This blog post is part of our series on Social Media for Social Enterprise: How non-profits can earn revenue with Web 2.0.
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How your non-profit can earn revenue with Web 2.0: Part 5 - Product sales
by Alexandra Samuel – April 22, 2008 - 9:47pmHow your non-profit can earn revenue with Web 2.0: Part 4 - Fee for service
by Alexandra Samuel and Rob Cottingham – April 2, 2008 - 12:10pmThis blog post is part of our series on Social Media for Social Enterprise: How non-profits can earn revenue with Web 2.0.
How your non-profit can earn revenue with Web 2.0: Part 3 - Earning revenue with advertising
by Alexandra Samuel – April 1, 2008 - 12:59pmWelcome to the latest installment in our series on revenue sources for non-profit social media projects. Today, I'm looking at what many non-profits first think of (and often, recoil at) when it comes to earning money online: advertising.
How your non-profit can earn revenue with Web 2.0: Part 2 - Intellectual property
by Alexandra Samuel – March 1, 2008 - 10:29pmThis week, I return to the questions I recently posed about social media and social enterprise:
Social media for social enterprise: How your non-profit can earn revenue with Web 2.0
by Alexandra Samuel – January 18, 2008 - 1:12am
Social Signal has worked with many different non-profit organizations, of varying size and means, to create a variety of social media sites, of varying scale and ambition. One thing that just about every non-profit client (and most for-profit clients) ask is about the return on investment. How can non-profits assess the financial value of their social media investments? And perhaps even more fundamentally, how can they find the money to pay for sites that can be costly to build, and just as costly to run?

