Move the needle!
How to activate your supporters
    Part of the Mobilize Your Cause bootcamp series




                          The Hub SoMa
                          Aug. 24, 2010

                          JD Lasica	 	 	 	 	 	 	
                          Founder, Socialbrite.org
                          jd@socialbrite.org	



                                                      1
Tonight’s agenda
 6:30 Introductions
 6:40 Social media overview
 6:50 What drives your organization?
 7:05 Campaigns with impact
 7:25 12 steps to activate your supporters
 8:00 Tools & action hubs for social change
 8:25 Summary & next steps
 8:30 Reception & spread your message


                                              2
Relax!
                                 Creative Commons
                                 BY photo on Flickr
                                 by Tom@HK




         resources: http://bit.ly/mobilize

                                                      3
Today’s hashtag




                                  Creative Commons
                                  photo on Flickr
                                  by Prakhar



   Tweet this talk! Hashtag: #hubsoma

                                                     4
Handouts! Be happy!




                      5
Social media by the numbers
77% US adults are frequent social media users.*
141 million active blogs (vs. 12,000 in 2000); almost 1 million blog
posts created per day; over 346 million people globally read blogs
6 of top 10 websites in US are social sites (YouTube, Facebook,
Wikipedia, Blogger, Craigslist, MySpace)
Twitter: 120 million registered users; 300,000 new users a day;
180 million unique visitors a month
Flickr: 35 million people have posted                            tagged
4 billion-plus photos
Wikipedia: 10 million users have contributed
YouTube: 2 billion videos streamed per day
Text messages per day: 4.5 billion (vs. 400,000 in 2000)
                                           *source: Nielsen Online, spring 2010

                                                                                  6
Facebook: Freaky growth
      500+ million members worldwide —
    62% of US Internet users are on Facebook




                                               7
Tweets in real time
       popacular.com/gigatweet/




                                  8
Twitter fun facts
  Twitter growth rate: 295% annual increase in U.S.




Highest # of tweets, May 16, 2010 compared with May 16, 2009

                                                     *source: http://bit.ly/tweetspercapita

                                                                                              9
What drives your organization?


                                      Before we talk tools,
                                      technology or
                                      campaigns, what is
                                      the animating force
                                      behind your actions?




   Pamela Hawley
   Founder/CEO, UniversalGiving.org

                                                              10
Types of campaigns
1. Raise awareness for your cause or
   enterprise, build authority
2. Sign up new members
3. Raise funds
4. Advocacy: sign petitions
5. Take an action: micro-loans, enlist
   people to attend an event
6. Find new volunteers or advocates
7. Grow a mailing/newsletter list
8. Attract new Facebook or Twitter
   followers
9. Ask people to create content on
   your behalf

                                         11
Care2 (if you have $$)
                 Effective advocacy campaigns




Matt Shepard Act         Protecting Oregon’s   Starbucks helps Ethiopian
to prevent hate crimes   forests               coffee farmers

                                                                           12
Campaigns with impact
 Equality California: Wedding registry
 SMA: Tweet for a Cure
 Grassrootsmapping & BP oil spill
 charity:water: Website, blog, Twitter,
 video updates, Google Earth
 Greenpeace & Nestlé                      Ric O’Barry, “The Cove”

 Visual storytelling in Middle East




                                                                    13
CASE STUDY



No on 8 Wedding Registry
1,700 couples raised $1 million+ for Equality California




                                                           14
CASE STUDY



Spinal Muscular Atrophy
      Slide show on Photobucket




                                  15
CASE STUDY



Tweet for a Cure
2,867 people have tweeted reaching 1.6 million followers




         http://gwendolynstrongfoundation.org/twitter
                                                           16
CASE STUDY



Grassroots Mapping
Balloon aerial images of Gulf Oil Spill funded by Kickstarter




                  grassrootsmapping.org
                                                                17
CASE STUDY



charity:water & Twestival
   http://www.charitywater.org/projects/map/




                                               18
CASE STUDY



Greenpeace & Nestlé
    Nestlé’s Facebook Page, March 17, 2010




                                             19
CASE STUDY



Greenpeace & Nestlé
        Nestlé Killer microsite




                                  20
CASE STUDY



Greenpeace & Nestlé
     Boycott Nestlé pages on Facebook




                                        21
CASE STUDY



Greenpeace & Nestlé
Greenpeace bought Google AdWords for Nestle & Greenpeace




                                                           22
CASE STUDY



Greenpeace & Nestlé
      Nestlé partners with Forest Trust




                                          23
CASE STUDY



Visual storytelling campaigns
Women & Memory Forum (Egypt) / Nawaa (Tunisia)




                                                 24
Other campaigns with impact
     National Wildlife Federation raised $100,000
     using social media after Gulf Oil Spill.


     Red Cross’s Text Haiti campaign raised $32
     million. Oxfam UK received $50,000 via link in
     YouTube video posted day after Haiti quake.

     Visible Children Scholarship Program: 700 kids
     in Uganda receiving scholarships & mentoring.



                                                      25
12 steps to mobilize your cause
 1. First, listen and observe. Engage
    before the Ask.
 2. Set clear goals & define metrics
 3. Define a clear theme
 4. Frame it with a personal story
 5. Create a simple call to action
 6. Create a conversation hub for participants
 7. Give your campaign social love handles
 8. Consider a mobile component
 9. Identify & enlist evangelists
10. Create ongoing mini-actions & provide updates
11. Use immediacy: Headlines & deadlines
12. Create real-world events

                                                    26
1. Create a listening post
                  Set up a listening post
                  (monitoring dashboard)
                  to track what’s being
                  said about your cause.
                  Choose from Google
                  Reader, Feedly (left) or
                  Netvibes, supplemented
                  by a Twitter monitoring
                  service.




                                             27
2. Set goals, map metrics
Goals                             Metrics to measure
  Grow email list of supporters   # newsletter, RSS subscribers
  Solicit micro-loans             Initial, repeat loan rates
  Increase comments on blog       avg. # comments/post
  Increase website visibility     increase in traffic or linkback #s
  Increase positive mentions      mentions in social networks
  of brand or campaign
  Have visitors stick around      stick rate
  Make our content more viral     # of shares
  Get people to take action       # of petition signatures
  Attend an event                 # of registrants, year over year


                                                                      28
3. Define a clear theme
   Boil down your cause to a strong, single sentence

               Vittana:
               Help anyone go to college

               Alter Eco:
               Support fair trade

               ActBlue:
               Elect progressive candidates

               DonorsChoose:
               Support public classrooms in need


                                                       29
4. Tell a personal story
     Use videos or photos — make us feel




          invisiblepeople.tv
                                           30
5. Create a call to action
  Inspire people to act with clear, motivating steps




                                                       31
6. Create conversation hub
    Where will you engage with supporters?




    Your blog        Community site (WiserEarth)
    Facebook         Social hub (Change.org)
    Twitter          Contest site (Giving Challenge)

                                                       32
7. Social love handles
   Socialize your campaign with plug-ins, widgets




                                                    33
8. Consider mobile
            GoodGuide.com:
            Users can use iPhone app
            to see if a product is healthy,
            environmentally friendly &
            socially responsible.




                 This American Life:
                 Facebook widget & text to give

                                                  34
9. Enlist evangelists


  Use your listening post to identify high-value influencers in
  your subject area
  Establish a rapport and only then reach out
  Scope out Twitter Lists that intersect with your company or
  social cause
  Connect with other social media influencers through their
  blogs and other networks
  Twitter followings: @adventuregirl 1.4m @garyvee 853,854
  @TOMSshoes 487,109 @AmeriCares 6,380
                                                                 35
10. Create mini-actions
    America’s Giving Challenge: Daily winners




                                                36
11. Use immediacy
Headlines & deadlines: Play off the news & use a hard stop date




                                                                  37
12. Create offline events
Contests, tweet-ups, fund-raisers to propel real-world gatherings




                                                                    38
Then: Measure, refine, refresh
    Measure results, follow up, recalibrate, relaunch




               http://dashboard.imamuseum.org/
                                                        39
Build an active community

      here’s an amazing
difference between building
an audience and building a
 community. An audience
   will watch you fall on a
sword. A community will fall
     on a sword for you.


     — Chris Brogan
   Author,“Trust Agents”

                               40
Social action hubs
     Care2           TakePart



     Change.org      WiserEarth



     Causes          Amazee



     Idealist
                     Causecast


                                  41
Use the Sharing Economy
Free content!                Free resources!
  Free photos                  Socialbrite.org/sharing-center
  Free videos                  Creativecommons.org
  Free music & audio           Techsoup

Free software & platforms! Free expertise!
  WordPress & its plug-ins     BarCamp
  Open Office 3.0               PodCamp
  Drupal, Joomla & other       WordCamp
  open source platforms        Social Media
  Ubuntu Linux OS              Club
  Kaltura for video


                                                                42
T O O L S



Creative Commons
                     Creativecommons.org
                     • Rich source of free
                     commercial & noncommercial
                     images

                     • Flickr: 156 million Attribution,
                     Noncommercial, No Derivatives
                     & ShareAlike licenses
                     • Use them for your blog,
                     website, email or print
                     newsletter, presentations, etc.
                     • Don’t just take. Share!


                     flickr.com/creativecommons



                                                          43
T O O L S



Darfur & Google Earth
     Crisis in Darfur: Using Google Earth




                                            44
T O O L S



Google Earth’s historical layers




       Historic Centre of Warsaw, 1945 & today

                                                 45
T O O L S



Google Sidewiki
      Google Sidewiki at Apple.com




                                     46
T O O L S



Do-good widgets
  Create a widget on Causes.com or create your own




                                                     47
T O O L S



Word clouds




   Wordle.net word cloud of JD Lasica’s tweets


                                                 48
T O O L S



Online visualizations




     Tea Party’s ‘Contract From America’
          word cloud on manyeyes
                           manyeyes.alphaworks.ibm.com
                                                         49
T O O L S



Online visualizations
                       manyeyes
                       Make your story
                       more visual: Former
                       Attorney General
                       Alberto Gonzales’
                       testimony before
                       Congress.




                      manyeyes.alphaworks.ibm.com
                                                    50
Other tools & platforms
   Social Actions: Open API enables organizations & bloggers
   to volunteer or take action on the causes they support, can
   tailor it to your cause.

   The Extraordinaries: Use the power of community for micro-
   volunteerism in people’s spare time.


   OpenStreetMap: Open source “Wikipedia of maps”;
   community builds own maps using GPS & donated satellite
   imagery.




                                                                 51
Warning: Gatekeepers
    The danger of closed platforms

           Exhibit 1: Facebook




                                     52
Warning: Gatekeepers
                  Exhibit 2: Apple




    Political satirist Mark Fiore was ‘invited to reapply’

                                                             53
Tools & resources
               What you’ll find at bit.ly/mobilize
24 online fundraising sites

Top cause organizations

Free reports

Free photo, music, video directories

Collaboration & project management tools

Geolocation tools

Free tutorials on the best way to use
Facebook, Twitter & blogs

How to use mobile strategically

Tons more. All free & shareable.

                                                    54
Biggest resource: Your supporters




                                    55
Let’s keep talking
                        JD Lasica, Socialbrite.org
                        email: jd@socialbrite.org
                        Twitter: @jdlasica

                        Pamela Hawley, UniversalGiving
                        email: phawley@universalgiving.org
                        Twitter: @pamelahawley




            Resources at bit.ly/mobilize
Bookmarks at delicious.com/socialmediacamp/mobilize
        Presentation at slideshare.net/jdlasica
                                                             56

Move the Needle: How to activate your supporters

  • 1.
    Move the needle! Howto activate your supporters Part of the Mobilize Your Cause bootcamp series The Hub SoMa Aug. 24, 2010 JD Lasica Founder, Socialbrite.org jd@socialbrite.org 1
  • 2.
    Tonight’s agenda 6:30Introductions 6:40 Social media overview 6:50 What drives your organization? 7:05 Campaigns with impact 7:25 12 steps to activate your supporters 8:00 Tools & action hubs for social change 8:25 Summary & next steps 8:30 Reception & spread your message 2
  • 3.
    Relax! Creative Commons BY photo on Flickr by Tom@HK resources: http://bit.ly/mobilize 3
  • 4.
    Today’s hashtag Creative Commons photo on Flickr by Prakhar Tweet this talk! Hashtag: #hubsoma 4
  • 5.
  • 6.
    Social media bythe numbers 77% US adults are frequent social media users.* 141 million active blogs (vs. 12,000 in 2000); almost 1 million blog posts created per day; over 346 million people globally read blogs 6 of top 10 websites in US are social sites (YouTube, Facebook, Wikipedia, Blogger, Craigslist, MySpace) Twitter: 120 million registered users; 300,000 new users a day; 180 million unique visitors a month Flickr: 35 million people have posted tagged 4 billion-plus photos Wikipedia: 10 million users have contributed YouTube: 2 billion videos streamed per day Text messages per day: 4.5 billion (vs. 400,000 in 2000) *source: Nielsen Online, spring 2010 6
  • 7.
    Facebook: Freaky growth 500+ million members worldwide — 62% of US Internet users are on Facebook 7
  • 8.
    Tweets in realtime popacular.com/gigatweet/ 8
  • 9.
    Twitter fun facts Twitter growth rate: 295% annual increase in U.S. Highest # of tweets, May 16, 2010 compared with May 16, 2009 *source: http://bit.ly/tweetspercapita 9
  • 10.
    What drives yourorganization? Before we talk tools, technology or campaigns, what is the animating force behind your actions? Pamela Hawley Founder/CEO, UniversalGiving.org 10
  • 11.
    Types of campaigns 1.Raise awareness for your cause or enterprise, build authority 2. Sign up new members 3. Raise funds 4. Advocacy: sign petitions 5. Take an action: micro-loans, enlist people to attend an event 6. Find new volunteers or advocates 7. Grow a mailing/newsletter list 8. Attract new Facebook or Twitter followers 9. Ask people to create content on your behalf 11
  • 12.
    Care2 (if youhave $$) Effective advocacy campaigns Matt Shepard Act Protecting Oregon’s Starbucks helps Ethiopian to prevent hate crimes forests coffee farmers 12
  • 13.
    Campaigns with impact Equality California: Wedding registry SMA: Tweet for a Cure Grassrootsmapping & BP oil spill charity:water: Website, blog, Twitter, video updates, Google Earth Greenpeace & Nestlé Ric O’Barry, “The Cove” Visual storytelling in Middle East 13
  • 14.
    CASE STUDY No on8 Wedding Registry 1,700 couples raised $1 million+ for Equality California 14
  • 15.
    CASE STUDY Spinal MuscularAtrophy Slide show on Photobucket 15
  • 16.
    CASE STUDY Tweet fora Cure 2,867 people have tweeted reaching 1.6 million followers http://gwendolynstrongfoundation.org/twitter 16
  • 17.
    CASE STUDY Grassroots Mapping Balloonaerial images of Gulf Oil Spill funded by Kickstarter grassrootsmapping.org 17
  • 18.
    CASE STUDY charity:water &Twestival http://www.charitywater.org/projects/map/ 18
  • 19.
    CASE STUDY Greenpeace &Nestlé Nestlé’s Facebook Page, March 17, 2010 19
  • 20.
    CASE STUDY Greenpeace &Nestlé Nestlé Killer microsite 20
  • 21.
    CASE STUDY Greenpeace &Nestlé Boycott Nestlé pages on Facebook 21
  • 22.
    CASE STUDY Greenpeace &Nestlé Greenpeace bought Google AdWords for Nestle & Greenpeace 22
  • 23.
    CASE STUDY Greenpeace &Nestlé Nestlé partners with Forest Trust 23
  • 24.
    CASE STUDY Visual storytellingcampaigns Women & Memory Forum (Egypt) / Nawaa (Tunisia) 24
  • 25.
    Other campaigns withimpact National Wildlife Federation raised $100,000 using social media after Gulf Oil Spill. Red Cross’s Text Haiti campaign raised $32 million. Oxfam UK received $50,000 via link in YouTube video posted day after Haiti quake. Visible Children Scholarship Program: 700 kids in Uganda receiving scholarships & mentoring. 25
  • 26.
    12 steps tomobilize your cause 1. First, listen and observe. Engage before the Ask. 2. Set clear goals & define metrics 3. Define a clear theme 4. Frame it with a personal story 5. Create a simple call to action 6. Create a conversation hub for participants 7. Give your campaign social love handles 8. Consider a mobile component 9. Identify & enlist evangelists 10. Create ongoing mini-actions & provide updates 11. Use immediacy: Headlines & deadlines 12. Create real-world events 26
  • 27.
    1. Create alistening post Set up a listening post (monitoring dashboard) to track what’s being said about your cause. Choose from Google Reader, Feedly (left) or Netvibes, supplemented by a Twitter monitoring service. 27
  • 28.
    2. Set goals,map metrics Goals Metrics to measure Grow email list of supporters # newsletter, RSS subscribers Solicit micro-loans Initial, repeat loan rates Increase comments on blog avg. # comments/post Increase website visibility increase in traffic or linkback #s Increase positive mentions mentions in social networks of brand or campaign Have visitors stick around stick rate Make our content more viral # of shares Get people to take action # of petition signatures Attend an event # of registrants, year over year 28
  • 29.
    3. Define aclear theme Boil down your cause to a strong, single sentence Vittana: Help anyone go to college Alter Eco: Support fair trade ActBlue: Elect progressive candidates DonorsChoose: Support public classrooms in need 29
  • 30.
    4. Tell apersonal story Use videos or photos — make us feel invisiblepeople.tv 30
  • 31.
    5. Create acall to action Inspire people to act with clear, motivating steps 31
  • 32.
    6. Create conversationhub Where will you engage with supporters? Your blog Community site (WiserEarth) Facebook Social hub (Change.org) Twitter Contest site (Giving Challenge) 32
  • 33.
    7. Social lovehandles Socialize your campaign with plug-ins, widgets 33
  • 34.
    8. Consider mobile GoodGuide.com: Users can use iPhone app to see if a product is healthy, environmentally friendly & socially responsible. This American Life: Facebook widget & text to give 34
  • 35.
    9. Enlist evangelists Use your listening post to identify high-value influencers in your subject area Establish a rapport and only then reach out Scope out Twitter Lists that intersect with your company or social cause Connect with other social media influencers through their blogs and other networks Twitter followings: @adventuregirl 1.4m @garyvee 853,854 @TOMSshoes 487,109 @AmeriCares 6,380 35
  • 36.
    10. Create mini-actions America’s Giving Challenge: Daily winners 36
  • 37.
    11. Use immediacy Headlines& deadlines: Play off the news & use a hard stop date 37
  • 38.
    12. Create offlineevents Contests, tweet-ups, fund-raisers to propel real-world gatherings 38
  • 39.
    Then: Measure, refine,refresh Measure results, follow up, recalibrate, relaunch http://dashboard.imamuseum.org/ 39
  • 40.
    Build an activecommunity here’s an amazing difference between building an audience and building a community. An audience will watch you fall on a sword. A community will fall on a sword for you. — Chris Brogan Author,“Trust Agents” 40
  • 41.
    Social action hubs Care2 TakePart Change.org WiserEarth Causes Amazee Idealist Causecast 41
  • 42.
    Use the SharingEconomy Free content! Free resources! Free photos Socialbrite.org/sharing-center Free videos Creativecommons.org Free music & audio Techsoup Free software & platforms! Free expertise! WordPress & its plug-ins BarCamp Open Office 3.0 PodCamp Drupal, Joomla & other WordCamp open source platforms Social Media Ubuntu Linux OS Club Kaltura for video 42
  • 43.
    T O OL S Creative Commons Creativecommons.org • Rich source of free commercial & noncommercial images • Flickr: 156 million Attribution, Noncommercial, No Derivatives & ShareAlike licenses • Use them for your blog, website, email or print newsletter, presentations, etc. • Don’t just take. Share! flickr.com/creativecommons 43
  • 44.
    T O OL S Darfur & Google Earth Crisis in Darfur: Using Google Earth 44
  • 45.
    T O OL S Google Earth’s historical layers Historic Centre of Warsaw, 1945 & today 45
  • 46.
    T O OL S Google Sidewiki Google Sidewiki at Apple.com 46
  • 47.
    T O OL S Do-good widgets Create a widget on Causes.com or create your own 47
  • 48.
    T O OL S Word clouds Wordle.net word cloud of JD Lasica’s tweets 48
  • 49.
    T O OL S Online visualizations Tea Party’s ‘Contract From America’ word cloud on manyeyes manyeyes.alphaworks.ibm.com 49
  • 50.
    T O OL S Online visualizations manyeyes Make your story more visual: Former Attorney General Alberto Gonzales’ testimony before Congress. manyeyes.alphaworks.ibm.com 50
  • 51.
    Other tools &platforms Social Actions: Open API enables organizations & bloggers to volunteer or take action on the causes they support, can tailor it to your cause. The Extraordinaries: Use the power of community for micro- volunteerism in people’s spare time. OpenStreetMap: Open source “Wikipedia of maps”; community builds own maps using GPS & donated satellite imagery. 51
  • 52.
    Warning: Gatekeepers The danger of closed platforms Exhibit 1: Facebook 52
  • 53.
    Warning: Gatekeepers Exhibit 2: Apple Political satirist Mark Fiore was ‘invited to reapply’ 53
  • 54.
    Tools & resources What you’ll find at bit.ly/mobilize 24 online fundraising sites Top cause organizations Free reports Free photo, music, video directories Collaboration & project management tools Geolocation tools Free tutorials on the best way to use Facebook, Twitter & blogs How to use mobile strategically Tons more. All free & shareable. 54
  • 55.
  • 56.
    Let’s keep talking JD Lasica, Socialbrite.org email: jd@socialbrite.org Twitter: @jdlasica Pamela Hawley, UniversalGiving email: phawley@universalgiving.org Twitter: @pamelahawley Resources at bit.ly/mobilize Bookmarks at delicious.com/socialmediacamp/mobilize Presentation at slideshare.net/jdlasica 56