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Technology

Group Goes for Laughs and Donations

March 12, 2009 | Read Time: 2 minutes

Using a Web 2.0 brand of humor — along with e-mail, video, and outreach to social networks — the Nonprofit Technology Network raised more than $10,000 for scholarships to its annual technology conference in San Francisco.

“You guys answer each other’s questions, give each other encouragement, point each other in the right direction all the time,” Holly Ross, the network’s executive director, says in a video appeal. “Basically through NTEN, you support each other, and these days we all need a lot of support.”

Ms. Ross, who has been at the technology group for more than six years, gave donors an added incentive to give.

In the video, she laid out three potentially embarrassing activities — re-creating the dance sequence from a Beyoncé video, eating a sandwich called the Bacon Explosion, or playing the trombone from her college marching band in San Francisco’s Union Square — and said donors could vote for which one she would do if the organization met its goal.

“It would be easy if it were bacon, even though it sounds like a horrible fate in many ways,” says Ms. Ross. “But all signs point to Beyoncé.” The results of the vote will be announced the second week of March.


Online contributions from 199 donors totaled $10,395, which, combined with an additional $10,000 donated by Convio, an Austin, Tex., company that provides software for nonprofit organizations, will pay for free conference registrations for 58 people who work for nonprofit organizations with budgets of less than $1-million.

Registration for the April conference in San Francisco has been stronger than the group expected, given the state of the economy.

So far, more than 1,000 people have signed up, and Ms. Ross says that conference registration is on pace to exceed the target of 1,200 attendees that the network set when it budgeted for the meeting last spring.

The organization plans to write a case study documenting the steps it took to raise the scholarship money.

“It was a lot of work,” says Ms. Ross. “I think the title of the report will be something like, The Hardest $10,000 I Ever Raised.”


For more information: Go to http://nten.org/scholarship.

About the Author

Features Editor

Nicole Wallace is features editor of the Chronicle of Philanthropy. She has written about innovation in the nonprofit world, charities’ use of data to improve their work and to boost fundraising, advanced technologies for social good, and hybrid efforts at the intersection of the nonprofit and for-profit sectors, such as social enterprise and impact investing.Nicole spearheaded the Chronicle’s coverage of Hurricane Katrina recovery efforts on the Gulf Coast and reported from India on the role of philanthropy in rebuilding after the South Asian tsunami. She started at the Chronicle in 1996 as an editorial assistant compiling The Nonprofit Handbook.Before joining the Chronicle, Nicole worked at the Association of Farmworker Opportunity Programs and served in the inaugural class of the AmeriCorps National Civilian Community Corps.A native of Columbia, Pa., she holds a bachelor’s degree in foreign service from Georgetown University.