As an advocacy leader, you know the importance of spreading your message far and wide. However, your strongest and most valuable support will often come from your local community. Whether you’re looking to find volunteers, raise funds, or spread awareness about your new campaign, your community should be the first place you start.
Of course, building strong connections within your community won’t necessarily happen just because you’re in close proximity to them. Instead, your advocacy group should play an active role in forging these connections and keeping them strong through continuous engagement opportunities.
To help your advocacy group get inspired and learn how to build stronger community inroads, this article will walk through four ways you can connect with your communities members:
Attaining strong, loyal support will require time and consistent dedication, but these tips aim to give your advocacy group ways to speed up this process by getting in touch with more people faster and in a more meaningful way. Let's get started.
To learn more about your community and spread awareness of your cause, your advocacy group should consider launching a canvassing campaign.
Traditional door-to-door and street canvassing allows your advocacy group to make face-to-face connections with members of your community. Plus, canvassing tools have advanced to the point where you can also try virtual canvassing to continue meeting with members of your community even from home.
Successful canvassing campaigns require preparation and planning. Grassroots Unwired’s canvassing tips provide some helpful insight into a few best practices you should adopt for your next canvassing campaign:
Additionally, be conscious about your volunteers’ ability to canvass certain neighborhoods. For example, volunteers will find more success canvassing communities they are familiar with and have friends and family in. By contrast, other volunteers may want to participate in your canvassing efforts but lack needed transportation. These volunteers might instead be strong candidates for your virtual canvassing program.
You can form more connections in your community by leveraging your supporters’ personal networks through peer-to-peer campaigns. Peer-to-peer fundraisers can attract attention to your advocacy group and earn additional revenue by having your supporters campaign on your behalf and by setting up individual donation pages that present their unique reasons for supporting your cause.
Peer-to-peer campaigns tend to have several moving parts and can become complicated the more volunteers you have participating. You can stay organized and set your volunteers up for success by:
This can be an especially valuable method for expanding your network as individuals will be more likely to take an interest in your campaign if someone they already trust explains why supporting your advocacy group is worthwhile. After your campaign, be sure to follow up with new donors brought in through your peer-to-peer efforts to solidify their support.
Events are fun, social opportunities for your community to come together to engage with your advocacy group. Many advocacy organizations keep a full event calendar throughout the year to continually raise funds and awareness, while also giving themselves a chance to touch base with supporters in person and reinforce their connections with them.
Hosting events can also help attract attention not just to your cause, but to your organization as a whole, especially if your advocacy group is still new in your community. These types of events should aim to draw a large crowd to attract a wide initial audience, some of whom may then become more dedicated supporters, donors, and volunteers.
Here are a few types of events you can consider hosting:
For nonprofits running advocacy initiatives, hosting events can also open the door to earning additional revenue through volunteer grants. As Getting Attention’s guide to volunteer grants explains, “Volunteer grants are just one of many types of corporate giving programs. For this one, employers provide monetary grants to organizations where their employees volunteer on a regular basis.”
In other words, volunteer grants are donations made by your volunteers’ employers after they spend a certain amount of hours working for your charitable organization. Be sure to record your volunteers’ hours and help them discover if they are eligible for volunteer grants to claim this extra source of revenue.
You can find new audiences in your community by reaching out to local businesses to host events, promote your cause, and otherwise work together to benefit both your organizations. Research businesses before reaching out to them to ensure your philanthropic interests align and that they make sense as a partner for your campaign.
Businesses can help your advocacy group in a variety of ways, including:
When entering into an agreement with a business, be sure to talk through and have a formal agreement about what the partnership will look like. This ensures that all expectations will be met, which can in turn lead to potentially long-term, mutually beneficial relationships.
About the Author:
Russ Oster, Grassroots Unwired
Russ’ first experience in the world of grassroots organizing came when he was an infant and his mother pushed him in a stroller door to door to collect signatures for the Impeach Nixon movement. Eighteen years later he embarked on his college career in Washington, DC and during that time developed a passion for campaigns and elections that started with an internship on the campaign of the first woman ever elected to Congress from the State of Virginia.
For the next 15 years Russ lived and breathed campaigns, running field operations in a wide range of races and for a number of coordinated campaign efforts. When it became obvious to Russ that the technology existed to make field efforts drastically more efficient and accountable but the solutions did not, he launched Grassroots Unwired and has worked every day since to keep GU on the cutting edge, pushing new features and enhancements to meet the needs of ever evolving grassroots organizing efforts.
Your local community will likely be your first and strongest support base. Strengthen your relationships with this key audience through regular engagement activities from canvassing and peer-to-peer campaigns to business partnerships. Good luck!