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2026 is the year we go all in on nonprofit advocacy

Advocacy shouldn’t be a standalone topic, separate from the rest of running a nonprofit. It’s woven through leadership, governance, programs, finance, communications, and fundraising—whether we name it that way or not.

In the nonprofit sector, though, we often talk about advocacy in ways that don’t actually help people advocate.

And context matters. Right now, advocacy is often collapsed into lobbying, lobbying into politics, and politics into something divisive or risky. Advocacy can feel radioactive—something to avoid, handle carefully, or leave to someone else.

If 2025 was about getting our feet under us, 2026 is about braiding advocacy into our everyday practice. Here’s how we’ve been doing that…

📕 Margaret Schulte and I just published 12 Ways to Build Your Influencea 24-page booklet. Please download and share it. 

🎙 Sarah Brooks and I recently recorded a Nonprofit Radio Show episode on advocacy habits—subscribe to hear it when it drops. We talked with advocacy expert Bethany Snyder last year.

🧭 We have refreshed Powerhouse Boards, being delivered next on January 14 & 21, to make sure it includes meaningful conversation about advocacy.

📍 I’m looking forward to talking at the Tennessee Nonprofit Network Nonprofit Advocacy Summit in Nashville this February 24.

Underneath all of this work is a focus on how people actually change behavior. At its core, advocacy is about behavior change. As much as we may want people within nonprofits (and philanthropy) to engage in advocacy, people don’t change their behavior when expectations are vague or feel risky. They take action when the next step is clear, doable, and supported by their context. 

Vagueness stalls action.

When people don’t know what a next step looks like—or how risky it might be—they pause, even when they care deeply.

“Use your voice” sounds inspiring, but it leaves people with unanswered questions, and that stops progress.

When nonprofit leaders don’t engage in advocacy, it isn’t a personality flaw or motivation problem. It is a design problem. 

We can think about advocacy as behaviors and habits, not just actions.

An action is something you do once. A behavior is something you do often, because the system around you makes it possible—and expected. Actions are moments. Behaviors are patterns.

When we make this mental shift, several important things change.

That’s the promise of thinking in behaviors and habits instead of actions. Advocacy becomes practiced, shared, and built to last.

We can name what advocacy habits look like.

Advocacy habits start with practices nonprofit people already recognize:

[Download 12 Ways to Build Your Influence for specific information on these habits and the tools that support them.]

When larger advocacy moments arise, organizations are far better prepared to respond when they have advocacy habits. 

An invitation

Let’s go all in on advocacy together! Not to get specific, but we have an election coming up. Let’s…

How are you prioritizing advocacy in your work? We would love to know.

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