Charity:Water

Seven ways to holiday like a social citizen

Happy Holidays, all. :)

The holidays are in the air again - but they're also online. From Yeshiva University's the Maccabeat and their viral YouTube sensation, Candlelight - which has nearly 2.5 million hits - to the holiday favorite "Elf Yourself," getting into the holiday spirit at your laptop, on your iPad or on your phone has never been easier. And with social media, the smart, fun and charitable ways to enjoy the season are getting better every year.

These are some of our favorite ways to do the holidays like a social citizen:

1. Cash in when you check in.

Retailers are going way beyond Sunday circulars and email ads. This holiday season stores are using geolocation platforms to reward customers and perhaps attract a younger, more techie clientele. Radio Shack has created a Holiday Hero badge on Foursquare, which allows users to earn a 20% discount by unlocking the badge through the end of the year. On Facebook, Sears has adapted a Groupon model and is posting daily deals on its Facebook page, which will go live once it receives enough likes (but you have to like Sears first to see the deals). Other stores like American Eagle and Zales give foursquare users a discount just for checking in.

2. Give a gift that gives back.

Holiday gifts that delight the people on your list but also benefit a cause have been around for a few years, but the variety, quality and convenience of gifts that give back is greater than ever before. Philosophy bath products have a "shop for a cause" line this season, which includes varieties like "shower for a cure" which benefits the Women's Cancer Research Fund and "sweet to the core" which benefits educational programming on PBS. Or give the gift of fashionable rain gear with Kenneth Cole's Electric Rain Boot, which benefits The Awareness Fund and supports HIV/AIDS awareness and prevention. For more ideas, check out lists from Change.org, Philanthropy 411, Forbes and Daily Candy.

3. Download a helpful holiday app.

My Jewish friends were able to light the menorah no matter where they were with the iMenorah (or any one of about 50 Hanukkah-themed available apps). Bargain shoppers can also use apps like Shop Savvy to compare prices without all the legwork, and MobiQpons gives you access to local coupons on your phone, which you can search and show to your cashier when you're ready to check out.   The new app Shopkick allows shoppers to earn points which are redeemable for merchandise by checking in at stores, walking around and scanning item barcodes. The holidays have never been so convenient.

4. Go on a holiday social media scavenger hunt.

With their Gifts on the Go, Gowalla is giving away a number of prizes every day through Christmas to users who check in at secret locations - the more you check in, the greater your odds of winning a gift. Their adorable advent calendar lets you peak at the gifts coming down the pipe, but December 25 is still a big secret! As a closet baker and holiday treat aficionado, I can't resist listing a holiday promotion by New York cupcakery Baked by Melissa. The mini-cupcake shop has hidden 31 gift certificates throughout New York City and is posting clues on their facebook page every day to help fans hunt down the golden tickets. They're also encouraging winners to post photos and videos of their delicious discoveries.

5. Shop at the (online) angel tree.

Over the last 40 years, many families, offices and groups of friends have participated in the tradition of shopping for kids from the angel tree, but for many, the tradition may have fallen off as they have gotten busy and done more of their shopping on the web. Last year, the Salvation Army and JCPenney teamed up to offer this holiday tradition online, so you can still give back without fighting the mall traffic - but hurry the deadline is December 10!

6. Simply give up the gifts.

With many nonprofits still struggling to through tighter economic times, the holiday giving tradition makes a big difference for these organizations and the causes and people they serve. Social media standout charity:water is encouraging people to give up the gifts we don't really need and ask people to contribute to drinking water instead. Whether you're passionate about clean water or something else, consider trading your gifts under the tree for support of your cause.

7. Give a little and get a little.

Gap's Want campaign presents a win-win for social media users who want to shop and do good at the same time. Their videos feature celebrities like model Lauren Bush and actor Ryan Kwanten dressed in Gap favorites and talking about giving in the holiday season. For each "like" their videos receives on Facebook, they'll donate $1 to nonprofits like Women for Women and the FEED Foundation. When you "like" their campaign, you also receive a code phrase that will get you 30% off one item.

How else are you doing the holidays like a social citizen?

The future of funding: measuring social impact?

Ruler

A few years ago, most of us probably wouldn’t have thought to ask a Salvation Army bell ringer what impact our spare change will have after we drop it in their bucket. But this Christmas, we just might consider it. Whether we’re embracing the information age or just taking a cue from the private sector, donors big and small are increasingly curious about the impact of their dollars.

Donation decisions are generally based on an organization's ability to make a connection with donors. Since people historically give money based on religious beliefs, a desire to feel good or because of a personal ask, fundraising 101 has been focused on telling your story. We've talked at the Case Foundation about how storytelling through videos and photos can be a key to success in fundraising campaigns. We are now seeing this more traditional form of storytelling be linked to social impact measurement and transparency when it comes to how donation dollars are being used. When discussing the future of social impact measurement recently, Anthony Bugg-Levine, Managing Director at the Rockefeller Foundation and Columbia Business School professor suggested the greatest losers of the fundraising game might be the people who are great storytellers but ineffective problem solvers (those unable to move the needle when it comes to social impact)– a shift that would be bad for them but good for the overall efficiency of the sector.

It's not hard to make the case for measuring social impact. Especially in a time when money is tight, people want to know how their donated dollars are being spent. They want to know how many dollars were raised, how those dollars are spent - how many meals were served, houses were built and vaccines were given. But beyond that, people want information about what the real impact of their dollars are. They want to know not only the simple numbers of meals, houses and vaccines, but the "so what" which is much more difficult to measure because it is often part of systematic change.

Let’s take the example of access to water.

Measuring the impact of water programs goes beyond counting the gallons of water provided. In rural areas where women and children have to spend 3-4 hours a day collecting water, they often miss out on educational and economic opportunities. This cycle continues to impact their communities by limiting sustainable development and progress. On top of that, clean water means saved lives, reduced health care costs, and increased productivity. The links are clear, but it’s a challenge for even a substantial nonprofit organization to allocate the resources required to quantify these effects. Since the majority of nonprofits have annual budgets of less than $1 million, it’s not surprising that so far, many take a look at social impact measurement and decide that it’s not worth it.

Resisting the measuring stick.

By nature, nonprofits are very cause-oriented. In the past this has led to resistance against spending funds on other non-service items. Many nonprofits have now accepted that in the long run, it’s worth investing funds in marketing, technology and earned income initiatives. The most common argument against social impact is that adding the task of social impact measurement to an organization's list of to-dos requires the use of scarce resources - resources that must be pulled away from something else, and often that something else is service the organization provides. To continue the water example, charity:water can give one person clean drinking water for 20 years for $20; I'm sure it's difficult in the short term to reduce the number of people served to divert some of those funds into measurement. But in the long run, such an investment could ultimately bring in more money, which will have a greater overall impact.

Ok, measurement might be good, but how?

Unlike a company's financial performance, which can be easily compared through established metrics like return on equity and stock performance, social impact measurement lacks established methods and benchmarks. But never fear – there are people who are already dedicated to fixing that. For example, the Impact Reporting and Investment Standards (IRIS) at the Global Impact Investing Network are meant to provide common metrics for social and environmental performance. The chicken and egg part of this situation is that organizations need to adopt these metrics for them to be helpful standards, and people are wary about adopting a method before it’s a standard – especially when adopting means another budget line item.

It's all about balance.

Before you trade your old fundraising material for statistical analysis and spreadsheets, remember that both your donors and your employees are will still be human and they still like a good story. Employees who are drawn to the mission could get disillusioned when they see the individuals that were the reason they sought a nonprofit job turned into numbers that can be crunched this way and that to maximize efficiency. Even when done well and with limited reallocation of resources, there are still dangers of making social change too much about the numbers. When it becomes too much about efficiency and numbers, the people can get lost. And if metrics become more and more important in how donors allocate their numbers, we could accidentally create incentives for people to neglect the real mission or even game the system. When the goal becomes big numbers, it could be tempting to sacrifice quality.

The truth is that organizations need to be able to do both storytelling and impact measurement, and focusing on one doesn't eliminate the need for the other - kind of like how companies need both good stock performance and good ad campaigns. Bugg-Levine concluded that efforts to measure social impact "should be relevant and reliable but not reductionist."

How do you think organizations should balance storytelling and social impact measurement? What are you interested in when spending your dollars as a donor?

Let the Twestival Begin!

Front of the Asheville Twestival Flier

Perhaps there is nothing more exciting for those of us in the social media for social change world than witnessing the culmination of today’s highly anticipated Twestival. This grassroots, citizen powered approach to addressing the world water crisis is in many ways unprecedented and opens the door for an entirely new way of taking global action. With 175 events happening across the globe to benefit the nonprofit charity:water, Twestival is like an overly active petri dish brimming with learning opportunities for the nonprofit world.

So where do we begin? Interestingly enough, Twestival comes to light just shortly after Porter Novelli released a survey which found that 70 percent of Americans care deeply about a number of causes, from protecting the environment to fighting poverty, and improving schools – but, less than 20 percent had done anything to better those causes in the past year. In fact, on most issues, just one in 10 Americans had put time or effort toward improving the problems they cared about. This brings me to my first question. Will events like Twestival provide a deeper connection to the world water crisis? What is the plan to engage individuals after they have enjoyed a cocktail, shared good company, and have been introduced to the important work of charity:water?
 
Twestival’s success is largely due to a tremendous grassroots effort which began in the U.K. just a couple of months ago. According to a very thorough post chronicling the event by Beth Kanter, there are guidelines of how the city organizer’s run the event, but it’s not a template. The Twestival organizers didn’t want to dictate what they did or how much money was raised. As my colleague Eric Johnson so aptly pointed out last week, welcome to the world of fundraising 2.0.
 
As an all-volunteer effort organized outside of the nonprofit’s direct management and control – is it now charity:water’s role to step back in and provide some guidance that will keep these individuals active and engaged in the long term? Is it the role of the grassroots organizers? Or will this simply be another well intentioned experiment that fails to see its full potential.  My hope is that Twestival has figured out the “special sauce” for deeper ongoing engagement – and I challenge them to prove all of the naysayer’s wrong!
 
There’s no doubt that nonprofits and NGO’s across the country and around the globe are standing by and taking note.  Twestival is a game changer in terms of its reach, its magnitude and the fact that it’s being driven entirely by volunteers. So, what should nonprofits take away from this online experiment? If anything, there will be a renewed interest and heightened awareness by nonprofits in finding the most appropriate ways to leverage their own social networking tools.  It’s not enough to build a facebook fan page, or have a static twitter feed and hope that people find you.  Organizations are powered by individuals and their personal relationships – and in order for real social change to take hold there needs to be a balance of  these elements. 
 
Twestival presents a unique opportunity to harness social media and effect social change, but it's important to not lose sight of the true goal - afterall, 1.1 billion people around the world don’t have clean water.  I commend the Twestival organizers for bringing attention to this critical issue and look forward to taking a deeper look at the lessons the nonprofit sector can learn in most effectively deploying social media strategies in the future. 
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