Entries Tagged as 'Internet and Society'

Thursday, February 5th, 2009

Going analog: 3 tips to help your non-profit get projects done

The internet is a joy forever, but sometimes it’s not actually helpful to your workflow.  Ever worked eight solid hours and then wondered where the time went? Find yourself falling down a rabbit hole of possibly useful websites? Not getting anything from your Facebook breaks?
You clearly need to enjoy the benefits of going analog. Here [...]

Tuesday, February 3rd, 2009

An excellent boring presentation: social media and story telling

Blogs, Youtube videos, Twitter, Powerpoint presentations: what do they have in common? Story telling.
If your non-profit is working on a social media plan, you’re going to need to think about how your non-profit tells stories. If you fundraise, you already know that the best collateral a non-profit produces are stories about their audience. Here’s an [...]

Wednesday, January 21st, 2009

What good are social networks?

It seems that there’s a bit of a thread out there on a few blogs, something in the air, a terrible question that’s being asked: are social networks actually a useful fundraising strategy?
The Pew Research Center published a report this week on the changing demographic profile of social networks.  I would, ahem, modestly point out [...]

Tuesday, January 13th, 2009

Facebook: All Your Donors Belong to Us

I was talking to someone about the growing importance of Facebook to fundraising, but was pulled up short by the following comment:
But Facebook users are all 20-somethings. Our supporters are all in their 40s and 50s. We have an older audience – they wouldn’t know how to use Facebook!
Not true, according to the latest stats. Facebook isn’t [...]

Friday, January 9th, 2009

What to do when the news is bad – break out the online activism!

Here’s the news you’re waking up to this morning.  Reading the news any day of the week can leave you clenching your fists. But you can do more about this than shake your head while you drink your coffee. Here’s how you can do something about news that makes you angry – get online and [...]

Thursday, January 8th, 2009

Bonus post: Are you signed up for Ada Lovelace Day?

This March 24th, mark Ada Lovelace day by blogging about women and technology. You can find out more here on Boing Boing – Social Ch@nge has promised to blog (about non-profit women in technology, natch) and you can too. Sign the pledge here: they need 400 more signatures to get the ball rolling!
Can’t wait for [...]

Monday, January 5th, 2009

You will meet a handsome online non-profit…

Alex Steed’s recent connective predictions post got us at Social Ch@nge thinking about the future of technology and civil society. Here’s our predictions for 2009 and beyond, based on some of the trends we’ve been watching at Social Ch@nge this year.
1) Cells will save lives
One of the things you will surely see more of is [...]

Tuesday, December 16th, 2008

Bonus Post: Estonia First to Vote by Cell – gr8!

Estonia – the little nation that geeked the world. We’ve written about Estonia before – here and here – when, for example, they were officially the first country to suffer a full-on cyber attack. Now they’ve achieved another first: Estonians can officially vote using their cell phone. This isn’t entirely breaking [...]

Tuesday, December 16th, 2008

Social Media Job Description

You are a Facebook goddess, the fastest Twitter tweeter on the planet. Can you take your mad social media skillz and turn it into a job? How exactly would you describe that job?
I don’t know, but I came across a job posting the other day that seemed to sum it up for me: [...]

Wednesday, December 10th, 2008

Smart social media strategies for a cause: interview with War Child Canada

Right now, there are an estimated 300,000 children around the world who have been forced to take up weapons – many as young as 6 years old.
Since 1998, War Child Canada has been working to educate and mobilize Canadians on this issue. War Child is known for to creating innovative and unconventional outreach strategies, [...]