At Fundly, we know that the future of fundraising is
through online social media channels. Twitter has over 300 million
users and 1.6 billion search queries each day. Facebook boasts of having
more than 845 million users and more than half of those people log on
each day. Furthermore, this past year showed a 13% increase in online
giving which equals a 35-55% growth rate over the past year! With
numbers like these, which are only increasing over time, it just goes to
show that online social networking and fundraising are here to stay.
While we continue to encourage nonprofits and political candidates to
take full advantage of their online fundraising potential, it’s nice to
know that we’re not alone in our optimism using this strategy for
garnering donations. Mike Cassidy wrote in the Mercury News this
past weekend an interesting article entitled, “Will Facebook, Twitter,
Fundly and the like be the fundraisers of the future?” (Can we answer an
astounding “YES!” to that question?)
Cassidy proposes that, “as we move into the meat of the 2012 election
season, think of the accelerating convergence of social networking and
campaign fundraising as the anti-Super PAC movement.
“Super PAC money rolls into campaign coffers in the form of six-zero
checks signed by supporters who possess unfathomable means and political
interests that they’ll spend tens of millions to protect. The social
network money, on the other hand, comes from no-name nobodies, kicking
in $20 or $50 or maybe $200 at a time, in part because one of their
Facebook friends did the same.”
Cassidy also highlights the point that social networks such as
Facebook and Twitter are allowing those who normally wouldn’t contribute
to political campaigns to now actively participate. This is reaching a
younger demographic and getting more people involved in the political
process.
Fundly has definitely seen the popularity of online giving grow over
the past couple of years. At the end of the 2010 election cycle, 120
political customers were using Fundly to raise money.
Now the number is 10 times that. The campaigns range from local races
to the presidential efforts of Republicans Rick Santorum, Mitt Romney
and a Newt Gingrich PAC. Candidates also successfully raised $71 million
for the 2010 midterm elections, including $23 million for Fundly money
leader Meg Whitman, who ran for the office of Governor of California.
Online fundraising is the wave of the future, and we are excited that
the word is getting out. We have helped thousands of nonprofits,
schools, individual causes and candidates and we would love to help your
organization, too!
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