Remove Haiti Remove Internet Remove Report Remove Teen
article thumbnail

How Faith-based Nonprofits Can Use Peer-to-Peer Fundraising

Qgiv

Is there a backup plan in case the internet connection fails or isn’t fast enough? Once the peer-to-peer campaign is over, compile a report summarizing the overall impact, as well as each individual participant’s fundraising result. Giving Initiative For Teens – Homelessness and Poverty.

article thumbnail

Things We Like (February 2010)

NTEN

2010 Haiti earthquake mobile fundraising: $30+ million. Pew Internet, in their report on " Social Media and Young Adults ", reveals that the number of teen bloggers has plummeted since 2006. A monthly roundup of our favorite nonprofit tech resources. Read more posts on our blog. Mouse pointer track.

Japan 55
professionals

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

Are Qwerty Monsters the Nonprofit Donors of the Future?

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

If you skip that, your mobile tactics won’t yield much impact or learning. What we witnessed over a year ago with SMS donations to the Haiti disaster is not going to be the norm for nonprofits. Qwerty Monsters are teens, age 13-17, who have gone mad for texting on their mobile phones. Maybe that first step is research.

Donor 98
article thumbnail

Consumer Attitudes Toward Mobile Giving

NTEN

Early last year, mobile giving evolved from an emerging technology to mainstream awareness with Haiti earthquake relief, raising approximately $45 million for victims of that natural disaster. Research firm Quorus Consulting Group polled 2,003 teens and adults in April 2011. 48 percent were interested in a "tally of funds raised".