article thumbnail

Why email success starts with a clean subscriber list

Association Success

Nowadays, you can’t be too careful with who you communicate with online. Way back when, before the CAN-SPAM Act of 2003 , we were able to send out emails with the voracity of water coming out of a firehose. Since 2003, additional legislation regulating how businesses manage customer data has been enacted. Clean and Compliant.

article thumbnail

Best of the Web: February 2013

Association Adviser

MySpace in 2003? May 29-31, 2013 ASAE 2012 Marketing Membership & Communications Conference. Contact us today for an assessment of your current communications plans and non-dues revenue strategies. When, for instance, did social networking begin? With Facebook in 2004? With CompuServe in 1969? How about Pompeii, 79?

Georgia 60
Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

Digital Privacy Compliance for Nonprofits: The Big 3 Laws

Achieve

Regulation #1: The CAN-SPAM Act The CAN-SPAM Act was passed into US law in 2003, and it protects consumers from receiving emails that they never agreed to receive. How does the GDPR relate to US-based nonprofit marketing and communications?

article thumbnail

Association Brain Food Weekly: 3.13.20

Reid All About it

– Crisis Communications: Coronavirus Edition. Whether you intend to cancel your event or not, the coronavirus outbreak has made one thing abundantly clear: we need to be prepared to communicate to our meeting’s stakeholders. Learn how you can communicate effectively with or without a plan currently in place. 2 CMP credits.

DC 44
article thumbnail

15 Changes in the Learning Business Landscape

Leading Learning

The spread of both video and social—often in tight combination—has gone hand in hand with the widespread use of smart phones and the ever-increasing speed of mobile communication networks. The Growth of Mobile. I can’t remember the last time that happened. Most learning businesses, of course, are a long way from rising to that standard.

Course 101