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Philanthropy 2.0

Author: Catherine Curan
Date: 21.10.2008
Category: Foundations, Fundraising & Philanthropy

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A year ago, Jean and Steve Case’s teenage daughter asked a question that inspired her parents to reassess their entire approach to philanthropy.

Steve, one of the cofounders of AOL, had taken her— one of his five children—to mingle with Bill Clinton and other global charitable titans at a philanthropy conference at the Clinton Presidential Library in Little Rock, Ark. Despite growing up with parents who established a family foundation, and despite her hands-on participation with her family in volunteer work, the teenager leaned over to her father in the middle of the conference to ask, “Dad, what’s philanthropy?”

“That was the point at which we said, the way we’ve been doing things, the way we talk about what we do . . . it’s all really out-of-date with how young people think today,” says Jean, the CEO of the Washington, D.C.–based Case Foundation. "We really need some new branding here."

This realization inspired the Cases to rethink both how they define giving and how they promote it. When Steve and Jean (also a former AOL executive) founded their charitable organization in 1997, they believed they had to set aside the consumer-marketing skills they had honed during the Internet revolution and adopt only the nonprofit arena’s methods. Now, however, the Cases have realized the value of applying consumer-marketing principles to further their foundation’s mission of helping underserved families and fostering economic development. They had been at the forefront of popularizing personal Internet use through the spread of AOL. Technology has since transformed personal communications and shopping habits, but philanthropy has consistently lagged behind this trend. The Cases want to help it catch up. 

Instead of a closed circle of insiders, the Cases—along with Napster co-founder Sean Parker and a handful of major foundations—are defining charity as something that everyone should make part of their daily lives. To further that new ideal, they are hosting online competitions that help donors choose grant recipients. They are also tapping online social networks such as Facebook and Second Life to foster new ways for philanthropic groups to coalesce and to find new solutions for persistent social ills. In keeping with the consumer-business model, philanthropists are also seeking ways to use technology to reach out to those who want to give, rather than relying on traffic to a particular website. That might mean, for example, allowing people to use their cell phones to make donations after attending a film or event highlighting a cause.

Parker, who at age 28 has already spearheaded two large-scale online communities—the music site Napster and the address-book site Plaxo—and been part of Facebook’s executive team in its early phase, launched a new venture last year called Causes on Facebook. The project is designed to replicate online the networks that support grassroots social and political movements. Causes allows Facebook’s more than 61 million active users to create a cause complete with a real-world nonprofit beneficiary. Users then invite friends on the site to join, and members can even donate to the cause directly through Facebook.

Keywords: philanthropy, web, technology

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PhContributeBy Visionjr  
Location: Newport Beach, California
Country: United States

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