Nonprofit Publicity Archives - Nonprofit Hub https://nonprofithub.org/category/nonprofit-publicity/ Nonprofit Management, Strategy, Tools & Resources Tue, 30 Jul 2024 16:33:59 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.6.1 https://nonprofithub.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/cropped-favicon-1-32x32.png Nonprofit Publicity Archives - Nonprofit Hub https://nonprofithub.org/category/nonprofit-publicity/ 32 32 [PODCAST] Making the Most of Google Grants – Sean Littman https://nonprofithub.org/podcast-google-grants-sean-littman/ Fri, 09 Aug 2024 08:00:32 +0000 https://nonprofithub.org/?p=363097 The post [PODCAST] Making the Most of Google Grants – Sean Littman appeared first on Nonprofit Hub.

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Making the Most of Google Grants – Sean Littman

Everyone in the nonprofit space is talking about Google Grants and how to get one for your nonprofit organization. But how do you use a Google Grant to its fullest potential once you’ve been approved for the grant? How can you build an effective search campaign to bring people to your website? How can you convert clicks to donations? Learn about strategies and best practices for getting the most out of your Google Grant. On this episode, host Meghan Speer sits down with Sean Littman to discuss the importance of thinking outside of the box when designing an effective search campaign and the importance of prioritizing campaigns that create an effective funnel to convert clicks to donations.

Sean Littman is a nonprofit marketing strategist that brings a fully holistic approach to an organization’s marketing and digital presence. In the past 10 years, he has started several successful companies and podcasts that grew to thousands of streams per week. However, his real interest is in helping nonprofits maximize their potential on the internet. He helps nonprofits transform their new and existing email lists into profitable campaigns on a monthly basis through visual storytelling, strong content, and email funnels. He focuses on Google for Nonprofits, helping organizations take the $10k/month and turn it into real money. He’s worked with a large range of organizations both big and small to help them achieve their goals.

This episode is sponsored by:

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Elevate your fundraising strategy effortlessly! Go to donorbox.org to unlock your full fundraising potential today.

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How Automation Can Level Up Your Nonprofit Marketing Strategy https://nonprofithub.org/how-automation-can-level-up-your-nonprofit-marketing-strategy/ Wed, 17 Jul 2024 08:00:50 +0000 https://nonprofithub.org/?p=363071 The post How Automation Can Level Up Your Nonprofit Marketing Strategy appeared first on Nonprofit Hub.

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They’re out there by the hundreds, maybe by the thousands. Your potential donors. These are people who are sure to be moved by your mission. They are certain to be compelled by your cause. 

 

But they might not even know you exist.

 

Even if they do, without a clear plan to bring them from the “awareness” stage to the point where they are ready to give, these potential donors will stay in the periphery, never moving forward and taking action. 

 

The path to individual philanthropy is, of course, individual. But in most cases, it is a long journey with many touch points. Not many donors will open their pocketbooks the first time they hear about your organization — especially not for a large donation.

 

Marketing automation software lets us nurture our audience members, sending them specific messages and prompting specific actions, depending on whatever criteria we determine. 

 

Below, we’ll walk through the strategy behind marketing automation so you can see how the right software platform can help you turn a potential donor into a true ambassador for your organization.

 

Your fundraising engagement strategy

The for-profit world has long used the image of a funnel to describe a customer’s journey. The top of the funnel, where it is widest, represents the full audience — everyone who has been reached by the brand’s marketing efforts. Of those, some will move down the funnel to become contacts. Some contacts will become leads. Some leads will move down to become customers.

 

Nonprofits can use a similar funnel analogy to plan their marketing and track their engagement.

 

Imagine it like this:

​​Each section of the funnel represents a different stage in a patron’s progress. At each stage, some opt out and some move forward.

 

And just like repeat customers in the for-profit world, your relationship with each donor doesn’t end with a single donation. Some donors become true ambassadors who donate regularly, volunteer their time, and rally others to the cause.

 

Remember that it’s called a funnel for a reason. Not everyone passes from one stage to the next. There are fewer prospects than there are visitors, for example. Fewer leads than there are prospects. And, although we’ve made the “advocates” and “ambassadors” stages bigger in the diagram, that’s because of their outsized influence, not their actual numbers. Of all the stages listed, you will have the fewest ambassadors — but they are of enormous importance.

Marketing automation will let you find new donors, volunteers, and clients – and more quickly and successfully move them to action. iMission’s Ultimate Guide to Marketing Automation for Nonprofits shows you, step-by-step, how your organization can take your fundraising to a whole new level.

But for now, let’s turn our attention to the very top of the funnel and examine how each group moves into the next.

 

Visitors

First off are called visitors, but don’t just think of them as visitors to your website. These can be people who come across your content anywhere. They might like your social media posts or watch your YouTube videos, or they might come to your actual website.

 

The idea behind your marketing should be to attract as large a number of visitors as possible — at least within reason — and invite them to take a low-stakes action (think: signing up for your newsletter) in exchange for their contact information. This way, you get them to engage with your organization in a way that doesn’t feel overwhelming.

 

(However, be sure that you’re providing value and building trust from the earliest stages. Spamming an inbox or rushing them forward are certain to do more harm than good.)

 

Once you have a visitor’s contact information, you can track their behavior on your site, put them into email nurture campaigns, and keep them engaged with your organization. Once they’ve crossed this threshold, they become prospects.

 

Prospects

Some visitors will become prospects, and it’s up to your organization to determine what criteria differentiates one from the other.

 

In some cases, a visitor might opt in to becoming a prospect. Maybe they check a box saying they want to be contacted about a certain program. Maybe they download a specific resource.

 

In other cases, you can use lead scoring functions to evaluate when someone crosses over. Lead scoring works by assigning value to certain website-related actions. Once a visitor reaches a certain score, they pass from a visitor to a prospect in your contact list. For example, it might be because they visit a certain number of pages or return to your site a certain number of times.

 

Your prospects have shown that they may want to contribute to your cause, and you should communicate with them in a way that builds interest, confidence, and trust.

 

For example, if you’re a local land trust, you might send out information about a new property, or a recent trail clean-up effort. The right communication will build a strong relationship that allows the prospect to see your organization as trustworthy and vital. At this point, you’re “earning the right to ask” for them to take meaningful action in the future.

 

Leads

An engaged prospect can become a lead. A lead is someone you can compel to take a meaningful action — like making a first financial donation.

 

This is an important touchpoint, and you don’t want to get it wrong. Asking for a donation too early can destroy trust, asking too late can mean you miss your window. The key is making it easy for leads to donate on their own terms, whether they want anonymity or recognition, whether they prefer Venmo or dropping a check in the mail.

 

Engaged contacts

A single action is nice, but that’s a one-time thing. A second action means so much more.

 

Once someone donates a second time, they’ve crossed into different territory. We call these engaged contacts because they are engaged with the mission of your organization. Likely, they see your values aligning with their own, and, if you nurture the relationship, they could give repeatedly over the course of their lifetime.

 

Engaged contacts deserve an elevated level of attention.

 

With the right strategy, you can turn someone at this stage into a true advocate for your organization who spreads word-of-mouth endorsements to family and friends.

 

Advocates

Engaged contacts transform to advocates when they eagerly search for new ways to support your organization. Think of a donor becoming a volunteer, or a volunteer becoming an organizer.

 

Savvy organizations help advocates find ways to be a part of the effort.

 

Ambassadors

At this point, the relationship has reached its zenith. True ambassadors are deeply committed to your organization — spreading goodwill and rallying their networks to your mission. In many cases, they see your cause as a movement that’s deeply personal to them. 

 

Your ambassadors are your superstars. They will proudly represent you and your organization, and they are vital to your long-term growth. Remember, no marketing in the world is as powerful as word-of-mouth, and a single engaged ambassador can bring in more prospects than dozens, even hundreds of ads. 

 

With these details spelled out, let’s take another look at that funnel diagram, this time with explainer text included. 

It’s easy to think of marketing as a broad-based approach designed to spread the word about your organization. And it is, but if you only focus on top-of-the-funnel content, you’ll spread awareness while ignoring the needs of other stages of the giver’s journey. 

 

As you’re planning your marketing, use this diagram to develop nurture campaigns, social media content, reengagement efforts, and other approaches to grow your nonprofit.

 

With all that said, there are real opportunities that exist beyond and outside this funnel, as we’ve conceived it. 

 

It’s important to think creatively about how to reach that broad audience of potential donors. 

 

The promise of potential donors 

Think of those potential donors out there who have never heard of you or what you do. They are unaware of you — but you are equally unaware of them. At this point, there is no relationship. 

 

In almost all cases, the donors will learn that you exist long before you learn that they exist. This is an important, but often frustrating, point. It means despite all the data offered by digital platforms, you’ll still struggle to accurately track your reach. 

 

For this reason, it is imperative that you invest in outreach and marketing to continually put yourself in front of would-be givers.  

 

An emphasis on multi-channel marketing

To reach a diverse, multi-generational audience, you’ll need to invest in multi-channel marketing that puts your message in front of the right people in the places where they spend time. 

 

Sure, there are paid media type spots like social media and search ads, but that’s just scratching the surface. Modern nonprofit marketing is more akin to PR — organic social content, appearances on podcasts and other programs, press and media coverage, user-generated content, and more. 

 

Diverse marketing has a wide reach — and authentic marketing builds trust and fills the funnel. As you plan your strategy, think creatively about the ways a person can learn about your cause.

 

The importance of discovery platforms (i.e. social media)

When you type a question into Google, you have some idea of what you are looking for, even if it’s vague. You have some need that’s brought you there.

 

When you are on social media, you’re in a different headspace. Social media, broadly defined, is about discovery, not about searching. 

 

You’re there to scroll through and see what you find, based on your likes, your demographics, and the accounts you’ve connected with. That means you get served up a feed that includes organic content, recommended content, and ads.

 

It could be a video of your sister’s vacation, a political donation request, and pictures of a humanitarian crisis, all back to back. But that’s what you expect because you’re in a mindset to discover.

 

Marketers call social media sites discovery platforms.

 

Content that lives on discovery platforms can reach people who are in a different mindset from the search engine user. 

 

They’re pre-awareness.

 

This makes social media a goldmine for connecting to those potential donors who have no idea your organization exists.

 

The right social content can fill the top of the funnel with those elusive potential donors who have the potential to become your next ambassadors — once they learn you exist.

 

The long journey of the future ambassador

Imagine a large park in the full splendor of summer. The air carries laughter and birdsong. Huge trees dot the grassy landscape, offering shade for picnics. Those grand old trees are precious, yet they’re vulnerable to storms and insect damage.

 

If you lose that massive spreading oak tree, the park will never be the same. It will take a hundred years to grow another just as big.

 

The wise park ranger knows this — and knows that you always need to be planting new trees so that the ones to replace the big ones are not so far behind. A healthy park is full of trees, some big, some small. As one park ranger once put it, only one-quarter of your park’s trees should be in the last quarter of their lives. The rest need to be younger so that when one dies, whether big or small, its loss is not so significant. The park remains. If a park is full of late-stage trees and nothing else, the park is in peril.

 

A nonprofit with an older base of ambassadors is equally perilous. 

 

Your donor base, like the park, requires constant effort.

 

At all times, you must be working to spread awareness to the masses, bringing them into the fold. At the same time, you need to build trust with the top-of-the-funnel audience, inspire action among your prospects and leads, and guide your advocates and ambassadors to make meaningful contributions. 

 

That ambassador whose patronage is so critical to your success was once a person who had never heard of you. 

 

The right marketing plan shepherds future ambassadors through all stages of the giver’s journey, just as the park ranger plants trees today that will not offer shade for decades. 

 

Want to learn more about how marketing automation can help your nonprofit? Contact us! Or visit the link here.

About the Sponsor

iMission is a social sector marketing agency and a nonprofit technology consulting firm. We offer marketing and technology strategy consulting as well as campaign and technology implementation services. Our clients include nonprofit organizations, health and human service providers, schools, municipalities, and social enterprises.

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[PODCAST] It’s an Election Year: Now What? – Jeff Kruszyna and Joel Baugher https://nonprofithub.org/podcast-its-an-election-year-now-what-jeff-kruszyna-and-joel-baugher/ Fri, 05 Jul 2024 08:00:36 +0000 https://nonprofithub.org/?p=363035 The post [PODCAST] It’s an Election Year: Now What? – Jeff Kruszyna and Joel Baugher appeared first on Nonprofit Hub.

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It’s an Election Year: Now What? – Jeff Kruszyna and Joel Baugher

As presidential elections grow nearer, how much should your organization change your marketing strategy and how much should you keep the same? How can you make your attempts to connect with new and old donors stand out among the rush of emails, text messages, and direct mail that comes with election season? Learn about how to navigate through an election year and how to avoid common mistakes that nonprofit organizations make during this time. On this episode, host Meghan Speer sits down with Jeff Kruszyna and Joel Baugher to discuss strategies for nonprofit organizations during the election year. 

Jeff Kruszyna is a three-time Peer Choice “All Star Award” winner and a 2019 recipient of the American Association of Political Consultants’ “40 Under 40 Award” who has raised more than $100 million for Republican campaigns, political action committees, veteran support groups, Christian charities, and other conservative advocacy organizations. He has more than 20 years of experience in the areas of Republican politics, direct response strategy, fundraising, copywriting, design, donor acquisition, list selection, segmentation and analysis. 

Joel Baugher is a networker whose agency expertise spans all facets of direct mail fundraising, including creative cause concepts and program strategy, list selection and analysis, print production brokerage, and creative copywriting. He has helped grow programs into nationally-recognized institutions by routinely exceeding client growth and revenue goals. For two decades, Joel Baugher has helped guide the direct response marketing success of charitable nonprofits, Christian missions groups, political candidates, and conservative advocacy organizations.

This episode is sponsored by:

Donorbox Logo

 Don’t let managing your finances get in the way of doing good. Go to maxisbyfm.com/nonprofit for a complementary consultation today!

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[PODCAST] 4 Practices to Improve Your Storytelling – Arielle Bateman https://nonprofithub.org/podcast-4-practices-to-improve-your-storytelling-arielle-bateman/ Tue, 02 Jul 2024 08:00:18 +0000 https://nonprofithub.org/?p=363024 The post [PODCAST] 4 Practices to Improve Your Storytelling – Arielle Bateman appeared first on Nonprofit Hub.

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4 Practices to Improve Your Storytelling – Arielle Bateman

Whether it’s an interview about the life of one of the people your organization is helping or a discussion with your donors about the motivations behind their support for your cause, the ability to capture and communicate a story is crucial to the success of your organization. So how do you enhance your storytelling abilities and improve the stories that your organization tells? How can you tell the story of the present while also inviting your audience to play a role in a possible story for the future? On this episode, host Meghan Speer sits down with Arielle Bateman to discuss her 4 practices that she suggests for improving your storytelling: stay hopeful, be curious, focus on the people, and own your story. 

Arielle has worked as a nonprofit storyteller for more than 12 years in international relief, human services, and museums. Her work has spanned the donor pipeline from direct response to major gifts. As a dedicated fundraiser and communicator, she enjoys sharing stories of transformation and building relationships in the community. She loves helping people to discover their philanthropic passions and to support the work that’s closest to their heart.

This episode is sponsored by:

Donorbox Logo

 Don’t let managing your finances get in the way of doing good. Go to maxisbyfm.com/nonprofit for a complementary consultation today!

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[PODCAST] Humanizing Your Message with Influencer Marketing – Ryan Davis and Mel https://nonprofithub.org/podcast-humanizing-your-message-with-influencer-marketing-ryan-davis-and-mel/ Fri, 14 Jun 2024 08:00:24 +0000 https://nonprofithub.org/?p=362936 The post [PODCAST] Humanizing Your Message with Influencer Marketing – Ryan Davis and Mel appeared first on Nonprofit Hub.

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Humanizing Your Message with Influencer Marketing – Ryan Davis and Mel

Has your social media content felt repetitive and robotic lately? Are you and your organization looking for a way to refresh your social media content and maximize your social media presence? Influencer marketing may be the refreshment that your social media pages need. Learn how to humanize your message by tapping into the potential of social media influencers who have audiences that are interested in your organization and its purpose! On this episode, host Meghan Speer sits down with Ryan Davis and Mel to discuss the world of influencer marketing and the doors it could open for your nonprofit organization.

Ryan Davis has over twenty years experience in digital strategy for non-profit and advocacy organizations. He was the founding Social Media Director at Blue State and is the co-founder of People First. Ryan currently works with dozens of organizations across the country on influencer marketing.

Mel is a content creator who creates traveling content across several social media platforms. She has worked with several nonprofits to raise awareness about environmental issues in an effort to protect the lands that she visits and loves. She has worked with People First on several campaigns.

Get free nonprofit professional development resources, connections to cause work peers, and more at https://nonprofithub.org

This episode is sponsored by:

Donorbox Logo

 Don’t let managing your finances get in the way of doing good. Go to maxisbyfm.com/nonprofit for a complementary consultation today!

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[PODCAST] Avoiding Random Acts of Marketing – Lindsay LaShell https://nonprofithub.org/podcast-avoiding-random-acts-of-marketing-lindsay-lashell/ Fri, 07 Jun 2024 06:00:56 +0000 https://nonprofithub.org/?p=362914 The post [PODCAST] Avoiding Random Acts of Marketing – Lindsay LaShell appeared first on Nonprofit Hub.

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Avoiding Random Acts of Marketing – Lindsay LaShell

Are all of your marketing efforts worth the time and money you pour into them? How do you get the best results from your marketing campaigns and optimize the use of your resources? Learn how to break through the dead-ends of ineffective and unproductive marketing that does not benefit your organization and saps you of time and money that you could be using elsewhere. On this episode, host Meghan Speer sits down with Lindsay LaShell to discuss three of her courses that are available on the Nonprofit Hub website for you. These courses will teach you how to cut the deadweight on your marketing campaigns and spend your marketing resources more effectively through focused marketing practices and team management!

Social Media Solution – https://nonprofithub.org/social-media-solution/

Never Enough Time – https://nonprofithub.org/never-enough-time/

Get More Done: Delegation Training – https://nonprofithub.org/get-more-done-course/

Lindsay Dayton LaShell is the founder of Diamond + Branch Marketing Group, a digital marketing agency that provides strategy, content and analysis to women-owned and purpose-driven organizations. She’s passionate about using her powers and the internet as a force for good.

Get free nonprofit professional development resources, connections to cause work peers, and more at https://nonprofithub.org

This episode is sponsored by:

Donorbox Logo

 Don’t let managing your finances get in the way of doing good. Go to maxisbyfm.com/nonprofit for a complementary consultation today!

The post [PODCAST] Avoiding Random Acts of Marketing – Lindsay LaShell appeared first on Nonprofit Hub.

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Clever Ways to Boost Publicity Among Key Age Demographics https://nonprofithub.org/marketing-to-gen-z-millenials-and-boomers/ Thu, 25 Jan 2024 14:32:02 +0000 https://nonprofithub.org/?p=362204 The post Clever Ways to Boost Publicity Among Key Age Demographics appeared first on Nonprofit Hub.

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It’s Time to Take Your Publicity Strategy to the Next Level and Market to Key Age Demographics

You want to drive more traffic to your website, and you have already put the regular best practices to work. You send out newsletters and post regularly on social media. And you engage with your followers. You’re ready to take it to the next level, but how? 

Ideally, your digital marketing presence will grow steadily and consistently, even if it is slow. ‘Slow-and-steady-wins-the-race’ is a solid approach to digital marketing for long-term growth. However, you may be asking yourself whether there are any remaining levers or wheels you can maneuver to accelerate growth. There is a world full of voices out there competing for your donors’ attention.  

Other organizations may also be using best practices, so how can you get an edge? The resources and strategy ideas shared in this article center on reliable, practical steps you can take now to boost your nonprofit’s visibility and market to key age demographics.

 

1. Age Bracket: 18-35 — Resource: YouTube Shorts (and TikTok) 

Let’s say you have a YouTube channel where you post podcasts, recorded events, or informational content. You need to incorporate YouTube Shorts. Unlike the standard YouTube fair, YouTube Shorts videos are restricted to 60 seconds. Viewers interact with the content by swiping left and right between videos. This means that a significantly higher number of people (who are not even looking for your content) will land on your videos. Try to keep viewers engaged for most of the runtime. Then, the algorithm will automatically show your video to more people.  

Getting a few thousand views on a YouTube Shorts video is common. The trick is to first get audiences hooked and then to keep them engaged. A hook can be something as simple as “If you are interested in nonprofit work–you need to know this…”. Keep in mind that even if you get 100,000 views on a video, it is likely to only translate into a handful of new subscribers. Five to 10 on a good day. But if you stay consistent, picking up a few new subscribers here and there — your growth rate will be at light speed compared to what you get with standard YouTube. 

So, you’re planning to upload to YouTube Shorts? You should also consider TikTok. TikTok and YouTube Shorts go hand in hand. Both exclusively host 60-second videos with a 9X16 aspect ratio, a swipe function, and similar algorithms. If you post on one, there is little reason not to share that same content on the other and get more views. Using TikTok and YouTube Shorts is a dependable way to boost your digital presence among young adults aged 18-35. Just keep in mind that you must also tailor your content to this age group. Speak about their concerns, interests, and entertainment sensibilities. 

 

2. Age Bracket: 35-60 — Resource: Help A Reporter Out (HARO) 

HARO allows you to share your expertise (in this case, around nonprofit issues) by becoming a source that journalists and bloggers can use for their stories. If the benefits of this service are not immediately clear, think of it as a quick and straightforward way to get publicity. Position yourself as a thought leader, and build awareness around your mission. With the free membership, you receive multiple email lists full of journalist queries throughout the week. Simply specify your area of expertise on the site, scan the emails for queries relevant to your knowledge base, and then reach out to the reporters that match. People in this age group frequently visit digital news sites. The younger members also spend time on user-sourced blog sites like Medium, so do not undervalue the smaller publication venues. 

 

3. Age Bracket: 65+ — Resource: Local and Network News 

Historically, people in this age group are the most consistent in terms of giving donations. Notably, they are also big consumers of network and local news. Here, you have an opportunity to share your story with members of your community and establish a mutually beneficial relationship with local media. But to get your organization featured, you must first identify the interesting storytelling elements in its mission. Ways to do this include: 

  • Associating Your Story with Current Issues: If they impact your mission, current events can create an updraft that carries your story to greater relevance. So instead of pitching: “Local Clothing Bank Holds Drive for the Underprivileged”, you might instead find the story in: “Increasingly Unpredictable Weather Puts Pressure on Local Nonprofit to Provide Warm Clothing.”  
  • Finding Relatable Stories: Do you want your story shared in the community news? It needs to be community-oriented. If you run a food pantry, get to know your volunteers on a personal level. Understand what drives them. Listen for stories like: “89-year-old Community Matriarch Volunteers Every Friday Regardless of Weather Conditions” or “Two Caretakers of Mentally Challenged Athletes Find Love at the Special Olympics”.  

Finding relatable stories within your organization does not mean marketing your mission. Instead, it involves paying attention to the interesting residual effects of your nonprofit that are outside of your control. Because if you find something unexpected and interesting, chances are that others will, too. Learn more by checking out our blog post “Six Ways to Generate More Media Coverage This Year”. 

While maintaining a steady and consistent social media presence will always be a reliable foundation strategy, keep an eye out for innovative solutions to get a few more clicks, a few more likes, and a bit of an edge. This way, you can succeed, stand out from the crowd, and keep top-of-mind awareness with your communities and help you market to key age demographics.

 

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