Presentation Explains the Benefits of Branding for Nonprofits
Nonprofits can focus their message, appear more professional and attract donors when they have a strong brand. These were the key points I made in a workshop at the Support Center for Nonprofit Management yesterday. The 3-hour session helped nonprofits to understand the essential steps in the branding process.
Continue readingUnited Jewish Communities (UJC) Rebrands as The Jewish Federations of North America
In an attempt to consolidate on the identity of their 60 local Jewish Federations and 400 independent network communities across the continent, the United Jewish Communities renamed itself the Jewish Federations of North America and adopted a new logo.Continue reading
Does Your Nonprofit Need A New Name?
. Two weeks ago, at seminar I conducted at the Support Center, several nonprofit participants expressed the concern that their name was holding them back from pursuing certain donor markets and they didn’t want to isolate their current donor base. Here’s how to assess your nonprofit’s name.
Continue reading70-Year-Old Relief Charity Adopts a New Name
Christian Children’s Fund recently changed its name to ChildFund International. This is a good example of how a nonprofit is adapting to changing conditions by rebranding. The new name will help to position the organization for success. It is interesting to note that they are responding to both internal and external factors:
- Changing services to reflect new constituent needs
- Adapting to the local markets to be more effective in executing their mission
- Recognizing their relationship with their funding organization (ChildFund Alliance)
I would also suspect that they realized that removing the word Christian from their name will help them appeal to a wider donor base.
And note, how they engaged employees and donors as part of the process – it’s critical to earn internal support for the brand.
Nonprofit Naming Considerations
The name of your organization can say a lot about who you are, what you do, your values and your audience. While a great name won’t guarantee a steady of stream of funds, it can help distinguish your organization in this increasingly competitive world.
Continue readingAcknowledging Sponsors Names in Programs
How do nonprofit organizations address long sponsor names in their programs?
As more nonprofits turn toward individual and corporate donors, they face the issue of how to acknowledge these contributors often in contexts that do not easily accommodate long naming formats.
Red Rooster Group recently worked with a nonprofit organization that had multiple tiers of sponsorship naming — the entire building as well as specific wings of the building, its departments and individual programs, as well as a book series — all named after people.
Their series of brochures, are typically named for their respective programs. Given that these sponsors names, some of which were quite long, had to appear in the nameplates of the various publications, a plan was needed in order to handle them appropriately.
We identified the following three considerations for addressing sponsorship names:
1. Political – how the name is treated based on the donor’s request balanced with the needs of the organization. The size of the donation, the clout and influence of the donor, and the need and fortitude of the organization will come into play.
2. Relative – the size, nature and payout of the donation relative to other contributions for that organization. It is easiest to set up this hierarchy before soliciting contributions in order to set the standards for the appropriate recognition and treatment of sponsors’ names.
3. Logistical – the practical considerations that will determine how a sponsor’s name is treated. Each media will tend to have its own limitations. Building names, for example, may require a significant capital investment and have a fairly long lifespan, while links from an online recognition can provide quick means additional information.
BRANDING: Naming Nonprofits for Impact
I recently received an email that reinforced the importance of having a strong name for your nonprofit organization. Envirolution, a website leading the revolution for environmental jobs, was launching their latest project: The Win-Win Campaign — a youth-led small business energy and carbon efficiency campaign.The name Win-Win Campaign name made me grin — how can you go wrong with a name like that? It underscores the importance of the emotional impact that a name makes when people hear it. And face it, who would you rather support, The Association of Small Businesses for Carbon Efficiency (ASMCA) or The Win-Win Campaign? (I made up ASMCA to demonstrate how most nonprofits name themselves, that is, purely descriptive and not result-oriented.)
Envirolution’s e-mail also contained the names of other groups that they work with including Always Build Green, Make Me Sustainable, Global Kinect, and Urban Go Green — all names that have an immediate appeal. Always Build Green is powerful because it is an exhortation that is easy to understand. The name Make Me Sustainable is an invitation that is hard to resist. The names Global Kinect, and Urban Go Green are short, direct and sound progressive, but it is not entirely clear what they do, making them a little less powerful.
WAKE UP CALL: Make your organization’s name compelling and it will make it that much easier to achieve your mission. Align your programs, campaigns and events around the same theme for even more impact.
Tips for Naming Nonprofits
- If possible, describe the benefit that your audience will receive.
- Use your audiences,’ not your organization’s, frame of reference when naming.
- Keep it short. If it’s refer to it by an acronym, it’s too long.
- Avoid industry jargon.
- Make it memorable by combining words in new ways to create interesting juxtapositions.
- Make sure it distinguishes your organization from others doing similar work.
- Reinforce your organizational name through the naming of your programs and sub-brands and event as well as through your logo and tagline.
Types of Nonprofit Names
A good name gives a nonprofit a running start. It can help distinguish your group from others doing similar work and inspire people around your mission. Here are several different types of organizational names.
Descriptive
The names of the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, Feed the Children, The Nature Conservancy, the Salvation Army and World Vision are prime examples of organizations whose names relate to their mission. Not surprisingly, Descriptive is the most common type of nonprofit name.
Unfortunately, there is also an abundance of descriptively named organizations that are unsuccessful. Many are bland, uninspired, and too long. In choosing a descriptive name, consider the problem you solve and the main benefits you provide, as opposed to description of the actions you take. The name needs to inspire, so consider the emotional impact, which can make a huge difference in how people feel about your organization.
Geographic
Descriptive names are often combined with the location of the organization, such as The Boys Choir of Harlem, Louisville Zoo Foundation, and the 92nd Street Y, or the area that the organization serves (the Himalayan Cataract Project). While originating as a point of distinction between other groups with similar missions, a geographic-based name can become a limitation should the organization seek to expand outside the named area.
The New York Zoological Society changed its name to the Wildlife Conservation Society in order to enlarge its mission and appeal to people outside of New York. Unless the geographic feature is the basis for the organization, or the entity will never expand, geographic-based names are best avoided.
Person’s Name
From Hale House to the Ellington Fund, founders’ or funders’ names are often used. There are advantages and disadvantages to this approach. A person’s name provides the opportunity for the organization to tell a compelling story of its founder and to galvanize people around a magnetic personality. The limitation is that the equity or good will is built up around an individual, and it may be difficult to shift it to the organization when the founder steps down. And of course, these types of names don’t describe what the organization does. Name recognition can also take time to build up, while scandal can easily roil the accumulated amity.
Since celebrities’ names are their greatest asset, naming their foundations after themselves, such as The Michael J. Fox Foundation for Parkinson’s Research, lends immediate visibility and credibility to the charity.
And as corporations increasingly step up their philanthropic endeavors, business names are becoming more commonly associated with charities (such as the Avon Walk for Breast Cancer).
And of course, large donors love to see their names on organizations. Sometimes short, such as the Getty Center, and sometimes involving the first, middle and last names of people. For the factors to consider in naming an organization or program after a donor, see the post: Sponsor Naming of Programs.
Conceptual
This type of name implies a meaning or metaphor that relates to the organization’s mission. The name Red Cross is derived from inverting the colors on Switzerland’s flag to symbolize the organization’s neutral status, which allows it to deliver aid to ravaged countries. Their immense name recognition is owed to its long and successful history (founded in 1881 by Clara Barton), simple name, and widely recognized icon, now indelibly linked to concepts of medical care.
Using a generic word as a name has both advantages and disadvantages. The name Crossroads conjures a powerful visual metaphor and is thus used by many organizations, which creates problems distinguishing between them. The organization Breakthrough, which uses popular culture and media to affect social change, also faces competition for its name, but is a bit more unique.
Combinations
One way to generate a unique name is to combine two words. KICKSTART, which builds moral character in youth through martial arts, suggests its mission in a concise, emotionally upbeat moniker that combines two generic words.
MercyCorps, a website dedicated to the spread of more open markets and the global fight against poverty, fuses common words in a new way to create a powerful name, but unfortunately, it suggests a different mission.

Coined (Made Up)
To truly achieve a unique name, you can concoct a word. George Eastman’s camera company created the word Kodak because it had hard Ks to start and finish the word, making the name sound modern. This unusual construction creates uniqueness and consequently aids memory.
In the 1980s, the technique of combining various Latin roots became common. Auto brand Acura suggests accurate. Lexus implies excellence. The pharmaceutical industry uses this technique for naming drugs. The name manufactured name Prozac helped fluoxetine hydrochloride become the best-selling anti-depression medication.
Linguistic naming techniques can be very effective, but are not commonly used in the nonprofit sector since it is expensive to generate good names this way and requires a significant investment in order to imbue the name with meaning and reinforce it for recognition.
A simpler method would be to appropriate a highly unusual word, such as a sound. Search engine Yahoo! successfully uses the sound of a joyous discovery; however, a nonprofit called KaBOOM!, which rallies people around the cause of playgrounds, belies its mission of providing a safe haven and nurturing ground for kids by employing the sound of an explosion as its name.
Foreign Words
Sometimes foreign words provide good names, particularly when they are short and sound good. Kiva, the microlending site, is a Swahili word that means “unity” or “agreement,” which works for them even if you don’t know the meaning – perhaps because the structure and two of the four letters subtly mimic the word give.
Hazon, a Jewish environmental organization, is the Hebrew word for “vision,” a concept suggesting the group’s progressive approach in engaging its audience on environmental issues, but leaving the door open to other causes. This team is slightly less successful because it does not relate to any English word, and it is unclear how to pronounce it.
Abbreviations
In the nonprofit sector, abbreviations are usually the result of a name that is too long to say easily in conversation. In these cases, the abbreviation is a bridge to a series of meaningless letters. Large organizations that have been around for more than half a century, such as IBM, AT&T, or the UJA (formally, the UJA – Federation of New York), may be known by their initials without the need to know what the abbreviation actually stands for (UJA was the United Jewish Appeal, which merged with the Jewish Federation three decades ago).
Some organizations such as AIPAC, AJWC, and HIAS are known by their initials, at least in Jewish circles, but their full names are not lost.
Some names that are abbreviated are abbreviated even further (down to one letter), such as calling your local YMCA The Y, or the Jewish Community Center, The J, not a bad proposition for poor organizations to be known so fondly by their members.
Acronyms
Carefully crafted acronyms, such as K.I.D.S. (Kids in Distressed Situations) or M.A.D.D. (Mothers Against Drunk Drivers), actually help to reinforce the name, in the first case by specifying the population served, and in the second, conveying the emotion felt by victims of drunk driving, a strong emotional appeal, often lacking in nonprofit names.
CARE, the leading humanitarian organization and originator of the CARE package benefits from a fantastic acronym that describes its mission succinctly. The conglomeration of relief agencies has become so well known that its longhand name is no longer referred to, even on its website.

