits in the past? If so, can you provide examples? Seeing other organizations the prospective partner has worked with can give you more insight into the causes they care about.
  • What resources or support can you provide our organization? Get an idea of the funding or other resources the partner is willing to provide. For example, a restaurant might provide free dinners at your meal center.
  • What commitment level are you looking for in a partnership? Determine how much responsibility the partner wishes to carry in the partnership. Some partners may just want to give your nonprofit more funding and exposure while others have more capacity to go above and beyond. 

Make sure to cover more logistical questions during the interview as well, like how the partner will track impact metrics during the partnership. For example, maybe your dog rescue wants to work with local organizations to spread awareness of proper spay, neuter, and vaccination practices. A dog boarding business that uses kennel management software like Gingr could track the number of sterilized and vaccinated dogs they serve before and after the campaign.

Start small.

During your interviews with potential partners, you’ll find that not all of them are willing or able to offer you significant funding, volunteers, or in-kind resources. However, with the right stewardship techniques, smaller collaborations can grow to large-scale partnerships one day. 

For example, let’s say a pet-care business’ ultimate goal is to partner with an animal shelter to encourage people to adopt pets rather than purchasing them from stores or breeders. However, the pet-care business doesn’t have the bandwidth or resources to support a full-fledged marketing campaign. 

You could start with something simple instead. Your nonprofit could hold a dog-friendly 5K and work with a local dog daycare to support the fundraising event. In this case, the dog daycare might sponsor the event in exchange for their logo being on promotional materials. Or, they might send a few volunteers to monitor the dogs’ behavior and hand out coupons for their services. 

If this event goes well, the dog daycare might start taking on more responsibilities in future partnerships and eventually agree to support a cause marketing campaign.


Whether a partnership offers small or large-scale support, it’s crucial to always thank the partner to show how much you value them. Show your appreciation by sending them thank-you notes, calling them to express your gratitude, and sharing impact metrics. Communicating the impact of their partnership with your nonprofit will get them excited to work with you again and continue doing good work in the community. 

Casey Dorman is the Sales Manager at Gingr software. Originally from Indianapolis, Casey now lives in Colorado with his wife and dog, Dexter. His hobbies include hiking, skiing, and visiting local breweries.