article thumbnail

Geoff Livingston Guest Post: Follow @childfund and Help Feed Children

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

These efforts will directly benefit children in Gambia, Zambia, Kenya and Ethiopia. Vegetable seeds in Ethiopia. ChildFund wants to show folks how their efforts and these items benefit children and their communities. There is no cap on on followers, and the offer will continue through July 27. . Mango trees in Kenya.

article thumbnail

Convio Innovator Awards - Online Fundraising, Advocacy, and Social Media - frogloop

Care2

frogloop Home frogloop Home Receive monthly updates Subscribe to our RSS feed Follow frogloop on Twitter Most Popular Posts Social Network ROI Calculator Social Networking for Nonprofits: ROI, Tracking Tools and More "While Theyre Hot!" and see how many weeks of food, for a family of four, your donation could provide.

Convio 28
professionals

Sign Up for our Newsletter

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

article thumbnail

Joitske Hulsebosch: Blogs, NGOs, and Developing Countries

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

In Ethiopia, she did organizational capacity building work for a local network of NGOs. What benefits? s blogs feed (if you can deal with an overflow of posts that is.) She notes, "I started in Kenya working with a water users association, living in a thatched hut!" I blogged a discussion on web2.0 s the downside?

Develop 50
article thumbnail

Buy a Song, Support a Cause

Have Fun - Do Good

Profits from the record raised money for famine relief in Ethiopia. Below are some recent examples I found of proceeds from songs, or CDs benefiting a cause or nonprofit. Satchmo.com has a list of 35 Hurricane Katrina Benefit CDs. Proceeds from SERVE3: The Hard Rock Benefit Album will benefit WHY (World Hunger Year).

Causes 57
article thumbnail

Know Where Your Coffee Comes From

Have Fun - Do Good

Now when I see a Fair Trade certified symbol (pictured here), I see two images from Black Gold in my mind: one of a long table of Ethiopian women sorting through thousands of coffee beans by hand for 50 cents a day, and another of a child being weighed at a therapeutic feeding station to determine if he is undernourished enough to receive food.