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Archive for the ‘Web 2.0’ Category

2009 Hype Cycle report – is Twitter on the slide or headed for enlightenment?

Posted by Bryan on August 12, 2009

Hype Cycle 2009

Back in May last year I wrote about the ‘Hype Cycle’ devised by technology research company Gartner to illustrate the adoption, maturity, and business application of specific technologies, and I specifically considered where on the cycle various online fundraising initiatives lay.

So with the release of the the 2009 Hype Cycle Report, I was interested to compare where things are now (see the chart above) compared to where they were last year (see the chart below).

Hype Cycle 2008

There are certainly some interesting shifts here from the perspective of the digital fundraiser.

For starters, Microblogging has swept over the ‘Peak of Inflated Expectations’ and on towards the ‘Trough of Disillusionment’ in just one year – thanks essentially to the phenomenal rise of Twitter. However, this doesn’t mean that all the Twitter nay-sayers have been proved correct – because if Twitter adoption and application continues at this pace then it could just as well whizz up the ‘Slope of Enlightenment’ towards the ‘Plateau of Productivity’ by this time next year. It certainly seems to be moving towards mainstream adoption far faster than Gartner predicted in 2008.

Web 2.0 can be seen to have started this migration towards general acceptance already, moving from the ‘Trough’ in 2008 to the start of the ‘Slope’ now. Driven forwards by its increasingly widespread adoption, but at the same time probably held back by the challenge of effectively monitising the massive interest in Web 2.0 applications. Likewise, Corporate Blogging can be seen to have moved on at much the pace predicted by Gartner.

Noticeably lagging behind in the progress stakes are Public Virtual Worlds, like SecondLife, which fell rapidly from an high ‘Peak of Expectations’ back in 2007 (anyone else remember the Pet Shop Boys ‘playing’ at Secondfest?) and now seem stuck down in the ‘Trough of Disillusionment’ with minimal progress over the last year. I guess that makes last month’s Second Life Relay for Life, raising over $270,000 for the American Cancer Society, an even more notable success.

You can read more about Gartner’s Hype Cycle here.

Posted in Blogging, Online fundraising, Second Life, Twitter, Web 2.0 | Tagged: , , , , , | 1 Comment »

On its 20th birthday, the creator of the World Wide Web explains why its future is in shifting from ‘linked documents’ to ‘linked data’

Posted by Bryan on March 13, 2009

Today is apparently the 20th birthday of the World Wide Web! So, why not celebrate this great day by taking a little time to stretch your thinking about the Web just a bit.

Go on, make yourself a cup of tea, relax… and watch the great TED video above, in which Tim Berners-Lee explains how he invented the World Wide Web – and sheds some light on how he believes his brainchild will evolve in the future.

In this short talk, Berners-Lee explains how the World Wide Web all began because he wanted to refine the way we use information and work together – and, apparently, because his boss humoured him and agreed that he could spend time on it on the side as a “play project”. All bosses with bright staff – take note!.

It goes without saying that this particular play project ended-up revolutionising our lives through the way the Web links documents together online.

But this is just the beginning. The future, Berners-Lee explains, will comprise evolving from the current ‘linked documents’ approach to a ‘linked data’ approach. This is the next revolution. Releasing, repurposing, and re-using the infinite wealth of data we collate – from medical research databases to data on relationships held on social networking sites – by linking it up in previously unconsidered ways to support previously unachievable applications.

This revolution has already started, with the ever increasing number of of APIs (Application Programming Interfaces) being launched – from Facebook to Kiva – which enable the data traditionally held within websites to be accessed, combined with data from other sources, and re-purposed in an infinite number of new ways (such as Google Maps mash-ups).

It might take a second, stronger, cup of tea – perhaps with sugar – for you to start to consider what this means for your own Web activity. Could you release the information you currently only share through ‘documents’ on your website for others to use and share on your behalf? What implications will this mean for your future web architecture and implementations? And what benefits might this bring, given the challenges of marketing within today’s highly savvy and highly connected networked society?

Posted in Web 2.0 | Tagged: , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

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 »

More examples of online community fundraising initiatives from Holland

Posted by Bryan on January 14, 2009

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Online Community Fundraising was one of the big discussion topics over at the Dutch National Fundraising conference back in November, so it’s no surprise that since then I’ve noticed a growing number of new examples of fundraisers in Holland making use of social media to engage with supporters and their personal social networks online.

A couple of the latest have been health charity Astma Fons and the team behind the annual Radio 3FM ‘Serious Request’ fundraising campaign on behalf of the Red Cross – both of which have joined Vogelbescherming Nederland in making use of the YoCo online community fundraising platform.

Meanwhile, new Dutch crowdfunding start-up Play It Forward looks to have slipped its launch date just a little – with the launch countdown on its holding site now indicating a live date in February.

Posted in Fundraising, Online fundraising, Social networking, Sponsored events, Web 2.0 | Tagged: , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment »

As Facebook hits 150m users, Social Networking sites get 1 in 10 UK Christmas Internet visits

Posted by Bryan on January 9, 2009

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Earlier this week Robin Goad, Research Director at Internet research company Hitwise, released data that revealed a new high in terms of online social media usage in the UK over Christmas. Naturally enough, Christmas is typically the busiest time of year for social networks, but Christmas 2008 saw several new highs which reaffirm (were it needed) the scale of online social networking amongst UK internet users.

According to Hitwise data, visits to Social Networks accounted for over 10% of all UK Internet visits in the week ending 27/12/08 – the first time the company has ever seen them pass the 10% mark. Over the whole of 2008, traffic to those sites classified by Hitwise as Social Networks (top 5 sites being Facebook, YouTube, Bebo, MySpace, and Yahoo Answers) has apparently grown by 20% to make it the fourth most popular category after Entertainment, Search Engines, and Shopping & Classifieds.

Key to breaking the 10% threshold was Facebook, the UK’s most popular Social Networking site, which accounted for 1 in every 22 site visits during Christmas week – making it the second most visited website after Google UK.

Which is perhaps not surprising, given yesterday’s new year blog post by Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg, announcing that Facebook now has 150 million users world-wide – up by 50 million in just 4 months and spread across 170 countries and territories. And before you discount this vast number on the assumption that most never visit their profile after the initial novely has worn-off, that 150m is apparently ‘active users’ – with almost half of them using Facebook every day.

All in all, a very clear new year message for any fundraisers looking to engage with supporters online who have yet to really take Social Networking seriously. It’s not a fad. It’s a massive opportunity. So add it to your new year resolutions right now!

Posted in Facebook, MySpace, Social networking, Web 2.0 | Tagged: , , , , | Leave a Comment »

Play It Forward – new project crowdfunding site soon to launch

Posted by Bryan on December 23, 2008

A month ago, one of the big discussion topics at the Nationale Vakdag Fondsenwerving conference in Holland was Online Social Network Fundraising so it was great just after the event to spot a new online initiative coming from Holland looking to capitalise on the supporter engagement opportunities now available through Web 2.0.

Play It Forward (named after the movie, presumably) is a start-up that plans to launch a new online giving platform next month, offering individuals or groups of individuals the opportunity to fund specific projects around the world.

Ok. Sounds just like another Global Giving? However, Play It Forward looks like it’s going to have some special aspects to it that could make it stand-out as a distinctive player in the online nonprofit project crowdfunding world.

For starters, it sounds like the site’s user interface is going to be something very distinctive and engaging. Based around an interactive 3D globe through which visitors can view videos about projects requiring funding, it is described as combining “the gameplay of SimCity, where you are a developing your own world, with the excitement of Google Earth: hopping from one continent to another to see what’s going on over there”. Once you’ve chosen a project to support, there will apparently be video updates, blogs and online diaries to help keep you up to date with progress. To help supporters engage their personal networks to gather more support, each will have an ‘Ambassador Page’ – essentially a profile detailing the project supported and who is helping support them, complete with blog functionality and tools for promoting and sharing news about the project. Early designs for these pages have been shared to gather feedback – and they do suggest that the user interface is going to look pretty great.

Project-wise, it looks like donors should have plenty to choose from too. Already over 70 partner organisations are listed on the site, representing a highly diverse range of activities around the world.

In finance terms, 100% of your donation will apparently go to the project chosen, which is great – as it’s exactly what donors want. However, just how this is being achieved is not entirely clear. The organisation’s FAQs explain that it will funded through the interest on donations, but I couldn’t find any specifics about how long they will hold donations to accrue interest. Hopefully they have sufficient funding in place to get them through the start-up and launch phase, because I’m guessing it could take a while before they start seeing donations at the volume required to generate sustainable income from interest payments alone.

Overall, even though their main site has yet to launch, from the content of the holding site you get a great feeling of fun and energy – which contrasts with the more ‘corporate’ feel of some online giving sites – and I love the way they have so wholeheartedly embraced the potential for project crowdfunding through people’s online social networks. As they describe it on the site, “The thing that brings it all together is the social network, connecting friends, projects, field workers and charity organisations. All communicating and working together to create a positive change. Play it Forward is more than just donating to charity. It’s a team sport. If the world wants education for all, or a wild life park to protect endangered species, it’s a matter of inviting friends.”

Definitely one to watch-out for when it launches in early January.

January Update… launch now scheduled for February 09.

Posted in 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

twitter-addicts

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 »

Dutch charities getting into online social network fundraising

Posted by Bryan on November 20, 2008

hyves

I’m over in Holland today for the second annual Nationale Vakdag Fondsenwerving (or “National profession day fund recruitment” if, like me, you rely on online translation site babelfish to translate Dutch to English;-), along with something like 1,700 Dutch fundraisers.

Flicking through the session programme, one thing that occurs to me is the number of sessions mentioning fundraising through online social networks – which I really don’t remember seeing at this conference last year. It’s great to see, because in preparing for my session I found lots of research that suggests fundraisers in Holland have an incredible opportunity to capitalise on social networking – because the Dutch seem to love it (which I guess really shouldn’t come as a surprise given how sociable all the Dutch folks I know are).

Recently released findings from an international research study by Synovate show Dutch adults to be more likely than those in any other country to be members of an online social network, with 49% aged 18 to 65 saying they are joiners. A finding supported by Universal McCann’s Social Media Tracker from March 08, which shows 36% of the Dutch population to be members of online social networks.

As a nation, the Dutch have always been at the front of the internet adoption curve, and by the end of 2007 they had the world’s 3rd highest penetration of broadband – at c80% of households. Add to this their general sociability and the great importance of family and community here, and I guess you’re got the perfect environment for online social network adoption.

It also explains the phenomenal success of Holland’s home-grown, primarily Dutch-language, social network site Hyves. With over 7.73m members (in a country with a total population of 16.4m at the start of this year), the site is the market leader by miles – leaving the usual international sites like MySpace far, far behind. For example, according to data kindly provided to me by online research specialists comScore, in May 2008 Hyves received 5,778k million unique visitors compared to second place LiveSpaces at 1,825k and MySpace at 389k – and Hyves was up +87% on the same time last year, while the other two were down -27% and -40% respectively.

Dear old Facebook isn’t really anywhere to be seen – although last time I logged-on to my profile here in Holland it asked me if I would help it translate the site into Dutch – so it looks like they’re trying to get more of a toehold.

Now, to an overseas visitor, Hyves may not look to be quite as developed a place to hang-out as some of the other social network sites around. Visually, it comes-across as somewhat ‘early MySpace’ – once aptly described as like a digital ‘teenager’s bedroom’. And, as I understand it, bespoke widgets are a relatively new addition to the functionality and there don’t seem to be a great many of them available as yet (althought it’s great to see some fundraisers, like the Wereld Kanker Onderzoek Fonds, are already using them). However, you can’t argue with an online community with that sort of the national population already signed-up, and still growing at a pace that leaves its competitors well behind. Now that online community fundraising is becoming a particularly hot topic here, it’ll be very intersting to watch how fundraisers tap-into this national phenomenon over the coming months.

In addition, several Dutch organisations are tapping into online community fundraising through the creation of their own fundraising community sites. Including Vogelbescherming Nederland, who are using the neat YOKO platform developed by my former colleagues at WWAV Holland, that comes complete with easy blogging functionality for online supporters who might not have ever considered posting to a blog before. I’m due to be catching-up with the WWAV team tomorrow, so if I hear there about any other Dutch organisations doing good stuff then I’ll add another post.

…..
Quick update – for all the people who asked if they could get a copy of my presentation, here it is on Slideshare

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

Two twitterers keep the tweets flying thick and fast at the International Fundraising Congress

Posted by Bryan on October 16, 2008

I’m over at the 28th International Fundraising Congress in Holland right now, nursing a bad cold with lots of Lemsip and relaxing a bit after giving a couple of morning sessions back to back on The Future of Fundraising in a Networked Society.

One of the great things about conferences like this is the opportunity to catch-up with folks you just don’t get the opportunity to see much the rest of the year, a case in point here being my catching-up with Howard from fundraising.co.uk and Jonathan from Justgiving – who I usually only talk to online. The two of them are apparently the only delegates out of some 950 folks here from all around the world who are microblogging their experience at various sessions using Twitter. I only found this out when Jonathan mentioned that he’d been twittering away in the back row of my second session this morning (including mention of the ‘dubious’ Dutch language ‘are you lonely’ Facebook ad that appeared in my profile when I was using it to illustrate a point – see above!-).

You can follow the full results of their marathon twittering here.

Btw – for anyone who attended my sessions who is wanting to get the presentation downloads – I’ll post details of the IFC web address where you can get these as soon as I find-out what it is.

Time for another Lemsip now.

Posted in Blogging, Facebook, Fundraising, Online fundraising, Twitter, Uncategorized, Web 2.0 | Tagged: , , , | 5 Comments »

 
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