- Pick a charity or cause that is a good strategic fit.
- Don't overlook small charities.
- Do your research. "Don't assume every charity offers the same benefits to donors or is even willing to work with your small business."
- Don't expect advertising and marketing exposure from the organization you support.
- Don't treat the arrangement casually. You may need a formal written agreement with a charity if there's a public tie between you and the cause.
- Don't back off when money is tight.
Recently in Non-Profits Category
0
0
Jake says, "Epic Change is part of the next generation of the Ndugu Model." It's good to remember that there are other organizations creatively leveraging social media and other technology to make it easier for us to connect with people in need around the world.
So what is the Ndugu model? Jake continues...
"If anyone has ever seen About Schmidt you'll remember Ndugu. In the movie, Warren Schmidt, a newly retired midwestern widower played by Jack Nicholson, is up late one night watching TV, when he sees an ad for a sponsor a child type charity. Searching for purpose in his post-career, post-marraige life, he makes an impulse donation and, days later, gets a thick envelope in the mail telling him that he has adopted Ndugu, a Tanzanian first grader. The package encourages him to contact Ndugu directly and leads him to write a stream of hysterically and touchingly long letters about the trials, tribulations, life, and legacy of Warren Schmidt.
So. The Ndugu Model: direct support to individuals, philanthropy brought to life by human contact and return interaction. This being the '90s, instead of letters, checks, print photographs, and drawings in the mail, we have video streaming and blogs and mobile devices beaming OMG LOLs across continents.
And, either way, whether in its old sponsor a child form or in its more scalable online instantiations, the model's good. It pulls small donors deep into causes. It educates. It inspires. It engages. It reminds everyone that we can all contribute; we can all make meaningful change."
Jake then goes to say that "Kiva deserves a lot of credit for putting the online Ndugu Model on the map."
0
I think we have been somewhat bombarded with the theory that we all need to get solar panels to provide all the lighting in our homes. The vision of a polar bear holding on to the last ice cube is ingrained in our minds, and people feel somewhat helpless since there is nothing they can do to help. I think that we all need to contribute, however possible. KivaB4B is a great initiative that allows people to do this just by doing what they do day to day. In the end, it isn't as much about saving the world as it is about making it a better place to live in. We can help other people out starting with the simplest cause. Who knows, it may be an entrepreneur from the other end of the globe that solves the global warming "problem".







