Archive for June, 2008

Fundraiser of the month – July 2008

July’s fundraiser of the month was an easy one.

Congratulations to the brilliant Nicole Dryburgh who’s raised over £20,000 so far towards a neuro-rehabilitation room at King’s College Hospital.

Nicole_3

 

Nicole has been a patient at King’s since she was eleven and knows all about how important this new room is going to be. It’s well worth reading the very poetic message on her fundraising page.

She was nominated by Claire McFarlane who said:

“Nicole Dryburgh is 19, she was diagnosed with a malignant tumour on her spine at the age of 11 and 2 years later a brain haemorrhage left her totally blind. Nicole is always fundraising, her next fundraising event is a 100ft abseil on 6th July – she is an inspiration!”

You can find out more about Nicole by visiting her website or reading her book. And you can have a look at Claire’s fundraising page if you like too.

Good luck with the very daring abseil Nicole, and you win a £25 donation to King’s College Hospital Charity

Comments (1)

Online introduction and demonstration

This short recording highlights the key services of Justgiving and also the support we have in place for both your charity and your fundraisers.

If you would like any further information you can contact us on mollyandlee@justgiving.com, or you can print our factsheets.

Comments off

iPledge for Buwan Kothi – June charity site of the month

It’s been a while since the last charity site of the month, but June brings us another gem:

Ipledge_3
www.iPledge.org.uk

In the words of The Buwan Kothi International Trust, the iPledge site is a blog that celebrates the efforts and hard work of our many supporters – and reminds everyone that making a donation is not the only way of supporting our activities.

I caught up with Kevin from the Trust who had some very interesting things to say about devolved fundraising, word of mouth marketing and using free web tools.

Read on or download the full story: Download ipledge.doc

What is your charity and what do you do?

In December 2005, friends and relatives of Gilly Mundy and Debbie Quargnolo travelled from the UK to the tiny rural village of Buwan Kothi in Haryana, northern India, to celebrate their wedding. We were all overwhelmed by the warmth and generosity of the welcome from the village and resolved to develop and strengthen links between people in the UK and Haryana.

In March 2006, the Buwan Kothi International Trust was formed to raise funds for projects in Haryana and our major objective was to build a primary school in Buwan Kothi, a task that was given an even greater impetus by Gilly’s sudden death in March 2007, aged only 36.

Where did the idea of the iPledge site come from?

We wanted to celebrate the hard work of our many supporters and remind everyone that making a donation is not the only way of supporting our activities. Making a pledge can involve making a difference by taking part in (or organising) a sponsored event, or volunteering some free time, or talking to friends and colleagues about the Trust and what it has achieved so far.

Over the last year, we have managed to raise a considerable sum whilst keeping our costs to a minimum (less than £40 in 2007-08 out of a total of £52K). This has only been possible because of using the internet and e-mail rather than more expensive publicity but also because we have actively encouraged ‘devolved fundraising’, by letting supporters do whatever they can to help, without necessarily organising everything ourselves.

What did you want the iPledge site to achieve?

The iPledge site will hopefully help to encourage supporters to see the charity as belonging not to its trustees but to everyone that gets involved. The charity was the brainchild of a large group of friends with many skills and a variety of different talents and we want to keep that ethos at the forefront of our fundraising activities.

Using a blog enables everyone to see the range of activities that people have pledged to undertake and act as a reminder that each individual supportive action is part of a wider community seeking to help the Trust’s work. And, of course, it has cost us next to nothing to set up!

What sort of feedback have you had?

It’s early days yet but feedback has been very positive. For example, the number of supporters pledging to take part in our fundraising cycle ride in July looks set to top the 26 riders who took part last year (and raised more than £20K between them).

Some of your fundraisers have raised more than others – do you know why some are more successful?

For us, the amount raised is less important than the fact that so many people are willing to make an effort. Some supporters have wider – and wealthier – circles of friends than others, but every penny counts.

As a new and small charity, we also know our profile is nowhere near as high as the big charities, but that donations are nearly always made by families and friends supporting individual efforts, rather than on our name recognition, so the more people pledge to fundraise for us, the better. Building our profile by word of mouth helps to keep our costs to a minimum and make sure that so far, 99.9% of the money we have raise directly supports communities in Haryana.

How has Justgiving helped?

Devolved fundraising involves surrendering a certain amount of overall control, but as a charity we have an obligation to ensure that fundraising undertaken in our name is accountable and transparent. Justgiving provides us with this, because donations come straight to us rather than through each individual fundraiser.

Anyone making a donation can be completely confident that their money goes directly – and promptly – to the Trust. It also helps individual supporters to contact friends and family all over the country and encourage donations without the fuss of asking for cheques or collecting cash.

Was it easy to set up the blog on Blogger?

Setting up a blog on Blogger is very straightforward. Some knowledge of basic HTML is needed for changing from one of Blogger’s basic templates to something like the free template
we used to improve the look of the site, but the basic templates aren’t that bad.

If anyone wants to borrow our idea for their own charity and is struggling, then I’m happy to try and explain to them in more detail how we set up our blog.

Did it take up much time or resource?

Initial set up wasn’t too time-consuming because we had the necessary IT skills amongst our supporters. Maintaining the site is a doddle – it takes a matter of minutes to add new pledges via the Blogger ‘dashboard’ and because the site is accessed via a web browser, requires no special software or programming knowledge. Mainly, it has involved adding a title to a post, some standard wording and pasting in an individual’s Justgiving widget.

**********

Thanks for taking the time to speak to us Kevin, you’ve shared a lot of useful information that other charities can use. The concept of ‘devolved fundraising’ is something we are seeing more and more on Justgiving – as I mentioned recently on the blog with the rise of occasion fundraising.

It’s also a great example of using free tools like Blogger to start some word-of-mouth marketing and generate a *buzz* around a small charity.

Leave a Comment

Payment reports to be scheduled from end of July

We’re making a new adjustment to payment reports so that they download quicker and don’t affect site performance. From the end of July, payment reports will be scheduled and available to download from the Wednesday after we make a payment.

Why are you changing this?

Every time a report was generated, data was retrieved from our database in real time, so when lots of reports were run at the same time our servers were processing huge amounts of data and our site performance was suffering. As our CTO Dom said in April, we’re in the process of separating our reporting database from the live database so there will be one that deals solely with reporting. So, in future, reports won’t affect general site performance, but it’s a big project and will take some time.

Will we still see how much we’re being paid?

Yes, when we make the payment on a Friday, you’ll still see the summary of what you’re being paid. Depending on your charity’s bank, the money will arrive on Tuesday or Wednesday, and the payment report data will be available on the Wednesday.

What about old payments?

You’ll still be able to see and download reports on all payments made before the end of July at any time. These reports will be generated in real time, unlike the new payment reports which will be pre-generated and ready to download.

We’re used to thanking people based on payment reports..

We’re aware that this change may affect some processes you have in place, so we’d like to help find out what other reports we could provide to help you more. Just click on the poll below: (now closed) 

Is this the last change to reporting now?

We still need to make small changes to the Gift Aid analysis and Gift Aid payment reports over the next month to take into account the changes to Gift Aid and the payment of transitional relief. You can read more about those changes in this riveting blog post (which is strangely the most popular post we’ve ever done…).

Leave a Comment

Sponsor our Mike!

Our Mike is a bit of a helpdesk legend.

Mike

He loves a chat, so he’s ideally suited to his job of talking our lovely fundraisers and donors through their queries about Justgiving. He also puts up with the odd bit of flack from us about his chattiness (sorry about that Mike :) and we wanted to take the opportunity to show him a bit of appreciation. Mike – we think you’re ace!

Now down to business. On 27th June, Mike’s going to be jumping out of a plane (pretty brave if you ask us) to raise money for Help the Aged. The jump has already been cancelled once, making the lead-up to next Friday all the more exciting.

As he’s so very near his target, we thought we’d give his cleverly-titled fundraising page a plug on the blog. So if anyone feels like showing their support and helping Mike smash his target for a good cause, you can do it here.

Good luck Mike! We’re all going to be rooting for you! From the safety of the ground, of course. 

Comments (1)

Older Posts »