APRIL 24, 20 19 YAKIM
N O T G N I H S A W A,
PEOPLE MATTER THE SIXTH ANNUAL
Welcome to the sixth annual Central Washington Conference for the Greater Good! Today, you’ll have the opportunity to network with colleagues from nonprofits, philanthropy, government, and the vibrant central Washington community. This is your day to learn, connect, and be recognized for the vital work you do in the community. Thank you for being here! Photo courtesy of Rod’s House
In Partnership With
Presented by
The Central Washington Nonprofit Network
Sponsors
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KEYNOTE SPEAKER People Matter Akaya Windwood
People matter. In our increasingly divided country, good leadership requires us to build authentic relationships with those who are both like us and who differ from us in fundamental ways. Our capacity to skillfully navigate difference while celebrating our common humanity is what is needed in order to create the world we’re all working toward. Stories are what make us human – they contain our histories, our current realities and our dreams of what will come. Central Washington is home to people native to the land and to people who have come from near and far over the course of time. Come prepared to listen to the stories of your colleagues and partners and to tell a bit of your own. Let us create a narrative and a vibrant picture of the future and take strong next steps in making that a reality. Akaya Windwood is internationally recognized for elevating the effectiveness of leadership and collaboration in the nonprofit and social benefit sectors. She is a Partner at WiseBridge and the Opportunity Collaboration, which convenes an international conference that brings together leaders working to end poverty. She is one of Conscious Company’s 30 World Changing Women of 2018 and has been a featured speaker at the Stanford Social Innovation Institute, the Aspen Institute, and the New Zealand Philanthropy Summit conferences. She received an Ella Award from the Ella Baker Center for Human Rights and is deeply committed to working for a fair and equitable global society while infusing a sense of purpose, delight and wonder into everything we do.
TABLE TALKS
“Table Talks” gives you time to talk with peers about a topic of your choice. At 11:30 am, please find a table with the topic you are most interested in discussing. Facilitators will help guide the discussions. COLLABORATION (ROOM E) Interprofessional collaboration Collective impact strategies Cross-sector collaboration Network leadership FUNDRAISING (ROOM E) Planned giving Donor fatigue Grantwriting Small shop fundraising Collaboration in resource acquisition Fund development planning Major donor stewardship
LEADERSHIP (ROOM E) Effective board operations Board recruitment Time management Fearless advocacy Centering equity across the organization Executive Director Round Table OPERATIONS (ROOM E) Raising awareness Making the arts sustainable Bold risk taking Building a healthy culture Making change happen Social media Safety and health in nonprofits 3
PEOPLE (ROOM F) Managing a broad spectrum of people Mobilizing volunteers Advocating for Equity Working with youth
COMMUNITY STORY WALL
What are you most proud of? What’s special about your place? What success do you dream about?
Your stories of pride, challenge, and success are important. They have the potential to bring people together, to inspire community celebration and innovation, and to teach those outside your community what is possible. Let’s learn how to tell our stories and better elicit stories from others. Let’s document what we are proud of, what’s special about our communities, and what success looks like in our dreams.
Together we will create a Community Story Wall that celebrates that connections and innovations of Central Washington.
Artwork by Martha C. Bean www.marthacbean.com
The Community Story Wall is inspired and staffed by leaders of IRIS, the Initiative for Rural Innovation and Stewardship based in North Central Washington (irisncw.org).
Thinking Like a Community
Lunch Spotlight by Nancy Warner
Initiative for Rural Innovation and Services (IRIS) gathers community success stories to enhance a sense of belonging, inspire action, and build community. Why is important to gather the stories of a place? What has this communities learned about how stories connect us as a community and position us for more success? How can we accomplish more together? Stop by any time during the day to contribute your story to the story wall!
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AFTERNOON PLENARY Our Story/New Story
A panel conversation with nonprofit and philanthropic leaders and you Moderated by Nancy Bacon, Associate Director of Washington Nonprofits
that lift up the dignity and self-determination of people who don’t hold power within mainstream society? How do we take care of each other? The plenary creates a space for honest discussion that invites us to reimagine how we achieve the greater good in Central Washington.
Story is a theme of the conference: Your story, our story together. How to tell your story. How to hear the story of someone else. Storytelling is important for nonprofits for a few reasons. Our stories inspire us to take action. The stories we see or hear inspire our solutions. The stories we don’t hear leave us unable to work with empathy for others. People know when their stories are not being heard, and that creates inequities that divide communities.
FEATURING
Jessica Houseman-Whitehawk, Yakima Valley Community Foundation Isabel Garcia, Office of Rural Farmworker Housing
This panel conversation is designed to move from our stories to a new story for our communities that we can write together. It invites us to explore the big questions that frame our work. How do we move from charity to community-led progress? How do we change the system while working within it? How do we move forward in ways
Nancy Sanabria, Philanthropy NW Gloris Estrella, Premera
Carmanita Pimms, The Campbell Farm Sarahi Bravo, Sharehouse
Photo courtesy of Tieton Arts & Humanities
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PROG 7:30–8:00
CD CD
8:00–8:15 8:15–9:30 9:30–10:00 10:00–11:15
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FUNDRAISING Katie Howard Making the Ask
G
H
WELLNESS
E F
11:30–12:30
Angela C. Beard Strenthening the Fundraising-Finance Relationship
Akaya Windwood Caring for Myself as I Care for Others
K
The
TABLE TALK P
12:30–1:30 1:30–2:45
W
E
COLLABORATION Debra Miller & Heather Carrie How to Build Strong Collaborations
Cecilia Gonzalez (in Spanish) Fortaleciendo Familias
REG
Laura Armstrong (facilitator) Making Space for the Voices That Know Best
CD
Get R
2:45–3:00
E
3:00–4:15 4:15–4:30
FUNDRAISING TRACK
PHILANTHROPY PLENARY
E
ACTION PLANNING
NONPROFIT MONEY: STRENGTHENING THE FUNDRAISING – FINANCE RELATIONSHIP
Angela C. Beard
GENEROSITY & GRATITUDE: THE ART OF THE ASK
There are two sides to the money equation within a nonprofit: raising it and managing it. Fundraising and finance staff work to bring in and steward the resources that nonprofits need to serve their communities. (In small organizations, these aren’t separate staffs by individuals wearing different hats, often within the same day.) The organization depends on these individuals to raise money, safeguard funds, report accurately, and comply with all regulations. However, the objectives, training, and orientation between these functions often differ. How can we improve collaboration between these two sides of an organization? How can we ensure that they work effectively and efficiently together? This session combines reflection and discussion with practical exercises to help you build or improve good working relationships between your fundraisers and your financiers, however those functions happen within your organization.
Katie Howard
The prospect of raising friends and funds to fuel your mission can be a daunting one. But it doesn’t have to be! This interactive training will help participants from big and small communities practice the skills essential to building donor relationships. Participants will leave with new confidence, skills, and tools to learn how to build authentic relationships (and will have the change to practice in the room). They will also walk away with practical and meaningful ways to put gratitude into action. This workshop is geared for people who want to improve in the face-to-face part of donor engagement and people who want to move beyond computer-generated donor communications. Katie Howard has worked in the nonprofit sector as a fundraising professional and consultant since 2000. Throughout her career, she has helped nonprofits raise more than $140 million to serve some of Washington State’s most vulnerable populations. As a self-proclaimed “outgoing introvert,” she understands the energy required to engage the community into our nonprofit missions, and she loves to help other introverts get comfortable with the relational side of fundraising.
This session is appropriate for fundraising and finance professionals, executive directors and board members from all sizes of organizations.
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Angela C. Beard has been a nonprofit practitioner, board member and scholar for more than 30 years. Presently at City University of Seattle she directs the Sanford Institute of Philanthropy. In 2013 she began teaching as an adjunct
GRAM
GISTRATION
WELCOME
KEYNOTE BREAK PEOPLE
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Meg Fallows e Volunteer Cycle
RISK LEADERSHIP
A HUNGER LEADERSHIP
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WASHINGTON CONVERSATIONS
Melanie Lockwood Herman The Risk Bow Tie
Debra Hansen Ripple Effects Mapping
David Streeter & Laura Pierce Advocacy Update
Melanie Lockwood Herman How to Keep Organizational Knowledge
Food Bank Fundamentals
Matt Fairbank & Julia Hunter DIY Nonprofit Learning
PEER CONVERSATIONS LUNCH
Ready for the Census
BREAK Innovative Service Models for Emergency Food Programs
AND GIFT BASKET DRAWING professor at Seattle University and since has taught for Seattle University and Everett Community College. Dr. Beard began her fundraising career as the grants manager for Pacific Northwest Ballet and has held leadership positions at ArtsFund, the Museum of History and Industry, the Seattle Repertory Theatre, Seattle Youth Symphony Orchestras and Cancer Lifeline. In 2011 she received her doctorate in public administration from the Robert F. Wagner School at New York University.
prácticos para ayudarlo a construir o mejorar las buenas relaciones y el servicio que ofrece con el fin de fortalecer las familias equipándose con estrategias claras y efectivas. Esta sesión es apropiada para personal que habla, entiende y lee español, como proveedores de atención médica, trabajadores sociales, proveedores de aprendizaje temprano, practicantes al servicio de niños y familias, miembros del personal de PreK-12, cuidadores, trabajadores sin fines de lucro y todos aquellos trabajadores que tienen interacción directa con la comunidad de habla hispana.
WELLNESS TRACK
This session will be presented in Spanish
Cecilia Gonzalez began working for La Casa Hogar in 2008. As the Children’s Program Coordinator, she is trained in the Foundations of Early Literacy, the Creative Curriculum for Infants and Toddlers, Preschool, and Family and Child Care, Facilitation, Conevyt, Play and Learn 101, Habilidad de Comunicación y Resolver Conflictos, and Basic Concepts of Music.
FORTALECIENDO FAMILIAS: EMPATÍA Y EMPODERAMIENTO Strengthening Families: Empathy and empowerment
Cecilia Gonzalez
El trabajar con familias y escuchar diariamente necesidades diferentes, se entiende que es agotador y puede ser el camino a la indiferencia. El ser indiferente a las necesidades de las familias y el enfoque en sus debilidades es presagio directo a la frustración y a una relación desconectada entre las organizaciones y familias. ¿Cómo podemos mejorar el servicio de una organización? ¿Cómo podemos asegurarnos de que trabajen de manera eficaz? La empatía con familias es la solución a estas barreras. Esta sesión combina la reflexión y la discusión con ejercicios
CARING FOR MYSELF AS I CARE FOR OTHERS
Akaya Windwood
Attending to our personal health and well-being is neither self-indulgent nor elitist -- it is an essential aspect of good leadership. In this session we will explore the concept of Personal Ecology -- to maintain balance, pacing and efficiency over a lifetime. We will develop tools that allow us 7
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Photo courtesy of Yakima Arboretum
to care for ourselves and our organizations, and in doing so, better serve the organizations and communities that matter to us.
community back. • Identify specific strengths and capacities of diverse partners. • Define a strategy to establish mutual awareness and mutual benefits for working toward common goals and collective vision.
Presented by Akaya Windwood (bio on page 3).
COLLABORATION TRACK
This session is designed for members of diverse community-based organizations interested in improving health and well-being in their communities.
RAINBOW HEALTH: HOW TO BUILD STRONG COLLABORATIONS
Deb Miller & Heather Carrie
Deb Miller earned her Bachelor Liberal Studies (BLS), with focus on Health Studies and Business, from Eastern Oregon University. Her early career in health care and personal passion for population health improvement led her to her current role as Executive Director at Action Health Partners, a community-based non-profit serving North Central Washington.
Nonprofits want to collaborate. But how do you get different organizations together around a shared purpose? How do you build a shared vision to address a community’s challenge? How do you draw out the stories of that community to share success and opportunity? The CDC Foundation’s Health and Well-Being for All meeting-in-a-box gives us a set of practical tools and activities designed to increase community partner engagement and cross-sector collaboration. This is a hands-on session involving dialogue and role-playing to experience the tools available to you through the Health and Well-Being for All resource.
Heather Carrie earned her BA in Law and Policy with a dual concentration in Health Policy and in Health Care Leadership from the University of Washington, and a Master of Advanced Studies (MAS) in Health Policy and Law from a joint degree program with the University of California, San Diego School of Medicine and the California Wester School of Law.
Using the lens of social determinants of health, we will demonstrate the value of cultivating diverse partners who work together in a coordinated manner to effectively address upstream barriers. You will walk away with a deeper understanding of how to promote health and balanced wellness for individuals and communities, as well as how to use this set of tools to build partnerships in your community towards deeper collaboration.
MAKING SPACE FOR THE VOICES THAT KNOW BEST
Facilitated by Laura Armstrong Jessica Houseman-Whitehawk and Cecilia Gonzalez are co-contributors
By attending this session, you will be able to:
• Explain why coordinated collaboration is necessary to address barriers to health or whatever is holding your
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How are decisions made around programming in your organization? When programs need to be shifted or redirected, how does that happen? Whose voices are centered
in those processes and how are they centered? This session will dive into traditional forms of programmatic decision-making and walk through a reflective process to help discover whether decision-making processes are in line with your values. It will offer tangible examples and methods of shifting away from traditional models into authentically hearing, valuing and responding to the voices of those participants/beneficiaries/clients/students who are ‘served’ by your organization. Terms like “positional power” and “privilege” will be discussed in this context and the group will discuss core values of relationships, trust, and honoring those who share their voice with you will also be central.
who learn about how to volunteer for your organization. • Describe how you can improve retention through motivation and celebration.
Meg Fallows has been the Volunteer Coordinator at Kadlec Regional Medical Center in Richland WA since 2004, managing more than 500 volunteers. A past President of the Washington State Society of Directors of Volunteers in Healthcare Services, in 2015 she served on the American Hospital Association (AHA) Hospital Award for Volunteer Excellence committee. Currently Meg sits on the Volunteer Advisory Council of the AHA. She holds an MBA from Pfeiffer University and is certified through the WSU Institute of Volunteer Management.
By attending this session, you will be able to: • Identify how you do or do not hear the voices of those “served” by your work or organization • Identify how your organization does or does not hear and respond to those voices • Understand the term “positional power” and where/ when you hold “positional power” • Identify small ways to begin operationalizing values for voice and key practices to honor those voices.
GET READY FOR THE CENSUS
The 2020 Census is around the corner. It matters that everyone is counted to ensure funding and representation. Be a part of a conversation about the census, what you need to know, and how you can help get out the count.
RISK LEADERSHIP TRACK PRESENTED IN PARTNERSHIP WITH NPIP
This session is designed for people in positions or roles of authority and/or decision-making within their organizations. People who want to ensure their work is responsive to what community seeks and needs and those who are open to critically thinking around their own positional authority, where they can let some of it go, and where they can wield it more equitably.
THE RISK BOW TIE: MASTERING RISK ASSESSMENT IN 5 EASY STEPS
Melanie Lockwood Herman
This workshop presents a simple-to-learn but valuable tool for gaining a deeper understanding of the troubling risks that often prevent members of your team from getting a good night’s sleep. The Risk Bow Tie is a wonderful way to get “unstuck” from worrying about risk and on a path to implementing practical preventive and responsive measures. The Wonderful World of Risk begins with an overview of risks common to many nonprofits and continues with the exploration of each risk’s underlying conditions, upside and downside consequences, and specific levers and action steps to address risk at various stages. At the end of this workshop, you’ll be eager to share what you’ve learned with the team back at your nonprofit. The session handout includes materials you can use to teach the Risk Bow Tie to others.
Laura Armstrong is the Executive Director of La Casa Hogar. Cecilia Gonzalez is the Early Learning and Parent Education Coordinator at La Casa Hogar. Jessica HousemanWhitehawk is the Program Officer, Health and Wellness, at the Yakima Valley Community Foundation.
PEOPLE TRACK THE VOLUNTEER CYCLE Meg Fallows
Nonprofits have a lot of work to do to fully achieve their missions, and they can’t do it without volunteers. Yet many nonprofits lack the resources and practices needed to effectively engage volunteers in the long term.
In a world that is fraught with danger, it is comforting to know that Melanie Lockwood Herman is holding on tight to the handlebars of the Nonprofit Risk Management Center. The Center provides training, technical assistance and informational resources to help nonprofits take a practical approach to managing risk so that they can fulfill their missions and stay out of trouble. A prolific author of a more than a dozen comprehensive (and comprehensible!) guides on various risk management topics, Melanie was named to The NonProfit Times Power & Influence Top 50 in 2018.
Come learn the key elements of an effective volunteer engagement cycle. Learn what you need to know about how to connect your organization’s mission to your volunteer program, recruit volunteers, train volunteers, support and celebration volunteers, and get feedback from volunteers when they are done. By attending this session, you will be able to:
• Articulate a clear connection between your mission and the work of your volunteers. • Name the key elements of the volunteer cycle. • Give examples of key documents or tools that your organization could put into place to strengthen your volunteer program. • Name one way you can increase the number of people
PASSING IT ON: HOW TO KEEP ORGANIZATIONAL KNOWLEDGE FROM WALKING OUT THE DOOR
Melanie Lockwood Herman
Did you know that 10,000 people retire every day in the U.S. and 20% of all workers change roles every year? If 9
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you’ve ever worried that valuable knowledge, connections, insights and know-how is at risk of walking out your nonprofit’s front (or back!) door, you won’t want to miss this workshop. Learn 7 practical steps to prevent the loss of institutional knowledge when a team member leaves your nonprofit. Leave this session equipped with helpful information you can use to develop and implement sound succession strategies to fortify your mission for the long-haul.
curing high quality donations, food banking often requires you to be an amateur accountant and a full-time janitor all at the same time. In this session we will cover the basics of food banking in Washington and provide tangible tools to help make your job easier. Feel free to come armed with your burning questions and the scenarios that you’re sure only you have encountered. Our experts will help guide you to ensure all of your clients are served with the respect and dignity we all deserve.
HUNGER LEADERSHIP TRACK PRESENTED IN PARTNERSHIP WITH NW HARVEST
This session is designed for staff and volunteers new to food banking or those who have recently moved into a new role and have questions about how to better serve their community and organization.
RIPPLE EFFECT MAPPING: HOW TO CAPTURE YOUR IMPACTS, OUTCOMES AND COMPELLING STORIES
INNOVATIVE SERVICE MODELS FOR EMERGENCY FOOD PROGRAMS
There are many ways that food banks can serve their communities that don’t involve traditional distribution models. As more people and organizations turn to food banks to feed vulnerable populations, food banks are developing more specialized approaches to serving the community. This session will cover unique models such as backpack/ weekend hunger relief programs for children, pop-up food banks, and specialized menus to meet dietary needs.
Debra Hansen
Donors, stakeholders, community members, agencies, foundations and your own board of directors are increasingly asking for the impacts and outcomes of your work. Yet identifying find those answers is challenging because of the time, cost and effort it takes. Evaluations and follow-up surveys are difficult to design, conduct and analyze and aren’t guaranteed to elicit all impacts of your program.
This session is designed for food bank staff and volunteers looking to add programing to their organization that will enable them to better serve their communities.
The Ripple Effects Mapping (REM) is an effective way to get information about your work in a participatory and visual way. This workshop demonstrates how to use mind mapping and data collection to track the “ripple effects” of a program while also engaging and energizing program participants. REM is a creative and useful technique that can involve all age levels of participants. It gathers the untold stories and exposes the forgotten or behind-thescene activities that can ripple out.
WASHINGTON CONVERSATIONS PRESENTED BY WASHINGTON NONPROFITS ADVOCACY UPDATE
David Streeter & Laura Pierce
As a board president stated: “It was great to see all of the work in such a visual way, but being able to report the successes and details back to our funder was the priceless.”
Public policies impact our ability to achieve our missions. Join us as we discuss today’s public policy issues facing the nonprofit sector. Tell us what policy issues are impacting your organization. Learn what Washington Nonprofits is working on, and help shape our agenda going forward.
This session is appropriate for people interested in evaluation and data gathering. Debra Hansen is the WSU Extension County Director in Stevens County, Washington with a program emphasis in Community and Economic Development. She designs and offers classes and workshops to local small farmers, entrepreneurs, and small businesses, but finds most enjoyment out of helping communities understand their role in creating and sustaining a healthy small business ecosystem. She chairs the statewide WA Rural Pathways to Prosperity Conference and does the marketing for the statewide Women in Agriculture Conference. Ripple Effect Mapping is an evaluation tool she helped create to explore the effects of complex programs.
David Streeter is the Director of Public Policy & Advocacy at Washington Nonprofits. Laura Pierce is the Executive Director of Washington Nonprofits. DIY NONPROFIT LEARNING
Matt Fairbank & Julia Hunter
Be the nonprofit learning expert at your organization. During this session, you will learn how to navigate and put into action the learning resources from Washington Nonprofits. You’ll hear how a nonprofit consultant implemented these resources at a nonprofit organization. Leave the session with your own curated learning plan to guide your action forward.
FOOD BANK FUNDAMENTALS
There are so many details involved in successfully running a food bank and sometimes it can feel a bit overwhelming. From the alphabet soup of government programs to se-
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Matt Fairbank is the Principal Consultant with Sageland Mediation. Julia Hunter is the Membership Manager at Washington Nonprofits.
Nonprofit Pop-Up Library
There is so much to learn when working with nonprofits. Luckily there are really helpful books and online resources to give us information when we need it! The Yakima Valley Libraries Pop-Up Library will give you one-stop-viewing on what’s current. A YVL librarian will be on hand to help you explore:
appointment with a librarian for one-on-one help at the library.)
Applying for individual and/or institutional library cards.
Lynda.com, a robust platform that features in-depth, professionally designed tutorials and full-length courses on a huge variety of topics/lessons. Library staff will demo Nonprofit Essentials, Nonprofit Management Foundations, Social Media for Nonprofits, and Creative Video for Nonprofits.
Books on topics relevant to the nonprofit sector, like grant-writing and fundraising, DIY web design, accounting and finance for nonprofits. (If you have a current YVL library card, you will be able to check these materials out on-site.) Information on the Foundation Granter Center. (While the database is only accessible on-site at Yakima Central Library, you’ll be able to see how you can set up an
Thank you to the following organizations for their photo submissions: Rod’s House Tieton Arts & Humanities Yakima Arboretum Youth Services of Kittitas County
IN GRATITUDE We would like to express gratitude to the following people for helping to plan today’s conference: Laura Armstrong, La Casa Hogar Kellie Connaughton, Yakima Greenway Quinn Dalan, Yakima Council Volunteer Attorney Services Matt Fairbank, Sageland Mediation Erin Fishburn, Columbia Basin College Jessica Houseman-Whitehawk, Yakima Valley Community Foundation Jan Jorgenson Lisa Krous and the Yakima Convention Center Sharon Miracle, Yakima Valley Community Foundation Sarah Morgan, The Memorial Foundation Diane Reim & Yakima Valley Tourism Steve Wilmes, Catholic Charities of Yakima 11
EXHIBITORS
Exhibitors are here to collaborate with you and help you achieve your mission. 3 Choices Creative Communications 501 Commons Alegria & Company, PS Allison Carney Consulting Amerigroup City U of Seattle Clifton Larson Allen Columbia Bank Human Resources and Management Solutions Incite! Consulting Group Latino Community Fund NAMI Washington Nonprofit Shield Northwest Harvest NPIP Serve Washington United Way of Central Washington Walter Clore Wine and Culinary Center Warm Beach Camp & Conference Center Washington Counts 2020 Washington Nonprofits Washington Nonprofits — Nonprofit Tools Washington State L&I (Safety & Health) Washington State Office of the Secretary of State Washington Women’s Foundation Wayfind Yakima Valley Community Foundation “The Doctor Is In” Consultant
The Doctor Is In!
Need help with communications or fundraising? Sign up for one-on-one time with these three experts. COMMUNICATIONS CORNER WITH ALLISON CARNEY Frustrated by marketing? Questions about communications? Sign up for 20 minutes of free consulting by Allison Carney, a Walla Walla-based nonprofit communications consultant. Bring your questions about social media, websites, and messaging, or even bring a piece of printed collateral to get professional feedback and insight. GET VISUAL WITH MARGARET “MEPS” SCHULTE Tell me about a project you are working on, and I’ll brainstorm with you cost-effective ways to integrate visuals — graphics, photos, and videos — to strengthen your message. Sign up for 20 minutes of free consulting by Margaret “Meps” Schulte, an artist, graphic designer, and all-around visual content expert. Meps is the founder of 3 Choices Creative Communications. TALK FUNDRAISING WITH KARI ANDERSON “The Doctor is In…Into Fundraising!” Stop by the Incite! Consulting Group booth to talk about all things fundraising. Got a board that doesn’t fundraise? Need to create a culture of philanthropy at your shop? Haven’t written a fund development plan? Want to spice up your revenue streams? Book a 20 minute consult with Kari Anderson and walk away with tangible steps to increase fundraising at your nonprofit!
WASHINGTON NONPROFITS Washington Nonprofits makes sure nonprofits have what they need to succeed. We help nonprofits learn, increase their influence, and connect to people and resources. We are Washington’s state association for all nonprofits. For more information, please visit our website and our calendar of events: www.washingtonnonprofits.org info@washingtonnonprofits.org • 855.299.2922
www.facebook.com/WANonprofits
#cwgood @WANonprofits
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