Three Ways to Invest in Your Nonprofit Brand Year-Round

November 30, 2022

Hands using a calculator beside papers, charts, and a laptop, red tint

Share This Insight

Stay Connected to Bold Thinking

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
Name*
By subscribing you agree to with our Privacy Policy and consent to receive updates.

Your team may be great at actively living your organization’s brand and its values. But do you budget for it? Steve Jobs once said, “Even a great brand needs investment and caring if it’s going to retain its relevance and vitality.” Like any valuable asset, you need to attend to your organization’s brand upkeep and relevancy.

And investing in your brand isn’t just for big companies. Strategic and savvy nonprofit and education leaders know that continuously reinforcing what differentiates their organization from others is what will ensure their brand stays fresh and evergreen.

As you budget for your next fiscal year, here are a few ways you might invest in brand upkeep:

1. Make sure your annual impact report is a stunning reflection of your brand.

Budget both the time and the money to make this a compelling piece, not just a fiduciary commitment. Some of our clients use their newly articulated values as a way of telling the story of the organization’s impact in any given year. Use consistent brand messages and visual identity. Looking at this communication through a brand lens means it can’t be hastily or frugally executed.

2. Budget both money and time every year to keep your website relevant.

It’s tempting to think “Phew! We have a new website, we’re done.” But your web presence is an alive and breathing part of your brand. It needs updating, and not just in content, but for security and new or different features. Additionally, web technology is constantly changing and accessibility rules and features are also always evolving, so it’s important to stay on top of this before it becomes an overly taxing project that gets away from you.

3. Look at your big (or small) fundraiser through a brand lens.

A comment that haunts me still was at an event I attended years ago where the attendee sitting next to me, clearly the guest of another person, leaned over and asked, “Remind me what this benefit is for, again?” Brand your event. Add signage throughout the event spaces. Tie the auction items thematically to your brand identity. Decide the one thing you want people to walk away from the event knowing about you, and leverage your brand and budget to achieve that.

Branding is not a ‘one-and-done’ activity; it requires consistent intentionality to ensure that every touchpoint reinforces your brand, or reputation, for which you want to be known. Think of it this way: you wouldn’t let a home you own fall into disrepair through neglect—it’s too valuable of an asset. The same is true of the reputation you’ve worked so hard to craft and earn.

How have you invested in your brand? Reach out to learn how Mission Minded can help you create a strategy behind your organization’s brand.

Related Insights

7 Ways Your Website Should Be Working Harder Than You Are

Webinar
Mission Minded brand guide cover: "5 Ways to Strengthen Your School's Brand Right Now"

5 Ways to Strengthen Your School’s Brand Right Now

Guide
Wooden letter tiles spelling "Fundraising" on a wood plank surface

How to Write a Compelling Case for Support: The 3-Part Formula Behind Multimillion-Dollar Campaigns

Article
Mission Minded guide cover: "How to Get Your Board on Board With Campaign Communications"

How to Get Your Board on Board With Campaign Communications

Guide