Newsletter Ideas for a Disability Nonprofit Serving Families

A good newsletter keeps families connected to your organization between visits, phone calls, and events. It does not need to be long or fancy. It just needs to be useful, consistent, and honest about what is happening in your programs.

This guide is for nonprofit staff and volunteers who want to start a newsletter – or improve one that already exists – for an organization serving adults and young adults with different abilities. Most of these ideas can be built from content you already have.

Why Newsletters Still Work for Disability Nonprofits

Social media moves fast. Posts disappear from feeds within hours. A newsletter lands in someone’s inbox and stays there until they read it or delete it. For families and caregivers of adults with disabilities, that staying power matters. They are busy. They may not check your Facebook page every week. But they will open an email that tells them something useful about their loved one’s community.

Newsletters also reach people who do not use social media at all – grandparents, guardians, support coordinators, and donors who prefer email. If your organization serves families navigating disability services, a newsletter is one of the most reliable ways to stay in touch.

Content You Can Repurpose From Your Blog

If you already publish a blog, you have a head start. Here is how to turn blog content into newsletter content without doubling your workload:

The goal is not to rewrite your blog in email form. It is to give people a reason to click through and read the full post on your website.

Activity and Program Updates

Families want to know what their loved ones are doing. Even a brief update gives them something to talk about at dinner or during a phone call. Here are formats that work well:

If your organization runs regular community activities and outings, you can tie these updates directly to your Activities and programs pages so families can learn more.

Giving Families Practical Information

The newsletters families value most are the ones that help them solve a problem or answer a question. Dedicate a section of each newsletter to something genuinely useful:

Donor and Volunteer Sections

Your newsletter likely reaches donors and potential volunteers alongside families. Include a small section for them in each issue:

Keeping It Consistent and Manageable

The biggest risk with a nonprofit newsletter is starting strong and then going silent for three months. Here is how to keep it sustainable:

If you want to talk with the Lennon’s House team about how they stay connected with families, reach out anytime.

Frequently Asked Questions

What email platform should a small nonprofit use for newsletters?

Mailchimp, Constant Contact, and MailerLite all offer free or low-cost plans for nonprofits. Choose one that your team finds easy to use – features matter less than consistency.

How do we build an email list?

Start with the families you already serve, then add a signup form to your website. Mention the newsletter at events, in social media posts, and on your For Families page. Always get permission before adding someone.

What if we do not have enough content for a monthly newsletter?

You probably have more than you think. One activity photo, one upcoming date, and one helpful link is enough for a short, valuable email. You do not need a feature article every month.

Should we include photos of participants in the newsletter?

Yes, with proper photo consent. Photos are the single most effective element in a nonprofit newsletter. Even one well-chosen image can double your open and click rates.

Can we send the same newsletter to families and donors?

Yes, as long as you include something for both audiences. A family update section and a short donor/volunteer section in the same email works well and keeps your workload manageable.


Related Lennon’s House resources