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August #4Change Chat: Opportunities for Collaboration

Amy Sample Ward

Topic: How do social media open new doors for collaboration (especially internationally)? Here are some questions to consider: has your organization found new collaborators (other organizations, companies, networks, etc.) what issues are unique to collaborations of this type? Details: Date: August, 13th. Join the Conversation.

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Integration: The Ultimate Solution for Nonprofit Data Silos

sgEngage

Often, organizational structures within individual facilities and departments create their own data platforms and workflows that are not aligned with one another. Nonprofit Healthcare Data Integration By aggregating data onto one accessible platform, nonprofit healthcare organizations can deliver better results through strategic growth.

professionals

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Reimagining Museums with Latin America Leading the Way

Museum 2.0

El Museo Reimaginado is a collaborative effort of museum professionals in North and South America to explore museums' potential as community catalysts. I felt like I made new friends in aggregate, a whole community of people who I look forward to seeing again. Birds flew through the proceedings. I was continually hungry to learn more.

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Christian Kreutz's Reflections on Web2.0forDev

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

How do I offer all these channels for collaboration and still filter what is important to me? He also make a few other points worth noting: I had the feeling everybody shared an enthusiasm for the potential that development can have, but I also only saw a few clear structured projects. He basically argued that web2.0

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Can Social Network Analysis Improve Your Social Media Strategy?

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

The analysis looks at frequency of interaction, relationship structure (two-way, one-way), and helps reveal structural similarities. This can be useful to find potential collaborators. Who isn’t connected? Who should I spend my time responding to and cultivating? How has this helped your strategy become more effective?

Analysis 104
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Collecting Data in Low Resource Areas: How to Get Started

NTEN

It’s an old problem, made worse by the tantalizing potential that technology provides: how do you collect and aggregate quality data when you work in low resource areas? That means collecting the data at the source, aggregating the data, verifying the data, creating meaningful reports, and analyzing the data for decision-making.

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Traveling Couches and other Emergent Surprises Courtesy of an Open Platform

Museum 2.0

We actively seek participation and develop structured opportunities for visitors to collaborate with us. To me, this is an example of how the aggregation of participatory practices fundamentally changes the role that an organization has in its community. Visitors can comment on how we can improve or what they would like to see.