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william doust

Web 2.0 Badges - Useful collection of stylish web 2.0 badges and badge generator. - 0 views

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    use this generator to create your own web-badge
william doust

Fresh Badge Generator - Create Very Web 2.0 Badges - FREE! - 0 views

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    another badge generator
william doust

socialmedian - 0 views

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    these guys hook up user generated interests so you can get all the stuff based on shared interests. They have got a hook into facebook
william doust

PLS Welcome & Introduce yourselves to International Crisis Aid - when u get chance ;o) - 2 views

Hi, It was a lovely surprise to see you guys & gals join this group. Elements shared in this group are those that I feel may be moe applicable to charities in a general manner. The more I discover ...

International Crisis Aid welcome charity chums

started by william doust on 10 May 09 no follow-up yet
william doust

Stanford Social Innovation Review : Articles : Research Rules (December 1, 2005) - 0 views

  • Research Rules
  • In a preliminary online survey, we gathered simple demographic information like age and sex, while also posing deeper questions about interests and preferences. (Surveys can also be conducted via phone or snail mail.) We asked how often people visited the Web site, what they thought about Dr. Love’s work in the breast cancer movement, and how they liked to be contacted. We also asked questions about giving patterns, such as “Do you support other breast cancer organizations?” Picking the right – or wrong – questions is a sensitive business and central to a survey’s success, and we avoided specifics about giving amounts so as not to be too intrusive. (See sidebar for tips on survey research.)We supplemented these surveys with informal focus groups – small numbers of carefully selected individuals who share their opinions in a moderated roundtable discussion. Our focus groups were asked about their thoughts and feelings about Dr. Love, her foundation, and breast cancer organizations in general. (See sidebar at far right for tips on focus groups.)
  • Finding Focus With Focus Groups
william doust

Stanford Social Innovation Review : Articles : Giving Donors Control (April 1, 2006) - 0 views

  • A United Way affiliate has boosted its fundraising by breaking the rules
  • A Bold Idea Takes ShapeCorporate Cornerstones resulted from a fact-finding project that UWCNM launched in 1997. The project’s mission was to find out why people object to donating to charities in general, and to the United Way in particular. The agency found that two concerns top donors’ lists: nonprofits might use part of the gift to cover administrative costs, and donors might have no say in who benefits from the remainder of their pledge
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    how one charity overcame fears of sneakily funneling funds into admin
william doust

Whitepaper: Sustainable Social Media Infrastructure « Miro - Internet TV Blog - 0 views

  • Whitepaper: Sustainable Social Media Infrastructure
  • A new type of non-profit organization is emerging, one that has never been possible in an offline world. These new organizations are creating permanent, sustainable public knowledge and communications infrastructure that is designed for public benefit.
  • The foundation world, largely absent from these success stories, should seize the opportunity to create new funding models for the next generation of long-term, public interest technology projects.
  • ...3 more annotations...
  • Mozilla Key TakeawaysOnline, a small amount of resources can serve millions of people. Web-based organizations can become self-sustaining in a way that has never been possible offline. When creating a website or building software, costs do not rise linearly with the number of people served. Successful social tech projects can quickly transition from being grant recipients to granting organizations. Non-profits have competitive advantages in the marketplace: high levels of trust and credibility and volunteer communities can multiply the reach of the paid staff. Open-source software can create a better product than the proprietary competition.
  • Non-profit projects online can build vibrant collaborative communities of volunteers and evangelists that would have been extremely difficult and very expensive to organize offline.
  • Tiny amounts of money can let smart projects reach enormous audiences. Avoiding some types of revenue can help protect the credibility and therefore success of certain non-profit tech projects. Revenue requirements relative to people served may be so small that perpetual grant support is the best long-term strategy.
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    Xtine, here's tons of bits that you could nick to justify the impact of elearning @ CLP ;-) it will really, really - REALLY! inspire you ;-) will skype it to you ;-)
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