SocialNext: Ottawa Put Nonprofit and Public Sector Marketers at the Centre
Gabriel Helfant, Data Sciences giving the opening keynote - photo by Mathieu Higgins-Savidant
Marketing conferences often promise inspiration, tactics, or a glimpse at what’s next. SocialNext: Ottawa focused on something more grounded and, for many, more necessary: what modern marketing actually looks like for nonprofit and public sector organizations.
Dedicated specifically to marketers working in the public interest, the event brought together leaders from major platforms like Meta and Reddit, alongside agencies, nonprofits, healthcare organizations, advocacy groups, and public sector institutions. What connected every conversation was a shared understanding of the environment these teams operate in, one shaped by limited resources, high accountability, and the responsibility that comes with serving communities rather than markets alone.
A conference built for the public interest space
From the outset, SocialNext: Ottawa was clear about who it was for. The agenda reflected the realities of nonprofit and public sector work, where success is not measured only by reach or performance metrics, but by trust, clarity, and long-term impact.
Speakers represented a wide range of disciplines, including digital strategy, brand, social media, email, journalism, advocacy, and leadership. Many brought experience from highly regulated or publicly visible environments, which grounded the day in real-world challenges familiar to those working in government, healthcare, education, and mission-driven organizations.
Rather than presenting idealized case studies, the programming focused on the day-to-day realities of small teams, complex stakeholder dynamics, and audiences that expect transparency and accountability.
Tom Mulhern, Benevity on stage speaking to the audience - photo by Mathieu Higgins-Savidant
Trust as a central theme
Throughout the day, trust surfaced repeatedly as a defining concern. Not as a buzzword or a single tactic, but as something built over time through thoughtful communication, clear intent, and an understanding of audience context.
Conversations touched on how trust shows up across channels, from social and email to brand storytelling and community engagement, particularly as audiences grow more skeptical of polished or automated messaging. The emphasis was less on optimization and more on credibility, relevance, and consistency.
For organizations whose work directly affects people’s lives, this perspective felt both practical and necessary.
Technology with a human centre
And while AI and automation were part of the agenda, they were rarely framed as shortcuts. Instead, speakers emphasized how technology can support human work by reducing friction, increasing efficiency, and creating space for better strategic thinking.
Much of the discussion returned to voice, tone, and authenticity. How organizations adopt new tools without losing their personality. How they scale communication while remaining accountable and human. These questions felt especially resonant for nonprofit and public sector teams navigating rapid change.
Future of Online Community panel: Left: Haley Wells, seo+ Centre: Jesse Luimes, HeyOrca Right: Ben Waldmen, Gander Social - photo by Mathieu Higgins-Savidant
Looking beyond traditional marketing playbooks
SocialNext: Ottawa also stood out for its willingness to draw insight from adjacent fields. Elections, public affairs, advocacy, and journalism all featured prominently, offering perspectives on engagement and influence that extend beyond commercial marketing norms.
These examples reinforced the idea that meaningful communication is rarely transactional. It is built through participation, listening, and an understanding of how people actually seek out and evaluate information.
Creativity, care, and realism
The event made room for creativity and honesty, acknowledging that public-facing marketing work often carries emotional weight. Speakers spoke candidly about communicating with warmth and clarity, even within serious or highly regulated environments.
There was also a clear recognition of the people behind the work. The strategists, coordinators, and managers balancing public scrutiny, limited capacity, and high expectations.
Attendees taking advantage of a photo op - photo by Mathieu Higgins-Savidant
A space that felt intentional
Taken together, SocialNext: Ottawa felt deliberately designed for a community that is often underserved by traditional marketing events. It prioritized relevance over hype and connection over spectacle.
As one attendee put it, the event wasn’t just about learning something new. It was about feeling seen.
About SocialNext:
SocialNext: Ottawa is part of the SocialNext Events conference series, which brings marketing conferences to cities across Canada with a focus on nonprofit and public sector marketers. To explore upcoming SocialNext events across the country, visit SocialNextEvents.ca.