Charity and Social Media

Information on Social Media, Social Network monetization, Charity Social Media Initiatives, Major Brands, Social Trends and other widgets applications and social media resources

Social Networking/Charity Mashups November 20, 2008

Cause-Related Marketing in the Newest Social Media

In the last quarter three charity/social networking mashups have crossed my desk, each with their own distinctive tang. All three are in beta, that is, they’re works in progress. All are for-profit endeavors. All could benefit from a little ‘network effect’ love.

The network effect aka Metcalf’s Law postulates that the value of a network is proportionate to the square of the number of users. That is, a network only starts demonstrating value after reaching the critical mass described by the equation.

In other words, each of these outfits has some selling to do.

uPlej. With an approach that could probably only come from Utah is uPlej, which owes its business model as much to multi-level marketing as it does to Facebook.

Here’s how it works: you sign up as a member of uPlej and designate a charity, create your own profile, alert your personal network to your new uPlej page and UPlej dings your credit card for $4.99 a month. Of that, $4 goes directly to the charity, and the remaining $0.99 goes to uPlej’s operations and fees for processing credit cards and the like.

What’s the appeal? Well if just 4 of your friends also join uPlej, then your designated charity could receive perhaps $85 a month (more or less)! Here’s how: “The charity calculator works on the premise that each of your ‘friends’ tells just 4 people each, who tell just 4 people, and so on through 3 degrees.

“For every person you tell that visits your user page and signs up, you receive $1.00 for the cause YOU have elected to support. For every person they tell that visits their user page and signs up, you also get $1.00 for your cause, and so on through 3 degrees. Everybody that you tell that joins your network is your first degree, everybody that joins the network of anybody on your first degree (anybody that they tell), becomes your second degree, and so on. This gives you the opportunity, for only your $4.99 monthly payment, to raise a significant amount of money for your cause every month—simply by connecting with other charitable individuals.”

As I write this, you can choose from uPlej’s universe of 150 charities, a number they’re working hard to increase. uPlej is not a charity, it’s a fundraising company that uses the power of a networked downline to raise money for charities.

Just Cause. Like uPlej, Just Cause is a for-profit entity as well. But they prefer to think of themselves as a ‘for-benefit’ company, ala Newman’s Own and Peacekeeper Cause-Metics. Just Cause bills itself as “social networking with a purpose.”

Causes, individuals, and companies can all set up accounts and start talking about what their doing to make the world better, mainly through blogs. You can create or join user groups, post events, seek volunteers, donors, supporters, etc.

There’s more than 150 blogs currently being posted on the Just Cause site and about 60 nonprofits. Just Cause also publishes a magazine by the same name, expects to sponsor community events. The magazine is distributed with participating ‘city magazines’ in Seattle, Atlanta, Chicago and elsewhere. Just Cause says that the glue that holds all the pieces together is its approach to telling ‘stories.’

Do Good Channel from good2gether. The Do Good Channel is a kind of localized charity directory that allows you to search charities by type, participation, opportunities. But what really sets it apart is that it can also generates income for participating charities and enables searches that connect current news with charitable missions.

Here’s how. good2gether gives an Internet ‘widget’ to local TV, radio and newspaper media outlets. When a story is posted about, say, the crisis in Darfur, the widget points to local nonprofit resources that are working on the problem. The widget displays information in a frame on the media outlet’s website, which it can sell. If the reader clicks on one of the nonprofit links, it connects to a Do Good page where they find a profile of the pertinent nonprofit(s).

The profile or elements of the profile can be emailed, sent to Facebook, added to your calendar, etc. The profile is free to the nonprofit and relatively easy to generate. Better, the charity can sell the sponsorship of the page which it splits 65:35 with good2gether, which operates Do Good. To participate in this part of the service, the charity has to agree to charge a minimum of $100 per sponsor and limit it to no more six sponsors.

good2gether launched the Do Good Channel in Boston this month and is scheduled to add several top 10 markets per month over the next few months, including San Francisco, New York, Chicago, Houston, Los Angeles, Philadelphia, and Washington D.C.

There are elements of cause-related marketing in each of these approaches. uPlej enables a kind cause-related marketing for your personal brand, (although there’s no reason why a company couldn’t be a uPlej member too). Just Cause could certainly host a blog about your cause-related marketing campaign. The Do Good Channel in effect invites charities to connect to sponsors.
 

Social Networks Emerging as New Charity Fundraising Platforms November 20, 2008



“We’ve seen social media can be used to bring people together for all sorts of reasons; I really hope we can bring people together to do good,” said Anthony Berkman, president of BlogCatalog.com, a social blog directory on the Internet, as he launched a social awareness campaign to benefit DonorsChoose.org on May 28.

“Even better, this is a chance to find common interests within BlogCatalog.com and across the Web,” he added.

The campaign asked directory members (bloggers) to write about DonorsChoose.org and raise funds for the non-profit organization. DonorsChoose.org is a non-profit Web site that brings teachers and donors together to fund specific student projects that range from “Magical Math Centers” to “Cooking Across the Curriculum”. Any individual can search teacher proposals and fund specific projects, which are tax deductible.

“Internet social networks from MySpace to Facebook are receiving a ton of media and Internet attention, but we have yet to see an online social community come together to raise funds for a good cause,” said Anthony Berkman, president of BlogCatalog.com. “We see this as an opportunity to empower and recognize bloggers to collectively focus their blogs for good.”  

Berkman’s idea is to challenge directory members to draw attention to and raise funds for this underserved non-profit organization. BlogCatalog.com has set a goal to raise at least $25,000 for DonorsChoose.org, which is a member of the Omidyar Network.

The Omidyar Network is a mission-based organization established by eBay founder Pierre Omidyar and his wife, Pam (pictured above). Berkman said depending on the success of the challenge, BlogCatalog.com will develop a community service page to host and promote more blog events in the near future. All donations made to DonorsChoose.Org will credit the blogger.

 

New MTV series 4Real (.com) debuts November 20, 2008

Sol Guy stands next to a needle drop-box in a Downtown Eastside alley, and nods to two men dumpster-diving a few metres away.

He’s retracing a scene from an episode in his new MTV series, 4Real, in which he and Hollywood starlet Eva Mendes examine the troubled neighbourhood’s issues, from drug addiction to homelessness.

“We were picking up needles and putting them in here,” said Guy, 33, raising his eyebrows and smiling at the graffiti-covered box.

The series, which Guy hosts, kicks off tonight at 7:30 p.m. on CTV with the first of four “sneak peak” episodes. The entire series, including the Vancouver-based episode, will air in March on MTV in Canada.

In each show, a celebrity — including Mendes, Joaquin Phoenix and Cameron Diaz — travels to meet with local leaders and activists in developing countries, war zones, remote villages and slums.

Phoenix visits an indigenous tribe in the Amazon. Diaz meets a medicine man in Peru. U.K. rapper M.I.A. heads to Liberia to meet a children’s rights advocate. Hip-hop star, K’naan, visits the largest slum in East Africa with a local aid worker.

Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside seemed a good fit, said Guy.

“It’s the poorest postal code in Canada and it’s like, yo, we can do better than that as a city,” said Guy. “We have to examine collectively why that place exists, where have we failed?”

The Vancouver episode focuses on health advocate Liz Evans and her work with the Portland Hotel, which has a number of outreach programs for people in the area. While filming in October, Mendes worked in the hotel’s kitchen and joined volunteers at night, collecting used needles in alleys.

“I’ve completely been educated,” Mendes said of her experience. “We can’t look the other way, nor should we look the other way.”

Guy said the experience made him examine his own stereotypes, something he hopes the audience will also do. “I just hope that people in Vancouver recognize the beauty of the people [in the Downtown Eastside] and they’re not to be ignored.”

Josh Thome, 35, an environmental and social activist, created the series with Guy. The childhood friends, who went to elementary school together in Grand Forks, began brainstorming about the series five years ago. They spent two years travelling together before deciding on the format, then creating a pilot. Thome said he hopes the series inspires people to action. “We’ve come so far, but I feel we’re at the starting line,” Thome said in an interview Sunday.

He said the website for the show, www.4Real.com, is important to connecting the audience to issues. It includes background on the people and areas the series features and it is linked to Vancouver-based online giving group, www.givemeaning.com, so people can donate funds.

Thome said he’s particularly proud of the Downtown Eastside episode, to air in March. “It shows you don’t need to travel around the world to find inspiring leaders or issues that need addressing,” said Thome. “You can literally look outside your door.”

Fifty per cent of any profits the show makes will be given to the community leaders and groups including the Portland Hotel, said Guy. “I don’t want to find myself taking advantage of anyone,” he said. “They’re part of it too.”

Go to www.4Real.com to learn more.

4Real is an excellent original content create to generate awareness for charitable efforts.

 

Future of Giving-Donations-Technology and Charity November 14, 2008

Social Media can truly impact our worlds’ charitable initiatives. It is nice to see tools like sixdegrees.org widgets. These tools are interesting in that they allow a viral way of sharing your passion for charity and raising money. These tools however are no more than a donation tool. Donating alone in the US to charities (27% of all gdonations) is a mere $39 Billion. 50% of all charitable giving is immediately spent to raise more money for the charities. Leaving our country with $19.5 billion in charitable giving to be spent on “the cause” and all other operational expenses. Charitable giving to churches represents 32% of all ($300 Billion) charitable giving in the US. Giving is only a part of the solution. We have seen an increase in Giving year over year but there is only so much to give.

The next generation of “giving” is something that will allow consumers to be empowered to make change through their consumer actions, and drive money from COMMERCE (multiple Trillions available) to charities.

Jeff Palumbo; United Media Partners Inc.

Kevin Bacon, Charity