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Archive for the ‘Online advocacy’ Category

Handy demographics application for Facebook Fundraisers

Posted by Bryan on January 28, 2009

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As use of online social networks continues to grow worldwide, one of the most important questions to ask is how the user profile of different sites differs – to give an indication as to whether the type of consumers you want to engage with are actually spending time there in significant numbers. In particular, fundraisers tend to be watching for growth in older user groups (at least 45+) as these tend to best match with their traditional supporter profile.

With this in mind, I spotted a handy application today that helps answer this question, at least for Facebook users – and with over 150m active users worldwide that’s often the first site considered by marketers and fundraisers. It comes from the ‘unofficial Facebook blog’ AllFacebook and is aptly named Facebook Demographic Statistics.

You simply choose the country and the age group, or groups, you’re interested in (you can compare up to 3) and the site creates a chart showing the number of active Facebook users fitting the chosen profile each day over the last month.

The chart above shows the growth in UK active users in the 60-65 and 55-59 age groups. Perhaps not age profiles typically associated with online social networking, but both apparently showing sustained growth to 157,280 and 187,705 active users respectively by 25th January this year. That’s relatively small beer compared to the 750,199 aged 45-54 and the 2,029,595 aged 35-44 – and certainly to the 6,022,786 aged 18-25. However, it does still show that Facebook is gradually attracting an increasingly mature audience.

Another application offered by AllFacebook that you might be interested in ranks the performance of Facebook Pages – which let users become ‘fans’ of their favourite brands, celebrities, places, or whatever. Facebook Pages have become an important component of social media activity for many commercial and nonprofit brands but until now it hasn’t been possible to easily compare how well your Page is performing. Now you can use the AllFacebook Pages Statistics function to see a ranking of Pages by sector (including nonprofit) number of fans and growth rate.

Top of the nonprofit pages at the moment are The Red Ribbon Army and NPR.

Barack Obama, understandably, tops the Pages polls overall, with 4,641,291 fans. While Coca-Cola comes second with 2,315,954 fans – meaning that Obama is twice as popular as Coke (and better for you too!-)

Posted in Facebook, Online advocacy, Online fundraising, Social networking, Web 2.0 | Tagged: , , , , , | 2 Comments »

Is it time for fundraisers to take Twitter more seriously?

Posted by Bryan on December 5, 2008

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I must admit that when I first trialled the microblogging service Twitter a couple of years back, it was at a time when new Web 2.0 things were appearing so fast that unless an initial bit of play revealed an application for them beyond technical interest or geeky chic then I let them pass – and so it was for me with Twitter (and Jaiku, and the recently closed-down Pownce).

However, over the last year I’ve seen more and more examples of Twitter being used by nonprofits – and I even got twittered myself (not sure that’s the correct term) when speaking at the IFC over in Holland earlier this year. So I was wondering, perhaps it is time for those fundraisers who have to-date left the tweets to the early adopters with time on their hands to take twitter seriously as a potential addition to their digital toolkit?

Looking around the web, there is no doubt that a lot of organisations are making use of the service to share information with supporters. In the US, nonprofits like The American Red Cross (2,923 followers, 482 updates), Greenpeace USA (679 followers, 106 updates), The Humane Society (451 followers, 229 updates), and many more now use it to some degree.

And here in the UK several charities have also been testing it over the last year or so. Animal Welfare charity The Dogs Trust (438 followers and 688 updates) uses it to share information with supporters and other dog lovers on such things as its response to the Dangerous Dogs Act, and also to promote dogs requiring rehoming. Oxfam is using it too (462 followers and 102 updates), and Bullying UK launched a twitter-based campaign back in October (347 followers and 795 updates).

Beyond just digital updates, US charities registered with Network for Good can now also raise money through Tweet for Good, which allows Twitter users to make donations to an organisation or cause via a Tweet, and there are also a growing number of examples of organisations and individuals using Twitter to fundraise from their Twitter networks – with one of the latest being mentioned by Beth Kanter in her post ‘If Your Organisation Tweets it, will they donate?’.

It seems pretty clear that if you have a digitally-savvy audience then you can potentially enhance your supporter engagement programme with Twitter. Indeed, if you have the right type of content then the real-time, short-text nature of Twitter can make for a uniquely engaging and ‘authentic’ form of communication. As I write this, I’ve been following the activity of some Oxfam activists over at the UN Climate Change Conference in Poznan through their Twitter feed, and it really does work as a way to ‘connect’ me with their minute-by-minute activity.

However, the big question remains. When even an organisation the scale of the American Red Cross currently only has 2,923 Twitter ‘followers’, just how high should Twitter rank on the to-do list of fundraisers?

Well, quite possibly higher than you think.

Because the key thing to remember is what we don’t see when we check the number of followers the Red Cross has on Twitter is just how many people each of those has in their own wider personal networks, and just what that means in terms of amplifying the messages being sent to them.

Those 2,923 individuals are engaged enough to allow The Red Cross to broadcast information into their Twitter feeds whenever the organisation has something to say. This isn’t a case of worrying whether you can send one or two emails a week to a supporter. If you have something really important happening – like Oxfam’s activity at the Climate Change Conference – then you can broadcast updates every few minutes if necessary! And your ‘followers’ will read them because they are especially interested in the work that you do – and if you truly enthuse them then they will pass key messages on through their own networks when asked to – including requests for support.

Now, I’m not saying that this makes Twitter an easy way for charities to build new online communities of supporters and make money from them. It’s just as easy to block a Twitter feed as it is to become a follower – so if you abuse the trust that an individual has placed in you when they give you free reign to communicate with them through Twitter then they’ll be gone pretty fast.

However, if when you use it you abide by my oft-repeated mantra “The future of fundraising is to stop interrupting what people are interested in and be what people are interested in” then I believe Twitter could well have a growing role to play in your online fundraising programme.

For some initial guidance on best practice if you want to think more about the possible application of Twitter, then take a look at Sarah Marchetti’s post on the Ogilvy PR Blog (and thanks to Rick for pointing me there, via a Tweet).

Posted in Fundraising, Online advocacy, Online fundraising, Social networking, Web 2.0 | Tagged: , , , | 4 Comments »

Great community-building ideas from the 2008 Groundswell Awards

Posted by Bryan on November 2, 2008

Last week saw announcement of the winners of the 2008 Forrester Groundswell Awards, crediting some the year’s most effective corporate and nonprofit users of social media.

Divided into eight categories – Listening; Talking; Energizing; Supporting; Embracing; Managing; Social Impact; and Company Transformation – the winners provide a rich source of ideas and inspiration of how social media can be used to achieve consumer engagement that in turn delivers a significant, measurable business or organisational benefit. If you’re currently using social media to engage with supporters, or considering it for the future, then it’s well worth you taking a close look at the campaigns that won – and were shortlisted – to see what ideas they might give you.

For example, winner in the Energizing category was the Hershey’s Bliss Chocolate Party. Run by a word of mouth marketing agency specialising in the use of social media to get consumers to host branded house parties, this comprised 10,000 parties involving 129,000 people in support of the launch of a new Hershey’s chocolate line. Take a look at the House Party site and home page of the Hershey’s party community for some great ideas that any fundraiser looking to build integrated online-offline communities of supporters around a national event can learn from. It’s not that the use of technology is especially advanced (so no virtual parties in Second Life), just using the basics to great effect in terms of engagement, resourcing, use of consumer-generated content, and brand messaging.

Some great work by the Brooklyn Museum too, including the creation of a community curated exhibition, and from Starbucks with MyStarbucksIdea.com.

Posted in Online advocacy, Online fundraising, Social networking, Sponsored events, Web 2.0 | Tagged: , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

What is the future for membership organisations within our networked society?

Posted by Bryan on September 7, 2008

If you’ve read any of my earlier posts about the future of fundraising and the importance of understanding how relationships between consumers and brands (both commercial and non-profit) are evolving, then you’ll already have come across the concept of the ‘networked society’. Where consumers are free, in ways unimagined by previous generations, to choose their own personalised networks of connections and influences in place of traditional sources of information and authority.

The internet is clearly a key facilitator of this, but the societal changes that underpin it actually began long before we had the World Wide Web – resulting from the new wealth of opportunities and expectations that came with the dissolution of traditional social constraints such as class, gender, and ethnicity; along with the richer world view that came with global media access, increased education levels, and widening opportunities for travel.

With these changes has come significantly increased consumer sophistication and, as a result, increasing mistrust and cynicism with regard to traditional marketing and fundraising communications. Consumers are increasingly looking for alternative sources of trusted information to help guide their purchasing and donating decisions – equipping themselves with personally tailored networks of friends, family, and other non-traditional information sources to help them navigate the baffling range of brand choices now available.

The overall impact is that, while most brands continue to try to engage with their target consumers in much the same ways as they have for well over a decade, our networked society consumers are increasingly refusing to play along.

Directly related to this, but addressing an area that I hadn’t previously thought that much about, I recently came across a very interesting ‘open source’ project initiated by folks from the RSA and NCVO Third Sector Foresight Unit – exploring how networked society consumers may engage with membership-based non-profits in the future.

Co-ordinated through a multi-user blog at commonspace.org.uk, anyone with an active interest in the subject can share their thinking and collaborate on the consideration of such questions as what the impact on membership subscriptions might be now that Web 2.0-savvy consumers can get information and share ideas without the need for a traditional mediating organisation.

It’s early days for the project yet, but well worth a look if you’re interested in this subject – and if you’re from a membership organisation of any kind then you should be!

For a quick primer, take a look at the post by Megan Griffith on the underlying trends driving the future of membership.

Posted in Blogging, Online advocacy, Social networking, Uncategorized, Web 2.0 | Tagged: , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

What characterises a strong ‘digital’ charity brand?

Posted by Bryan on July 3, 2008

I spotted an interesting post by Shiv Singh at interactive agency Avenue A|Razorfish the other day, about the seven key attributes they have defined as characterising ‘digital brands’ (meaning brands best equipped for our new digital consumer world), and it occurred to me that the same criteria could be handy when examining charity brands and the way they engage online:

FRESH – does it inspire a feeling or emotion?

ADAPTIVE – does it respond to your involvement?

RELEVANT – Is it useful or appealing to you, specifically?

TRANSFORMATIVE – Does it raise expectations of the brand or the web?

SOCIAL – Is it worth borrowing, sharing, or contributing to?

IMMERSIVE – Do you lose track of time?

AUTHENTIC – Does it seem genuine?

The presentation above provides some examples of this as well as comparing top scoring ‘digital brands’ to Interbrand’s traditional top brands list. While in Shiv’s post he provides a handy interactive Excel ‘Brand Gene Scorecard’ with which you can have a go at comparing how your own online brand presence rates against your competitors in terms of digital engagement.

Posted in Online advocacy, Online fundraising, Social networking, Web 2.0, Web design | Tagged: , , , | 1 Comment »

Causes App celebrates first birthday – but surely there is more potential for Facebook fundraising?

Posted by Bryan on May 30, 2008

Last Saturday was an important anniversary in Social Networking terms, marking one year since Facebook launched Facebook Platform, the toolkit that enables the development of 3rd party Applications (Apps) that integrate directly with Facebook user data. The sudden explosion in Apps resulting from this was a significant driver of the site’s massive growth in popularity throughout 2007, and according to Facebook stats site Adonomics it has led to the release of almost 27,000 Apps to-date.

The same day was also the first anniversary of the biggest non-profit Facebook App, ‘Causes’ from Project Agape (now also available on MySpace).

A runaway success from launch in terms of installations, Project Agape marked the anniversary with the release of statistics on its first year’s activity. Apparently they now have a total of 12 million registered users (95,886 daily active users when I just checked) supporting over 80,000 US and Canadian non-profit organisations. Other countries are still being considered for inclusion, but in a post on the Causes discussion board earlier this month it was explained that “Supporting donations to UK-based charities is still a project we’re interested in, but we are strapped for resources and cannot provide a date”.

80,000 non-profits being represented on two of the world’s biggest Social Networking sites is undoubtedly great news, with the App clearly tapping into a widespread desire amongst site users to share their support for charitable causes.

However, when you look at the figures released in terms of hard cash it seems like Causes still has some way to go before it becomes a significant income generator for the organisations involved. Over the last 12 months, $2.5 million has been raised through Causes for 19,445 organisations – equating to an average of just $126 per organisation. No donations at all have been made to 75% of the 80,000 organisations being ‘supported’.

Don’t get me wrong. I still think Causes is a great initiative and I do understand when other commentators have observed that this is $2.5 million that these organisations would not have had otherwise. However, I wholeheartedly believe that supporter engagement on Social Networking sites has the potential to deliver massively more in fundraising terms than what currently appears to be the equivalent of an online small change collection tin.

Perhaps it’s simply that the Causes ‘Digital Badge’ approach to supporter engagement just doesn’t lend itself to generating higher levels of financial engagement? Is it just too easy to install the App and choose a few organisations to support by putting their badge on your profile and that’s it – job done?

By contrast, those Apps which extend the tried-and-tested sponsored challenge fundraising approach to Social Networking sites seem to better illustrate the real Community Fundraising potential of sites like Facebook. For example, Justgiving.com (which enables individuals to set-up fundraising pages in support of their sponsored activities) has seen significant uptake of its Facebook App (see their latest stats here) and identified Facebook as its second biggest referrer after Google – a trend confirmed by Hitwise UK.

Anyone else got any examples of where organisations are managing to raise significant amounts on Social Networking sites?

Posted in Facebook, Fundraising, MySpace, Online advocacy, Online fundraising, Social networking, Sponsored events, Uncategorized, Web 2.0 | Tagged: , , , , , , | 2 Comments »

A quick Community Fundraising 2.0 conference session plug

Posted by Bryan on May 20, 2008

There was some great feedback following my Community Fundraising 2.0 session at the Institute of Fundraising’s Direct Marketing Conference back in February. So I thought I’d post a quick plug for a couple more conference’s I’ll be speaking at later this year – not just as an invitation to anyone attending to come-along and say ‘hello’, but also to see if anyone has relevant case studies of online fundraising they’ve been involved in that they’d like to share. I do my best to keep-up with the latest fundraising campaigns, but there’s so much going-on these days that it’s easy to miss things!

The first conference is the Institute of Fundraising’s National Convention held here in London on 7th July. I’m co-speaking there with Natasha Hill, a former WWAV colleague and now Director of Supporter Marketing at Cancer Research UK, on the subject of ‘Fundraising in a Facebook World – Empowering Community Fundraising Online’.

The second is the International Fundraising Congress in October over at Noordwijk in The Netherlands, and the title of that session is ‘Community Fundraising 2.0 – the future of fundraising in a networked society’.

If you’ve got any suggestions for online community fundraising campaigns that you think I should take a look at, don’t hesitate to leave a comment below. Thanks!

Posted in Facebook, Fundraising, Online advocacy, Online fundraising, Social networking, Web 2.0 | Tagged: , , , , , | 3 Comments »

Online fundraising benchmarking study – how well is your email activity performing?

Posted by Bryan on May 1, 2008

The 2008 eNonprofit Benchmarks Study has just been released by M+R Strategic Services and the Nonprofit Technology Network, and contains a wealth of data which will be of real interest to you if you’re involved in online fundraising or campaigning.

Covering everything from click-through and conversion rates (by cause) to how much you might expect your email list to churn, it provides some really valuable data to help benchmark your own organisation’s performance. As an update of an equivalent report released back in 2006, it also provides insight into how performance against key metrics is changing over time.

The findings are based on the analysis of data from 21 US nonprofits involved in online fundraising and campaigning, but seem to tally well with the equivalent data I see for the range of UK charities I work with.

The report is free to download here.

Posted in Email, Fundraising, Online advocacy, Uncategorized | Tagged: , , , | Leave a Comment »

Do The Green Thing

Posted by Bryan on October 15, 2007

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Do The Green Thing is a great site that launched earlier this month, aiming to help as many people as possible to do something to help protect the environment.

There are already a whole host of sites around aiming to do the same thing. But, what makes this one really different is the way it addresses the whole issue in a fun way – and its beautifully crafted style (no surprise, given that one the people behind it is Naresh Ramchandani, formerly of advertising agency St Lukes).

There’s a vast amount of fun content (the videos in particular are fantastic) and to encourage you to keep on doing the green thing you can sign-up to receive regular videos with ideas of more green things to do.

(This post is part of Blog Action Day – 15,000 blogs of all shapes, sizes and specialisms uniting for one day by publishing posts about the environment).

Posted in Online advocacy, Social networking, Video, Web 2.0 | Leave a Comment »

Eco charity Google Maps mashup

Posted by Bryan on October 15, 2007

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Today is Blog Action Day – with some 15,000 blogs of all shapes, sizes and specialisms (including this one) uniting by publishing posts about the environment. So, it’s the ideal day to mention the latest charity Google Maps mash-up I’ve spotted (you can read about some UK examples here).

Called Who on Earth Cares, it comes from the Australian Conservation Foundation and gives Australians an opportunity to flag exactly where they live and attach to their flag details of how they pledge to help cut greenhouse gas emissions – as well as see who else in their local area is doing the same. The site also includes an environmental impact calculator and automatically generates a personalised letter the user can send to their local political representative asking them to take steps to address climate change.

It’s a great example of how Google Maps can be used to build a real world community of people and engage them very personally with a cause.

Posted in Online advocacy, Social networking, Web 2.0 | Leave a Comment »

 
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