micro-volunteering

Volunteer Platforms for "Good" Need to Be Great

a thousand point of light

Through celebration and fanfare -- to the tune of a Presidential Summit on Volunteerism in Texas today, Presidents’ Obama and George H.W. Bush will come together to mark the 20th Anniversary of the Points of Light.

If you remember back to 1989 when President Bush spoke of a thousand points of light in his Inaugural Address (or even if you don’t), personal computers were becoming commonplace in the West, and mobile phones even if clunky and awkward were quickly becoming a symbol of status. Nintendo had just released its Game Boy, and Microsoft’s first version of Office was available to consumers. These devices and programs were so new and transformative – but never could we imagine their power to mobilize the “thousand points of light” the President spoke of to take action in their communities, let alone halfway around the globe.

And while today we have new devices and symbols of status that we attach to our ears, or on our belts – we have to think that we are only at the cusp of what’s possible when using technology to address some of our worlds most pressing problems. We can micro-lend or micro-volunteer but there’s so much more that could be done if we could collectively recognize the potential of these tools. Even so, we know that the tools alone can’t sit with a child who’s battling cancer or feed a single mother who just lost her home. What’s more, the tools themselves are only as effective as we enable them to be.

Sure, today’s unprecedented technology allows us to reach new audiences, or connect advocates to share their stories, but the call to action must be clear, it must be actionable, and it must show impact. Today’s volunteers may be savvier when it comes to finding volunteer opportunities on their iPhone, but they expect an experience that matches the ease to which they found it.

New platforms like All for Good, the uber-aggregator of many of the online volunteer matching sites like Idealist, VolunteerMatch and Network for Good - is a powerful tool, but then again, it’s only as powerful as the opportunities that nonprofits upload. When I enter my zipcode into a search engine and let it work its magic, I don’t want to find an opportunity that’s outdated or already over capacity. I’ve taken the first step, and I expect to be matched with an opportunity that makes sense and is available.

We certainly didn’t know the extent of what technology could provide back in 1989 – let alone the creative things people would do WITH the technology to change the world, but there are still endless opportunities to put it to better use. Perhaps it’s creating an individual profile that allows us to upload our skills, our interests and our availability and then be more appropriately matched with an opportunity to serve. This is worthy of a post itself, so I’ll save it for another day – but a best case scenario would be for people to be matched through an online platform, with something they enjoy doing repeatedly rather than a bunch of “one and done” experiences.

This may go beyond providing good volunteer opportunities, to making it more of a relational experience between volunteer and organization. So even if it’s a good opportunity, the organization should solicit feedback, provide follow up, ask what it could do better, etc. There are sites like Great Nonprofits that are allowing folks to rate their experiences and share knowledge so that others can make more informed decisions about where to give or volunteer. Or the new mobile iPhone app, Catalista, that enables you to find a volunteer opportunity in your area using your phone's GPS coordinates and then invite your friends to join you, and rate your experience.

The platforms can have all of the bells and whistles in the world, but the big question that remains is how do we get nonprofits to use these tools in a smart way that provides up to date, clear opportunities for engagement and that will make more people want to use them to volunteer? We can demonstrate their success, lift up examples, but we are already doing that, and it’s not changing the game. How do we help nonprofits get savvier about what they post? Is there a way to incentivize this behavior so that they will provide better data? Or, is this just something the market will have to decide?

Good Reads Pulled From Our Feeds

good reading

It’s always tough coming off of a holiday weekend – so, in an effort to ease back into the work week we thought it would be best to do a roundup of some of the stories that caught our attention, got us thinking, and were worthy of passing along.  Also,  what's a "good read" in your feed right now? Please share with us in the comments.

The Not So Hidden Politics of Class Online
For years, many people have been saying the Internet will be a “great social equalizer.” Give everyone access to technology, and differences in race, class, and income will give way to a stronger democracy, right? Not necessarily, says Net researcher danah boyd, speaking at last week’s Personal Democracy Forum in New York, boyd said that even among people with access to the Net, long-held social divisions of race, class, and income are starting to play out online, particularly among teens now starting to choose which social network they prefer.
 
Nonprofits Lead Way in Social Media Adoption
With more and more nonprofits friending and tweeting these days, perhaps it should be no surprise that nonprofit organizations have outpaced corporations and academic institutions in their adoption of social media, for the second year in a row, according to a new research out of Dartmouth University, “Still Setting the Pace in Social Media: The First Longitudinal Study of Usage by the Largest US Charities.”
 
Microsoft veterans aim to make philanthropy more personal
Two Seattle nonprofits Jolkona and SeeYourImpact recently launched to encourage a new generation of philanthropists by using mobile phones, social networking and online connections between donors and people in need. Each started by asking the same question: How could they involve more people, particularly the younger and less affluent, in philanthropy? Eventually they came to the same conclusion: More people would donate if they saw the difference even a small amount of money could make in another person's life.
 
The Extraordinaries: Will Microvolunteering Work?
The Extraordinaries is one of a number of newly hatched social-media enterprises that champion speedy cooperation. Their aim is to deliver microvolunteer opportunities to mobile phones that can be done on-demand and on-the-spot.  Charity meets brevity. Crowdsourcing for the common good. The jury is still out on whether these sites will have large, and long-lasting, effects. But the microvolunteerism movement is undeniable.
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