Skip to content

The Arts Incubator

Manitoba and Northwestern Ontario

This year's spring arts exhibition will take place in Northwestern Ontario!
Primary Menu
  • Home
  • About
    • Artists, Collaborators And Mentors
    • Art Borups Corners
    • Winnipeg, Manitoba
    • Melgund Recreation, Arts and Culture
    • Partners, Funders and Supporters
      • Canada Council for the Arts
      • Global Dignity Canada
      • Labovitz School of Business and Economics
      • Manitoba Arts Council
      • Local Services Board of Melgund
      • Minneapolis College of Art and Design
      • Ontario Arts Council
    • Reports
      • 2023-2024 Report
      • 2021-2022 Report
    • Sustainable Development Goals (SDG) Tracker
    • Resources
      • Adaptive Phased Management
      • Entrepreneurship Resources
      • Framework for Recreation in Canada
      • Funding Programs and Sources
      • Parks for All
      • The Common Vision
  • Projects
    • Food Security
      • Manitoba: Come Eat With Me Cookbook
      • Melgund: Come Eat With Us Cookbook
      • Milkweed to Market
      • Towards a Framework for Northern Food Systems Innovation
      • Food Preservation Training and Curriculum Development
      • Relationship Development and Engagement with the Minneapolis College of Art and Design and University of Minnesota Duluth
      • Relationship Development and Engagement Activities with the University of the Arctic
      • The Art of Canning and Creative Entrepreneurship
    • Incubating Artificial Intelligence
      • Artist Bio Builder Writing Tool
      • Art Idea Generator
      • Asteroids
      • Inuit Innovators
      • Proposal Library
      • Step Inside Your Content
      • Winter City Stories
    • Media Arts and Storytelling
    • Melgund Township Oral History Project
    • Stories & Publishing Skills
      • Unfinished Tales and Short Stories
      • BL Stories. Unbound.
      • Bookstore Links
      • Spring Short Stories
      • Winter Stories
    • Youth Engagement
  • News
    • Artificial Intelligence (AI)
    • Arts & Creative Leadership
    • Borups Corners News
    • Creative Entrepreneurship
    • Food Security and Innovation
    • Photos and Short Stories
    • Winnipeg
  • Events
  • Contact
  • Home
  • Arts & Creative Leadership
  • What Silence Says
  • Arts & Creative Leadership

What Silence Says

When organizations fail to communicate — with staff, volunteers, funders, or the communities they serve — that absence becomes its own message.
Arts Incubator Winnipeg 29 May 2025
While the world moves forward digitally, many Canadian nonprofits are being left behind. The quiet struggle isn’t just about outdated websites—it’s about lacking the tools, training, and funding to keep up. For more than half of nonprofits, the gap between what’s needed and what’s possible is growing. Sometimes, standing still feels like falling behind.

While the world moves forward digitally, many Canadian nonprofits are being left behind. The quiet struggle isn’t just about outdated websites—it’s about lacking the tools, training, and funding to keep up. For more than half of nonprofits, the gap between what’s needed and what’s possible is growing. Sometimes, standing still feels like falling behind.

Communicating nothing is communicating something.

In the nonprofit sector, silence can be louder than words.

When organizations stop or struggle to communicate—whether with staff, volunteers, funders, or the communities they serve—that silence sends a message of its own. It can suggest uncertainty, disconnection, or worse, indifference. In times of challenge or change, saying nothing isn’t neutral—it risks eroding trust and weakening relationships that are often already stretched thin.

That’s why communication—clear, consistent, and human—isn’t a luxury; it’s a core part of nonprofit resilience. Even when answers are uncertain or resources are tight, reaching out matters. It signals presence, care, and accountability. It also shows that the work is happening—that people are engaged, progress is being made, and the mission is alive. In a sector built on trust and relationships, keeping the conversation going is one of the most powerful tools we have.

Too often, nonprofits under pressure also choose silence to avoid conflict, delay decisions, or wait for the “perfect” message. But perfect rarely ever comes. And in the meantime, people notice the gaps. Staff wonder what’s going on. Partners feel left out. Communities lose trust. This is compounded by the fact that 82% of fundraisers cite limited staff and resources as their biggest challenge to increase donor retention rates.

In 2021 54% of charity leaders reported lacking either the funding or the necessary skills for digital adoption. And research from 2023 showed no significant improvements. In fact, 60% of charities—up from 54%—reported they will soon struggle to do their work without better digital capabilities. 48% said they lack the necessary skills and expertise, and 62% say they don’t have the funding to make those improvements.

Good intentions don’t communicate themselves.

That’s why in our own work — as an arts- and creative leadership-focused climate entrepreneurship program — we’ve made communication and digital adoption a core part of what we do. This year, we’ve dedicated real time and energy to learning and teaching how to better use our content management systems more effectively.

As part of our arts and community internship and mentorship program, we’ve been training our board members, volunteers, and artists to use these tools. Every day, someone posts something — a photo, a reflection, a small update. It might be simple, but it’s consistent, and it keeps us connected and visible. It builds confidence. It builds trust. This consistent effort is crucial, as social media platforms algorithmically reward users that post diverse content regularly, and 94% of consumers/donors form their first impression of a brand based on its website’s design.

Artificial Intelligence and the NonProfit Sector

90% of organizations surveyed in the nonprofit, education, and healthcare sectors are leveraging AI for one or more engagement and marketing use cases, including customer engagement platform, contact center, survey platform, customer analytics, and more.  

Because communication is relationship-building. It’s how we stay accountable to the people who believe in this work. And silence — even unintentional silence — can quietly erode that trust over time. Donors and supporters want regular updates about their impact, yet only 36% of nonprofits provide them.

Those outdated or poorly designed websites also convey an impression that an organization lacks a focused, long-term strategy, undermining credibility and trust. So the next time there’s hesitation, remember: communicating nothing is still communicating something.

And if we want to lead, we have to show up — even if it’s just one small post at a time.

Canadian Innovation Week 2025

Taking place from 26-30 May, Canadian Innovation Week brings together innovators, partners, and communities from across Canada to spotlight how bold ideas are making a real impact – from local projects to global breakthroughs.

About the Author

Arts Incubator Winnipeg

Arts Incubator Winnipeg

Administrator

The Arts Incubator - Winnipeg is a participatory arts collective and living lab, based in Winnipeg, Manitoba and Northwestern Ontario. It's a space where innovation and creativity thrive. It's latest iteration was launched in 2021 with funding and support from the Canada Council for the Arts Digital Greenhouse. Today, working with students and faculty from the Minneapolis College of Art and Design, we fuse traditional and participatory media arts with artificial intelligence, music, storytelling and community-driven, land-based artist residencies to cultivate new voices and bold ideas. Whether through collaborative projects or immersive experiences, our small but vibrant community supports creators to explore, experiment, and connect. Join us at the intersection of artistry, technology, culture and community—where every moment is a new opportunity to create.

Visit Website View All Posts
Tags: SDG 11 SDG 16

Post navigation

Previous: Social Proof: Show, Don’t Just Tell!
Next: Our Place, Our Story

Related News

Come out and visit the amazing watercolour artwork of Dryden artist Tanya McArthur at the Dyment Recreation Hall Lower Level Art Space. The exhibition runs until May 17, 2026.
  • Arts & Creative Leadership
  • Photos and Short Stories

Watercolours by Tanya McArthur on Display

Arts Incubator Winnipeg 30 Apr 2026
Northwestern Ontario community arts hub grows through collaboration with Arts Incubator Winnipeg and regional funders.
  • Arts & Creative Leadership
  • Photos and Short Stories

Arts Hub Brings New Creative Space to Northwestern Ontario

Arts Incubator Winnipeg 27 Apr 2026
northern-ontario-artwork-by-leanne-nicholson-art-show
  • Arts & Creative Leadership
  • Photos and Short Stories

Wildlife, Bone & Land-Based Art from Northwestern Ontario

Arts Incubator Winnipeg 26 Apr 2026

Recent Posts

  • The Great Goose Occupation
  • Honk If You’re Home
  • Exploring the Forks
  • Winter Light
  • Soft Stitches, Strong Roots

Upcoming Exhibitions

The Art Spot Canada Under $100 Art Exhibition is coming to Winnipeg, Manitoba this August! ART SPOT was created in 2008 in Calgary to support local emerging artists.  ART SPOT has curated and facilitated over 100 successful art events, including solo exhibitions, group exhibitions, workshops, concerts, body painting competitions, markets, community events and more.

You may have missed

High ground in a garden planter provides the perfect tactical vantage point for monitoring every local passerby.
  • Photos and Short Stories

The Great Goose Occupation

Eva Suluk 2 May 2026
Canada Geese in Manitoba
  • Photos and Short Stories
  • Winnipeg

Honk If You’re Home

Jamie Bell 2 May 2026
Ancient riverbanks meet modern architecture here, creating a cultural hub where every performance feels like a homecoming.
  • Photos and Short Stories
  • Winnipeg

Exploring the Forks

Jamie Bell 2 May 2026
Tony Eetak’s breathtaking Hudson Bay photography headlines this year’s spring arts exhibition at Dyment Recreation Hall.
  • Photos and Short Stories

Winter Light

Arts Incubator Winnipeg 1 May 2026

MANITOBA ARTS PROGRAMS

This platform, our Winnipeg, Manitoba hub and programs have been made possible with support from the Manitoba Arts Council Indigenous 360 Program. We gratefully acknowledge their funding and support in making the work we do possible.

Manitoba Arts Council Indigenous 360 Program

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

The Arts Incubator was seeded and piloted with strategic arts innovation funding from the Canada Council for the Arts Digital Greenhouse. We thank them for their investment, supporting northern arts capacity building and bringing the arts to life.

Canada Council for the Arts Digital Greenhouse Logo

NORTHWESTERN ONTARIO ARTS

This platform, our Northwestern Ontario hub and programs have been made possible with support from the Ontario Arts Council Multi and Inter-Arts Projects Program. We gratefully acknowledge their funding and support in making the work we do possible.

Ontario Arts Council Multi and Inter-Arts Projects Program
Copyright © All rights reserved. | MoreNews by AF themes.