• Cart

        0
    Have any question?
    hello@nupetank.com
    NupeTank
        • Cart

          0

      What makes a good charity website

      NupeTank Entreneurship Incubator › Forums › Make a Charity WordPress Website from scratch › What makes a good charity website

      • This topic has 0 replies, 1 voice, and was last updated 6 years, 5 months ago by Nupe Tank.
      Viewing 1 post (of 1 total)
      • Author
        Posts
      • August 19, 2016 at 1:15 pm #6437
        Nupe Tank
        Keymaster

        A lot of charities rely on voluntary funding. This funding is carefully distributed and there are often more important things ahead of a generous budget for the website.

        So how does a charity get the most out of its website? It needs to let users find out information about the charity, but the main objective of the site is to get people involved with the charity, usually resulting in the user donating money.

        In this article, we look at 8 principles that you should follow when creating a charity website.

        WHAT MAKES A GOOD CHARITY WEBSITE?

        1. A MISSION

        A quick tagline to sum up what the charity (or charitable event) is about.

        2. HOW SPONSORS WILL BE HELPING

        Let your users know what you do with their money once they sponsor. They’ll want to know how they’re making a difference to someone’s life.

        3. PHOTOS OF PEOPLE THE SPONSORS WILL BE HELPING

        Help users identify and visualize the people they’ll be helping.

        4. DONATE BUTTON

        The donate button is most likely the most important asset of a charity website so it should be prominent and obvious. This is the ultimate end goal for users.

        5. DONATIONS TO DATE

        If the website is for a specific charitable event, show how much the charity’s raised to date. Current sponsors get to see how useful they’ve been while possible sponsors can see that there are other people already helping and the campaign is active.

        6. A FUNDING GOAL

        If applicable, share your goal. Having a target gives people something to aim for.

        7. KEEP IN TOUCH

        Sponsors will want you to keep in touch as they now have a vested interested, so make sure they can. Let people sign up and send them an occasional newsletter about what the charity is up to. This will also be helpful when it comes to looking for future donations.

        8. HOW CAN PEOPLE HELP

        Donating money is the obvious way people can help, but make it clear they can help in other ways. Suggest fundraising ideas and advise how users can help promote the website and charity via other social networking sites.

        9. USE A BEAUTIFUL CHARITY WORDPRESS THEME

        Just fulfilling all the above functions isn’t enough. How beautiful your website is should also be considered as a pre-requisite. Charity WP is a Charity WordPress Theme that can do this part for you. It has all the great plugins and all the great design a Non-profit website should have.

      • Author
        Posts
      Viewing 1 post (of 1 total)

      You must be logged in to reply to this topic. Login here

      Search

      Categories

      • Blog
      • Business
      • Community
      • Design / Branding
      • eIncubator
      • Uncategorized
      • Video Lessons
      Learn How to Pronounce Words in English

      Learn How to Pronounce Words in English

      $19.99
      Learn English with me – Grammar and Phrasal Verbs

      Learn English with me – Grammar and Phrasal Verbs

      $69.00
      Learn How to Pronounce Words in English

      Learn How to Pronounce Words in English

      $19.99

      (SMS) 313 454 1584

      hello@nupetank.com

      Company

      • About Us
      • Blog
      • Contact
      • Become a Teacher

      Links

      • Courses
      • Events
      • Gallery
      • FAQs

      Support

      • Documentation
      • Forums
      • Language Packs
      • Release Status

      Recommend

      • WordPress
      • LearnPress
      • WooCommerce
      • bbPress

      NupeTank by Peter Ayala Ph.D. Powered by Naked Man Media.

      • Privacy
      • Terms
      • Sitemap
      • Purchase
      No apps configured. Please contact your administrator.

      Login with your site account

      No apps configured. Please contact your administrator.

      Lost your password?