For a long time, a nonprofit’s digital presence hasn’t been a “nice-to-have.” It’s the central hub for mission delivery, donor engagement, and advocacy.

Many organizations struggle with the technical and strategic foundations needed to turn a website and a few social accounts into a high-performing digital ecosystem.

The goal isn’t simply to “be online.” It’s to build reliable infrastructure, so your organization owns its narrative, protects its assets, and measures the impact of “free” digital efforts.

Here’s a practical look at the critical elements of managing a nonprofit’s digital presence — and the common pitfalls to avoid — based on my experience helping several organizations throughout my career.

If you help an organization with digital marketing and they aren’t following these practices, your first step should be getting their digital house in order.

1. Own your foundations: Domains and account control

Owning your name and your story are essential parts of a proactive online reputation management strategy and a critical aspect of managing an online entity. 

In my experience, the most overlooked risk in nonprofit digital management is the lack of direct ownership of technical assets.

A well-meaning volunteer or third-party agency often registers a domain or creates a social account using personal credentials. If that individual leaves the organization, you risk losing access to your primary digital channel — the domain you should own and control.

I’ve worked with several organizations that had to start over completely because they lacked control.

  • Domain ownership: Ensure the domain is registered in the organization’s name using a generic “admin@” or “info@” email address that multiple stakeholders can access. Set the domain to auto-renew and use a registrar that offers robust security features.
  • Website hosting and management: The organization also needs to control its website hosting and administration. Use a similar approach to the one recommended for domain ownership.
  • Social media governance: Again, use a similar process to the one described above to establish ownership of key social media channels. Grant volunteers access via delegation on individual channels rather than sharing passwords. This allows you to revoke access immediately if a staff member or volunteer moves on, protecting your brand’s voice and security.

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2. Move beyond ‘winging it’: The editorial calendar

A common mistake for nonprofits is posting only when there’s an immediate need, which is often only when making a fundraising appeal. This “broadcast-only” approach often leads to donor fatigue and low engagement.

To build a community, you need a content plan that balances stories of impact with actionable requests.

  • The 70/20/10 rule: Aim for 70% value-based content (success stories, educational info), 20% shared content from partners or community members, and only 10% direct “asks.”
  • The editorial calendar: Use a simple tool, even a shared spreadsheet, to map out your themes and individual pieces of content for the month. This ensures you aren’t scrambling for a post on Giving Tuesday, that everyone knows what’s expected of them, and that your messaging and pace of content creation remain consistent across email, social, and your blog.

3. Tracking what matters (and ignoring what doesn’t)

Data is only useful if it informs future decisions. Many organizations get bogged down in “vanity metrics” like total likes or page views without understanding whether those numbers lead to real-world outcomes.

  • Set up conversion tracking: It isn’t enough to know that 1,000 people visited your site. You need to know how many of them clicked the “Donate” button or signed up for your newsletter.
  • Behavioral analytics: Use cost-free tools like Google Analytics 4 and Microsoft Clarity to see where people are dropping off in your donation funnel. If 50% of people leave the site on your “Ways to Help” page, you may have a UX issue or a confusing call to action.

4. Optimize for the ‘mobile-first’ donor

Most global web traffic is now mobile, and for nonprofits, this is critical. Donors often engage with your content on social media on their phones and expect a seamless transition to your donation page.

  • Speed and simplicity: Fancy header videos, sliders, and bloated images slow down your site, like the nonprofit example in this article about bad website design. Less is more when speed is of the essence. Reduce friction to make your website more usable. For example, if your donation page takes more than three seconds to load or requires more form fields than necessary, you’re leaving donations on the table.
  • Payment flexibility: Incorporate digital wallets like Apple Pay, Google Pay, or PayPal. Reducing friction at the point of donation is one of the most effective ways to increase your conversion rate. Many nonprofits use third-party tools to manage donations, so keep payment flexibility in mind when choosing a payment partner.

Dig deeper: Why now is the most important time for nonprofit advertising

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Common pitfalls to avoid

Even well-intentioned nonprofits can undermine their digital presence with a few common mistakes.

Targeting ‘everyone’

One of the biggest mistakes is trying to reach everyone. A digital presence that tries to appeal to every demographic usually ends up appealing to no one. Define your “ideal supporter,” and tailor your language, imagery, and platform choice to them.

Neglecting accessibility

Accessibility is about inclusion. Ensure your images have alt text, your videos have captions, and your website colors have enough contrast for users with visual impairments. If a portion of your audience can’t interact with your site, you aren’t fulfilling your mission.

The ‘set it and forget it’ mentality

I often tell businesses to treat websites like any other business asset, and the same applies to nonprofits. Digital ecosystems require maintenance.

Links break, plugins need updates, and search algorithms change. A quarterly “digital audit” to check your site speed, broken elements, and SEO health is essential for long-term visibility.

Dig deeper: How to use Google Ads to get more donations for your nonprofit

Turning your digital ecosystem into a mission multiplier

A successful digital presence is built on the same principles as a successful mission: consistency, transparency, and clear communication. By owning your assets, planning your content, and grounding your decisions in data, you ensure that your digital ecosystem serves as a force multiplier for the people you’re trying to help.


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