Upload
globalgiving
View
401
Download
4
Embed Size (px)
DESCRIPTION
Citation preview
GlobalGiving Presentation
Introductions
Intro to GlobalGiving
Network Game
Online Fundraising Basics
Online Fundraising Game
How to Join GlobalGiving
Office Hours
Introductions
Speed Networking!
Find someone you do not know. Spend five minutes. Be prepared to tell the group…
- Their Name- Name of their Organization- Fun Fact about Them
GlobalGiving Mission
$40M+ / Year
To More and More Effective Orgs Worldwide
Amplifies Impact on Billions
• Online Donations• Donor Management• New Donors• Effectiveness Training• Credibility/Recognition
GlobalGiving Value
Proposition
GlobalGiving Today
• 2,600 projects• 1,400+ nonprofits• 110 countries• 200,000+ donors• $48 million• Corporate Parnters
headquarterscountries with projects
Network Game
Something has happened, and you need to get a message to as many people as you can, as quickly as you can. How many people can you reach?
Directions
- Form groups of four or five
- Together, brainstorm how you would reach as many people as you possibly can in three days.
- Elect a spokesperson to share your results.
Your network:
10
Mom
Dad
Best Friend
Cousin
Co-worker
Classmate
Pastor
Neighbor
Volunteer
Donor
Mom
Dad
Best Friend
Cousin
Co-worker
Classmate
Pastor
Neighbor
Volunteer
Donor
Mom
Dad
Best Friend
Cousin
Co-worker
Classmate
Pastor
Neighbor
Volunteer
Donor
Mom
Dad
Best Friend
Cousin
Co-worker
Classmate
Pastor
Neighbor
Volunteer
Donor
Yes! You can use the Internet to:
• access your network • communicate messages quickly and freely• raise money for your organization
Yikes!
Where do I start?• What are your objectives?• Where is your audience?• What are other organizations
doing?• What social networks are
popular in Nigeria?
First Steps• Start slow• Choose one or two networks• Make someone responsible• Be a good partner• Identify your audience• Start conversations, make friends• Don’t ask for money too soon
What should I talk about?• News• Pictures, Videos• Beneficiary Stories• Articles about Your Organization and/or Staff• Articles about Your Cause• Feedback (good and bad)• Questions for Your Network• Partner News• Volunteer Opportunities• Job openings
Facebook• More than 500 million active users• 50% of these users log on daily, 70%
monthly• #1 site in the US• It is estimated that someone who has
“liked” a Facebook brand will spend an average of $71.84 more per year.
Facebook Do’s and Don’t’s• DON’T: Set up a user profile for your org. Profiles
are for people; Pages are for organizations• DO: Keep your page name short and relevant• DO: Use your logo as your picture• DO: Fill out your information tab thoroughly and
completely• DON’T: Auto-feed an RSS onto the page• DO: Be authentic, engaging and honest
Facebook Details• Regular interaction, but mind the 80/20 rule• Post articles, pictures, questions and commentary• Enable feedback on your wall and posts• You might get negative feedback, but that’s ok! Let your fans
defend you. They will, unless it’s a true problem.• You can have a rule about civility or offensive language• Facebook and Twitter are not the same platform. Post separately.• Add comments or questions to articles you post.• Think about ways to engage your fans where they already are – on
Facebook.
Twitter• Micro-blogging platform• You send updates or “tweets” in 140 characters or less• Tweets are seen by your followers – people who opt in• You see tweets from people you are following• Unlike Facebook, following doesn’t have to be reciprocal• Twitter.com is the 3rd most popular social network site• In June 2010, Twitter had 190 million users tweeting 65
million times/day (techcrunch)
Twitter answers the question…• What are you interested in?• What has your attention right
now?
Fundraising Game
You have been given a challenge. Can you raise $4,000 from at least 50 different people in one month?
Directions
- Form groups of four or five
- Together, brainstorm how you would accomplish this challenge.
- Elect a spokesperson to share your results.
Joining GlobalGiving
How to join GlobalGiving
Due Diligence process
Open Challenge
Eligibility Requirements• Registered organization – no individuals,
businesses, etc.• Advanced English• (At least occasional) access to the internet• Non-evangelizing• Non-discriminating• Eligible to receive international donations• Charitable purpose
Due Diligence Details
• Certificate of Registration• Organizational Documents
• How is your organization run? • Dissolution Clause
• Financial Statements• Be detailed!
• List of Board and Staff members• Text document only
• Program documents• What are your programs? How do they work?
How to Join GlobalGiving• Nominate your organization using the online
nomination form• Complete GlobalGiving’s Due Diligence
requirements• Post a project and participate in an Open
Challenge• Raise $4,000 from 50 donors
How to Succeed in an Open• Use the Fundraising Survival Guide!• Attend Online Trainings• Develop an online fundraising strategy• Make a plan and schedule• Identify networks
• Family, friends, neighbors, church congregation• International networks: volunteers, donors• Internet access• Credit cards
Then What?• Become an active GlobalGiving partner• Post frequent Project Reports• Send Thank You’s to your donors• Join GlobalGiving UK• Post another project• Participate in GlobalGiving campaign
Our Corporate Partners
U.S. Online Giver Profile
• Women and Men• Average 40 Years Old• Progressive• Affluent• Disaster Givers• Event Supporters• Last Minute Gift Givers
- Source: Network for Good
Margaret Coughlin
Chief Marketing Officer
Robert DuBois
Marketing Associate
Why will someone give to your organization?
Because you do something they believe in.
Because you asked them to.
Because someone else asked them to.
Because you make them feel good.
Because they trust you.
Thank You!
John HecklingerChief Program Officer
GlobalGiving Foundation001-202-232-5784
[email protected] (skype)
@jhecklinger (twitter)
Resources• Social Media Revolution• NameChk – find out if your org name is registered• Social Media ROI – how to justify what you’re doing• Facebook Page Best Practices – by Zoetica• So you want a Facebook Fanpage for your Nonprofit? – by Beth Kanter• How Charities are Finding the Good with Facebook Fanpages (case
studies)• Facebook Bestpractices for Nonprofits (beyond the basics)• 26 Slideshares on Social Media for Nonprofits• 10 Facebook resources for nonprofits• Social Media Starter Kit – by AARP• Mashable’s Social Media Page