TREATING OPEN
SOURCE AS PRO BONO
ABOUT ME
• John Jones, Vice President of
Interactive Strategies
• Developer by background, working
to drive expanded open source
engagement in the nonprofit world
ABOUT THE CASE
FOUNDATION
• Created in 1997 by digital pioneers Jean and
Steve Case, the Case Foundation invests in
people and ideas that can change the world.
• We focus on inspiring and raising up all to Be
Fearless
• We work to catalyze movements and
collaboration to bring forward ideas that have
transformative potential and can lead us to
uncover new, more impactful ways of
addressing chronic social challenges.
• Today we are driving at two major
movements—impact investing and inclusive
entrepreneurship.
WHAT ARE WE
TALKING ABOUT?
• Why open source can be considered a
form of pro bono work
• How that fits into our larger view of open
source driving tech-for-good
• How its happening in the sector now
• How to get involved in impactful open
source work
OPEN SOURCE
AS A PHILANTHROPIC ACT
GIFTS OF CODE
• Open source is a form of
philanthropy
• One gift of code can have unlimited
beneficiaries
• Both organizations and individuals
can embrace this type of
philanthropy as an alternative or
supplement to financial support
• Grants funding development of
technology should stipulate creation
of open source software to extend
the reach of that financial
contribution
ACCELERATION OF
INNOVATION
• The collaborative and transparent
nature of open source is a force-
multiplier for changemaking efforts
• By sharing and embracing open
source software, nonprofits can
kickstart collaboration, increase
efficiency and share successes and
encourage others to iterate off
failures
• We have seen it deployed in
multiple environments and see great
potential for open source to make a
real impact in the non-profit world
DEMOCRATIZATION
OF TECH
• Open source software lowers the
barrier to entry for technology and
therefore furthers the
democratization of technology
• It is an onramp for those without all
of the technical knowhow necessary
to create innovative products and
services
• It is often at competitive parity with
closed-source software thus
lowering the financial barrier to entry
CASE FOUNDATION’S
COMMITMENT TO
OPEN SOURCE
• We believe in the power of open
source to advance the great work of
the nonprofit sector
• Spreading the word to our peer
foundations and nonprofits
• “Walking the walk” by open sourcing
most of the technology we build in
service of our various programs
• Launching four open source
projects in 2018 – three are out, one
on the way
OUR CONTRIBUTION
#FACESOFFOUNDERS
• Our first foray into releasing open
source projects
• Campaign launched in late 2016
to gather stories of diverse
entrepreneurs and showcase
them using a profile-picture
generator
• We built a custom platform to take
in this user content and provide a
reviewing platform for a distributed
panel of judges
• Users of the platform, impressed
by the functionality, inquired about
reusing it for future work
https://github.com/casefoundation/Faces-of-Founders-Platform
ANALYTICS DASHBOARD
• Team dedicated to ongoing digital
A/B testing, analytics review and
general data analysis received
ongoing requests for more real-
time information
• We designed and built a
dashboard to query Google
Analytics and other data sources
to combine the information not
possible with other dashboard
platforms
• Open sourced and extensible to
support any number of additional
data sources
https://github.com/casefoundation/analytics-dashboard
WEEKLY ROUNDUP
• Our Marketing and
Communications team would
spend hours collecting and
formatting news clips every week
for a staff email
• With this platform, they simply
paste-in a URL, and it scrapes the
title title, publication, date, and
description for them
• Users may break clips into
sections and reorder as necessary
• Sends beautiful, branded email to
staff with clipped news stories
https://github.com/casefoundation/weekly-roundup
REVIEW-O-MATIC
• Built in 2017 to power the review
process in our Finding Fearless
campaign
• Organizes stories submitted via a
form and assigns them for review
to a panel of judges
• Easily adaptable for any
submit/review/decide process
such as conference proposal
submissions, crowdsourcing, etc
https://github.com/casefoundation/review-o-matic
NONPROFITS
AND OTHERS
EMBRACING OPEN
SOURCE FOR GOOD
BILL AND MELINDA GATES FOUNDATION
• Created Mojaloop, an open
source project that enables
interoperability between banks
and newer forms of financial
mechanisms sprouting up in
the developing world
• Using open source to build an
ecosystem
• Open ecosystem supports
financial inclusion while still
maintaining a competitive
market for innovation
CODE FOR AMERICA
• Organizes “brigades” of
volunteers across the country
to solve community and civic
problems using technology
• Brigades build and share
solutions using open source –
and we’re starting to see
solutions shared between cities
• Citizens who give their time
and talent in addition to the
material contribution of their
work product as philanthropy
TIDEPOOL
• Diabetes devices didn’t communicate and
relied on proprietary software for analysis of
the data
• Worked with manufacturers to open those
data standards
• Created software for working with all of these
devices for consumers
• Funded via research institutions using their
software
GIVESOURCE
• Open source fundraising
platform designed to power
Giving Days
• Created in partnership between
B-Corp Firespring, Lincoln
Community Foundation and the
Jeffrey S. Raikes School of
Computer Science
• Built with a focus on portability
and scalability for any size
campaign
• Cuts traditional fees taken by
similar fundraising platforms
BUT WHY AND HOW
CAN WE USE OPEN
SOURCE TO GIVE BACK?
WHY SHOULD YOU
GIVE BACK?
• Year over year, we see a growth in
the percentage of pro bono and
CSR programs that leverage “skills-
based” volunteering – up to 50% in
2017*
• Open source is the perfect venue for
the tech industry to give back
• This is an opportunity to make
volunteering count for something,
not as just a goodwill gesture
• It’s also easily measurable
*http://cecp.co/home/resources/giving-in-numbers/
WHAT HELP DO
NONPROFITS NEED?
• Many nonprofits contract with
commercial platforms that are slow
to adapt and feature poor
• Open source makes cutting-edge
technology accessible, but there is
still a barrier to entry
• At the end of the day, a GitHub
project page is a little intimidating to
a non-technical user
• Changemakers and technologists
think about problems in different
ways …
CHANGEMAKERS PEOPLE OUTCOMES
TECHNOLOGISTS PRODUCT OUTCOMES
HOW TO THINK ABOUT
GIVING BACK WITH
OPEN SOURCE
• Remember that your approach,
expertise, and personal experiences
are different
• Use an organization’s mission to drive
a tech strategy in terms of scope and
scale
• Be a mini-consultant and an educator
for organizations you work with
• Set them up to succeed in the long-run
with stable technologies and good
documentation
WHERE TO FIND THESE
OPPORTUNITIES
HIGH LEVEL
• Think locally – how can you give back
to your community or your neighbor
• Consider you and your teams’ core
technical competencies and individual
passions
• Find opportunities to open source your
own work in an impactful way
• Look at what industry peers may be
doing– can you apply what they have
done?
WHERE TO FIND THESE
OPPORTUNITIES
PRACTICAL LEVEL
• Personal and local networks
• Catchafire.org
• VolunteerMatch.org
• TaprootPlus.org
• OpenHatch.org
WRAP UP
• Open source is philanthropy and it accelerates
the work of nonprofits, but they need help
accessing
• Skills-based volunteering now accounts for 50%
of all volunteer work – where are the
developers?
• Giving back via open source is a way to actually
perform meaningful volunteering
• Think locally and as a mini-consultant and
educator when giving back
QUESTIONS? REACH OUT!
Twitter: @johnjones4
GitHub: casefoundation & johnjones4
Email: johnj@casefoundation.org

Treating Open Source as Pro Bono Work

  • 1.
  • 2.
    ABOUT ME • JohnJones, Vice President of Interactive Strategies • Developer by background, working to drive expanded open source engagement in the nonprofit world
  • 3.
    ABOUT THE CASE FOUNDATION •Created in 1997 by digital pioneers Jean and Steve Case, the Case Foundation invests in people and ideas that can change the world. • We focus on inspiring and raising up all to Be Fearless • We work to catalyze movements and collaboration to bring forward ideas that have transformative potential and can lead us to uncover new, more impactful ways of addressing chronic social challenges. • Today we are driving at two major movements—impact investing and inclusive entrepreneurship.
  • 4.
    WHAT ARE WE TALKINGABOUT? • Why open source can be considered a form of pro bono work • How that fits into our larger view of open source driving tech-for-good • How its happening in the sector now • How to get involved in impactful open source work
  • 5.
    OPEN SOURCE AS APHILANTHROPIC ACT
  • 6.
    GIFTS OF CODE •Open source is a form of philanthropy • One gift of code can have unlimited beneficiaries • Both organizations and individuals can embrace this type of philanthropy as an alternative or supplement to financial support • Grants funding development of technology should stipulate creation of open source software to extend the reach of that financial contribution
  • 7.
    ACCELERATION OF INNOVATION • Thecollaborative and transparent nature of open source is a force- multiplier for changemaking efforts • By sharing and embracing open source software, nonprofits can kickstart collaboration, increase efficiency and share successes and encourage others to iterate off failures • We have seen it deployed in multiple environments and see great potential for open source to make a real impact in the non-profit world
  • 8.
    DEMOCRATIZATION OF TECH • Opensource software lowers the barrier to entry for technology and therefore furthers the democratization of technology • It is an onramp for those without all of the technical knowhow necessary to create innovative products and services • It is often at competitive parity with closed-source software thus lowering the financial barrier to entry
  • 9.
    CASE FOUNDATION’S COMMITMENT TO OPENSOURCE • We believe in the power of open source to advance the great work of the nonprofit sector • Spreading the word to our peer foundations and nonprofits • “Walking the walk” by open sourcing most of the technology we build in service of our various programs • Launching four open source projects in 2018 – three are out, one on the way
  • 10.
  • 11.
    #FACESOFFOUNDERS • Our firstforay into releasing open source projects • Campaign launched in late 2016 to gather stories of diverse entrepreneurs and showcase them using a profile-picture generator • We built a custom platform to take in this user content and provide a reviewing platform for a distributed panel of judges • Users of the platform, impressed by the functionality, inquired about reusing it for future work https://github.com/casefoundation/Faces-of-Founders-Platform
  • 12.
    ANALYTICS DASHBOARD • Teamdedicated to ongoing digital A/B testing, analytics review and general data analysis received ongoing requests for more real- time information • We designed and built a dashboard to query Google Analytics and other data sources to combine the information not possible with other dashboard platforms • Open sourced and extensible to support any number of additional data sources https://github.com/casefoundation/analytics-dashboard
  • 13.
    WEEKLY ROUNDUP • OurMarketing and Communications team would spend hours collecting and formatting news clips every week for a staff email • With this platform, they simply paste-in a URL, and it scrapes the title title, publication, date, and description for them • Users may break clips into sections and reorder as necessary • Sends beautiful, branded email to staff with clipped news stories https://github.com/casefoundation/weekly-roundup
  • 14.
    REVIEW-O-MATIC • Built in2017 to power the review process in our Finding Fearless campaign • Organizes stories submitted via a form and assigns them for review to a panel of judges • Easily adaptable for any submit/review/decide process such as conference proposal submissions, crowdsourcing, etc https://github.com/casefoundation/review-o-matic
  • 15.
  • 16.
    BILL AND MELINDAGATES FOUNDATION • Created Mojaloop, an open source project that enables interoperability between banks and newer forms of financial mechanisms sprouting up in the developing world • Using open source to build an ecosystem • Open ecosystem supports financial inclusion while still maintaining a competitive market for innovation
  • 17.
    CODE FOR AMERICA •Organizes “brigades” of volunteers across the country to solve community and civic problems using technology • Brigades build and share solutions using open source – and we’re starting to see solutions shared between cities • Citizens who give their time and talent in addition to the material contribution of their work product as philanthropy
  • 18.
    TIDEPOOL • Diabetes devicesdidn’t communicate and relied on proprietary software for analysis of the data • Worked with manufacturers to open those data standards • Created software for working with all of these devices for consumers • Funded via research institutions using their software
  • 19.
    GIVESOURCE • Open sourcefundraising platform designed to power Giving Days • Created in partnership between B-Corp Firespring, Lincoln Community Foundation and the Jeffrey S. Raikes School of Computer Science • Built with a focus on portability and scalability for any size campaign • Cuts traditional fees taken by similar fundraising platforms
  • 20.
    BUT WHY ANDHOW CAN WE USE OPEN SOURCE TO GIVE BACK?
  • 21.
    WHY SHOULD YOU GIVEBACK? • Year over year, we see a growth in the percentage of pro bono and CSR programs that leverage “skills- based” volunteering – up to 50% in 2017* • Open source is the perfect venue for the tech industry to give back • This is an opportunity to make volunteering count for something, not as just a goodwill gesture • It’s also easily measurable *http://cecp.co/home/resources/giving-in-numbers/
  • 22.
    WHAT HELP DO NONPROFITSNEED? • Many nonprofits contract with commercial platforms that are slow to adapt and feature poor • Open source makes cutting-edge technology accessible, but there is still a barrier to entry • At the end of the day, a GitHub project page is a little intimidating to a non-technical user • Changemakers and technologists think about problems in different ways …
  • 23.
  • 24.
    HOW TO THINKABOUT GIVING BACK WITH OPEN SOURCE • Remember that your approach, expertise, and personal experiences are different • Use an organization’s mission to drive a tech strategy in terms of scope and scale • Be a mini-consultant and an educator for organizations you work with • Set them up to succeed in the long-run with stable technologies and good documentation
  • 25.
    WHERE TO FINDTHESE OPPORTUNITIES HIGH LEVEL • Think locally – how can you give back to your community or your neighbor • Consider you and your teams’ core technical competencies and individual passions • Find opportunities to open source your own work in an impactful way • Look at what industry peers may be doing– can you apply what they have done?
  • 26.
    WHERE TO FINDTHESE OPPORTUNITIES PRACTICAL LEVEL • Personal and local networks • Catchafire.org • VolunteerMatch.org • TaprootPlus.org • OpenHatch.org
  • 27.
  • 28.
    • Open sourceis philanthropy and it accelerates the work of nonprofits, but they need help accessing • Skills-based volunteering now accounts for 50% of all volunteer work – where are the developers? • Giving back via open source is a way to actually perform meaningful volunteering • Think locally and as a mini-consultant and educator when giving back
  • 29.
    QUESTIONS? REACH OUT! Twitter:@johnjones4 GitHub: casefoundation & johnjones4 Email: johnj@casefoundation.org