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Who Can I Add to Our Email List?

March 11, 2024 by Michael Simkins

If someone gives me their email, may we add them to our email list? Or if someone has their email on their public website, may we subscribe that address?

We all want to build our contact lists to be sure we get the word out about the great work our nonprofits are doing and how people can be involved. That said, there are legal requirements you need to know and follow.

First, it is simply a best practice, and often legally necessary, to get permission from people before adding them to your list. If you’re having a conversation with someone, ask, “May I add you to our email list?” Odds are, they will say yes. If they say no, you probably wouldn’t want them on your list anyway. The main point is don’t assume because the person happened to share their email with you for some purpose that it’s OK to subscribe them to your list.

What about those email addresses you find on an organization’s website? Clearly, the emails are there for use by the public to communicate with the organization, but that doesn’t give you permission to subscribe them to your email list. You might, however, send them a single email that explains why you think they might want to receive your emails, and include a link for them to subscribe themselves.

Even when you have permission to include a person’s email in your list, be sure each of your marketing emails (e.g. your newsletter, announcements or programs or fundraisers, etc.) includes a link for people to opt out of receiving future emails.

Resources for further information:

  • When Your Nonprofit Can And Cannot Send An Email
  • CAN-SPAM Act: A Compliance Guide for Business

Researching Local Nonprofits

February 6, 2021 by Michael Simkins

Looking for nonprofits near you? Perhaps you are thinking of starting a new nonprofit but, before you do, you want to see if there’s already one with a similar mission. Maybe you are a staff member or volunteer of an existing nonprofit and you are looking for nonprofits that complement what you do or with whom you could collaborate or share resources. Here are three online databases that can help you research nonprofits in your area—or elsewhere!

GuideStar has been around for years and provides a database of charities and nonprofits classified in the following nine groups: Arts, Culture and Humanities, Education and Research, Environment and Animals, Health, Human Services, International, Public, Societal Benefit, Religion, and that old faithful, “Other.” Each main category is broken down into various subcategories. You can search by state and city, but not by county without purchasing a subscription.

GreatNonprofits bills itself as “the leading platform for community-sourced stories about nonprofits.” Like GuideStar, you can search by geography (state and city). You can also search on a long list of issue areas from AIDS to Zika Virus. What sets GreatNonprofits apart are the individual reviews and ratings submitted by individuals who have experienced services or volunteered for various organizations.

Cause IQ provides the most sophisticated queries of these three services. Create a free account and you can search using many filters. For example, the first filter I applied was to limit organizations to those in the “San Luis Obispo-Paso Robles metro area.” That yielded 1, 845 nonprofits. Then I applied the additional filter “501(c)3.” That brought my total down to 1,465. I limited that set to “Animal organizations” which reduced my group to 53. Finally, I excluded organizations that filed a 990-N tax form (i.e. those with gross annual receipts of $50,000 or less). The result: a list of 28 animal organizations in the San Luis Obispo-Paso Robles area with 501(c)3 status and annual income of over $50,000.

Whether you’re searching nearby or afar, add these tools to your research kit.

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DISCLAIMER: Spokes offers informed advice and recommendations, not professional counsel. Blog content is current as of the date shown. Individual posts are not necessarily updated, so please confirm the accuracy of the information, especially of older posts.

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