A stellar panel from Facebook (Matt Jacobson, Head of Market Development), Mashable (Zachary Sniderman, Social Good Assistant Editor), Nten (Holly Ross, Executive Director), and Twitter (Jack Dorsey, CEO/Co-Founder) shared thoughts this week on nonprofits’ use of social media at the Chase Charity Insights event in midtown NYC.
Jack Dorsey, who recently announced he will return to the helm of Twitter, began by recalling the now familiar story of Charity:Water, and asked that nonprofits:
- focus on design and storytelling – tell stories about the people you’re helping, not only about your organization
- measure results and listen to constituents
- use ‘simple tools’ to engage followers through ‘constant outreach’ to stay in touch
(Jack’s most recent project is Square, an amazing credit card reader which plugs into mobile phones, allowing organizations to accept donations / payments anywhere.)
Jack noted also that many charities are addressing the same issues, asking that we find ways to work together towards common goals.
Matt Jacobson explained how a simple gesture of agreeing to pay for someone’s groceries led to the $93 dollar club which has raised over $120,000 to fight hunger. He offered a few websites to help nonprofits get the most from Facebook, such as Non-Profits on Facebook and Facebook Pages.
My friend Holly Ross gave a quick review of the Nonprofit Social Network Benchmark Report, recently released at Nten’s Nonprofit Technology Conference (and which I recently blogged about). The most interesting takeaway – how organization size doesn’t matter – any nonprofit can benefit from using social media. But Holly pointed out that online represents only about 5% of total fundraising and that direct mail still brings in the most money. She also asked that we look past statistics and focus on telling good stories and building relationships. During the Q&A session, Holly reminded us not to talk at people, but to seek to engage in conversation.
Zachary Sniderman offered several examples of creative nonprofit social media initiatives such as Earth Hour, Living Philanthropic and would you believe, World Poopin’ Day.
Today’s event was sponsored by Chase Community Giving, which recently extended its philanthropic program by two years and $25 million and will soon begin another contest to select charities to support. There was some controversy over this program last year but nevertheless, learning from our colleagues on how to creatively use social media at our organizations is very worthwhile.
