Join us for the San Francisco Net Tuesday on September 9:
Involver: How Nonprofits Can Create Video Campaigns for Social Networks.
(Note: I'll be in the Bay area in October 2006 and could meet face to face.)
Goal: Find the right combination of Web2.0 tools for a volunteer core group to use to help turnout people for a local social-justice event, scheduled in 3 months.
In just one volunteer network, for example, nationally there are 10,000+ local people, already involved in various communities, to mobilize for particular events.
Tools I have so far:
Tools I need:
A local community network and project-oriented collaborative web space. Coordinators first learn to use this at a local face-to-face meeting. Then together for 3 months they utilize it asynchronously to help build participation for a successful event. The website would include simplified workplace e-tools and short videos, appropriate for busy volunteers.
Its purpose is social facilitation: to encourage people to perform better at simple tasks when they know they're observing one another. Tasks include extending personal invitations to attend the event, listening and engaging others to participate based on their particular interests and gifts. See: 12 Guiding Principles of Community Engagement.
WhizSpark invitation websites produce Excel spreadsheets. I want to mash up and report invitations sent, etc. graphically in the collaborative web space for others to see. Bar charts and a campaign thermometer would help build campaign momentum by representing:
Event invitations sent so far
Simplified, volunteer-appropriate features in collaborative web space might also facilitate:
Today there is a downward spiral of civic apathy. Our national stockpile of social capital -- our reserve of personal bonds and fellowship -- is seriously depleted. We need democratic social-capital strategies like this to enable busy people to act bettertogether.
There's also a market for such event-organizing tools. Example: school reunions. But on this wetpaint.com High-School reunion wiki notice the last comment: Poor planning.
Web2.0 tools could help facilitate more effectively-planned events by supporting grassroots coordinators online to engage and mobilize busy people.
Mac Johnson psmcovky at usa.net
New Richmond, Ohio (Cincinnati area)
"...Remember me as a drum major for justice." -- Martin Luther King Jr.
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Cruiskeen Consulting LLC - Uppity Wisconsin http://www.uppitywis.org Menomonie, WI |
Uppity Wisconsin is an attempt at building a collaborative on-line web presence to promote progressive ideas in Wisconsin Politics. This is a new site (based on the Drupal CMS). It uses a combination of incoming and outgoing RSS, Blogs, Video, and email for communications. Uppity Wisconsi... |
It seems to me one of the basic challenges of implementing Web2.0 technologies is getting the (easy to use) technolgies set up appropriately so that they are easy to use. I just went through a fairly complex Civic Space Labs install, and had it not been for the techie sitting next to me, I would have been stymied right from the start, at "PHP MySQL Admin" (or whatever it was). Obviously, some of these new technolgoies are easier to grok from the beginning, but if I was a nonprofit administrator who wanted to run an open source CMS, I would need some one-time expert help installing and configuring it. I can handle the rest.
Given that Web Content Management tied for "most potential to help nonprofits and NGOs create social change" I think this is a fairly important issue we should look to address.
So here's my challenge - and discussion: Where do I go to find hands-on help for the more complex Web2.0 technologies? And more specifically, where are the tech volunteers? I.e. is there any level of implementation for these technologies that could use volunteer help, as oppsed to paid consultants? And are there communities of volunteers for Web2.0 technologies that exist already (I know of some obvious ones, but I'll let others respond...) ?
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