Using Humor: 6 Reasons Why It Works

November 29, 2012 by

Woman laughing

Most nonprofits I know are terrified of using humor in their communications. We can’t be funny, this is serious stuff we’re trying to accomplish. 

Hogwash.

Executed thoughtfully, humor can be an effective form of communication. In addition to offering lots of benefits for our minds and bodies (like reducing pain and stress, and increasing relaxation), it can really move the needle on nonprofit recruiting, advocacy and awareness initiatives (and in rare cases, fundraising).

Yes, humor can misfire or worse, backfire, but so can other approaches. We test and try then learn from our mistakes. Nowhere is that easier than online communications.

(And remember, to err is human. Mistakes can be openings for deeper engagement. A prompt mea culpa can endear you to supporters.)

So, why does humor work?

1. Powerful Emotional Engagement

Humor hits us somewhere deep in inside. Brain science tells us laughter and humor release endorphins and increase oxygen to the brain, giving us an opening for persuasive messaging. Make someone laugh or smile and you immediately have their attention, which is a pretty hard thing to get these days.

Humane Society of the United States Photo Caption Contest

Humane Society LOL Seals Contest

2. Break Down Walls; Ease Fear and Tension

Ever go toe-to-toe with a stubborn kid and reach that because-I-say-so moment? Make a joke (especially one at your own expense, not theirs) and watch that impasse melt away.

How might this apply to nonprofit communications? It gives people an easy out, or a pleasant path around your mutual obstacle — think taking action, donating, awareness, caring. Make ‘em laugh and they are more likely to get past that hump and meet you half way.

3. Binds People Together

Laugh together and you create a positive shared experience. How many times have you had a conversation that went like this, “Did you see that cartoon about the election?…YES, it was so funny!” BOOM! Bond formed. That bond can be between you and your supporters.

NOTE: Never mock your supporters. Humiliate yourself instead.

Pie in the Face Fundraiser for United Way of Olmsted County

Pie in the face

4. Memorable

Funny stands out and sticks with us. Recalling something humorous makes us feel good all over again.

Sierra Club Email: Help Governor Sanford Find the Appalachian Trail

5. Freedom to Say Stuff You Couldn’t With a Straight Face

This approach can be a bit harder to pull off, but it is the bread-and-butter of successful comedians like Stephen Colbert, and of parody Twitter accounts such as @PaulRyanGosling, @DepressedDarth, @FakeAPStylebook or @BronxZoosCobra. In the nonprofit sphere, no one does this better than Left Action, which has built a one-million strong progressive activist empire on edgy, humorous campaigns. Left Action founder John Hlinko says, “This approach is so much more effective it’s CRAZY.”

Left Action Campaign

Tell Ann Coulter to Go Fukushima Herself

6. Humor Travels (Dare I say viral?)

Funny gets shared. Those joke emails have been (thankfully) replaced by shares on Facebook, Twitter, Google+ and Pinterest (check out George Takei’s Facebook Page or my For the Love of Star Wars and Political Humor Pinterest boards). We share funny, therefore we are funny. 

Got Photoshop skills? Hop on a meme like Texts from Hillary, Binders Full of Women or McKayla is Not Impressed to ride a wave of publicity.

“Let My People Vote” by Jewish Council for Education and Research (This is Sarah Silverman, so if you offend easily, don’t watch.)

Have you used humor in your nonprofit fundraising or communications? How did it go?

Woman laughing photo credit.


TOOL TUESDAY: Wordle Turns Words Into Art

September 20, 2011 by

Wordle logoHard pressed to come up with an image for your blog post or email newsletter? Try Worldle, a toy for generating word clouds from text.

  1. Go to Wordle
  2. Paste in a bunch of text, plug in the URL of a website or blog post, or enter the user name of a Delicious user (Delicious is a social bookmarking service)
  3. Make a word cloud
  4. Play with fonts, color schemes and layouts
  5. Make a screen capture
  6. Adjust size as needed in your photo editing program (if you don’t have one, read my blog post about Picnik)
  7. Upload to your blog or website

They don’t even have to be your words! Grab the text of a political speech or a news story. Word clouds are very good at instantly finding themes. Here’s the text of the press release for President Obama’s American Jobs Act made into a Wordle:

American Jobs Act Wordle

10 IDEAS FOR WORD SOURCES

  1. Print newsletter
  2. Appeal
  3. Blog post
  4. About page
  5. Press release
  6. News story
  7. Speech
  8. Staff bios
  9. Book excerpt
  10. Delicious user (see my Wordle below, based on http://www.delicious.com/karvetski)

Wordle

Be sure to browse the Wordle gallery for inspiration. Even more fun is this Google Images search for Wordles.



TOOL TUESDAY: Seriously Easy Videos With Animoto (and a nice nonprofit discount)

June 28, 2011 by

Video is awesome. Video is powerful. Video can deliver amazing results.

But it ain’t easy.
No more!
Yes, smartphones and Flip video cameras have made it easy to capture video. The gobs of videos uploaded to YouTube every minute attest to that.

But many nonprofits and businesses shy away from video because they know a good video is not just about capturing video. A good video is about telling a story and having a purpose, i.e. capturing leads, raising awareness or soliciting donations. It’s also about knowing the medium and editing your footage to create a coherent and compelling message.

Making a good video entails both storytelling and technical skills. No one wants make a bad video, so a lot of us just don’t try.

Animoto Helps You Make Stunning Videos

If you’ve got photos, you can have a good video. Very few technical skills required. Really.

Animoto is a web-based service that sets your photos to music and turns them into videos. Check it out.

Animoto thinks like a director and an editor, combining your images and music with the same sophisticated post-production skills and techniques used in television and film. The technology takes into account every nuance of a song – the genre, song structure, energy, rhythm, instrumentation and vocals.

Animoto is a tool, not a magic bullet. You still need a compelling story structure, decent photos and solid copy.

Make and share an Animoto video and I guarantee someone will ask you how you did it.

animoto logoThirty-second Animoto videos are absolutely free. Pick an animation style, choose your music, add some text, upload your photos and Animoto makes it stunning.

Pull in images from Facebook, Flickr, Picasa, Photobucket or SmugMug. When you are done, share your video easily via email or on YouTube, Facebook, Twitter, MySpace or Tumblr.

Animoto comes with about a dozen animation styles and music in a variety of genres. Paid accounts give you more options – download videos, produce videos without the Animoto branding baked in and add a link to the end of your video, a feature that’s a must if you are going to use the video to make an ask (sign up, donate, etc.).

Pro accounts with all the bells and whistles are just $249 per year, or $39/month. Click here for Animoto pricing.

Free Animoto Pro Accounts for Nonprofits & Educators

Here’s the best part – nonprofits and educators are eligible for free Animoto Pro accounts!

Here’s a video that volunteers at Amnesty International US put together recently in support of Iranian student leader and prisonor of conscience Majid Tavakoli.

To qualify, nonprofits need to submit a charity registration number and to register with a nonprofit email address, not a personal email address. The Animoto website states that it will take about 14 days to process a nonprofit application. Click here for Animoto for a Cause.

Educators must provide school, grades and subjects taught and class website/blog. Likewise, educators must submit the application using an official school email address. Click here for Animoto for Education.

I highly recommend the Animoto blog for tips and tricks, webinars and tutorials. Definitely read 5 Ways Animoto Can Help Your Cause and Animoto For A Cause 101.

If you end up using Animoto, share your video here and I’ll share it on the Company K Media Facebook page and Twitter feed.

Tool Tuesday blog posts feature products and services I’ve actually used, like and recommend to nonprofits and small businesses.



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