Paul Ford

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Non-profit sector

Non-profit brands exist to serve causes, not shareholders. They’re judged on authenticity, impact and transparency. The challenge is to inspire action and trust while managing scarce resources.

Behavioural signals

  • Cause-led messaging. Every touchpoint tied to mission.
  • Transparency signals. Annual reports, donation breakdowns.
  • Empathy visuals. Real people, lived experience.
  • Urgency framing. Appeals tied to crises or immediate need.
  • Community focus. Volunteers, partnerships, networks.

Expressions fit

  • Caregiver. Strongest fit. Service, nurture, protection.
  • Advocate. Rallying supporters and driving movements.
  • Familiar. Community-based organisations with local reach

Others: Visionary (global NGOs), Liberator (activist groups).

Media and channels

  • Direct mail and donor newsletters.
  • Public campaigns in TV, outdoor and radio.
  • Social media storytelling.
  • Grassroots events and fundraisers.
  • Partnerships with corporates.

What to avoid

  • Over-spending on administration without clarity.
  • Inauthentic imagery.
  • Over-claiming impact without evidence.
  • Donor fatigue from constant asks.

Summary

Non-profit branding is about trust and empathy. Energies ensure clarity of role: caregiver, advocate, or familiar presence in the community. The strongest brands combine authenticity with measurable proof of impact.

Featured brands

  • Oxfam
  • Amnesty International
  • Red Cross
  • WWF
  • Save the Children