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Perla Ni at the Online Community Summit

Posted to: Haney Armstrong (CCAL30) (1784) by Haney Armstrong (CCAL30) (1784), Mon, 11 Dec 2006 13:22:36 PST
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Link here for picts and links.

Thomas Kriese and I were at the Online Community Summit on Oct 5 and 6 where about 75 professionals gather in very cute Sonoma to swap stories of online communities .

I was very lucky to have Perla Ni riding shotgun on the rainy trip up. Perla was founder and former publisher of the Stanford Social Innovation Review among many other famous things. She was also one of the presenters at the non-profit pre-conference Thursday morning.

She feels that most non-profit websites aren’t emotionally engaging – offering stock photos and cold information and a “donate here” button. She offers a cure: make it possible for the people that the group serves to put up content on the site – either text, video or podcasts. She showed a very cool Canadian site - homelessnation.org - that puts up new videos portraits of homeless made by volunteers. It turns out that most homeless people have very interesting stories to tell. New videos appear each week and Perla returns regularly to see what's new.

Of course nonprofits might fear losing control of the message. But direct communication gives the site an authenticity that should more than make up for any uneasiness. And it makes it possible for visitors to feel like they are in contact with the real people who they would like to help.

Perla has also software that allows non-profits transform their websites via the collection and display of user created content. She passed on the chance to toot her own horn in her presentation.

She is also the CEO of a nonprofit called GreatNonprofits – taking advantage of the grassroots democratization of the web to aggregate and share information about nonprofits.



By Laurel Ley (48), Mon, 01 Jan 2007 12:36:14 PST
Comment feedback score: 0

Haney --

I'm surprised others haven't latched on to this jewel of a resource. While their site is not live yet, the concept is completely on-target. I've already registered to get notified when the site is up.

I'll be sure to email Perla direct but this is the same conclusion I came to after Katrina. I had a similar experience on the animal side. One large group received an exact sum to still be disclosed but somewhere between 30 and 50 million. And some groups with documentation of exactly how they helped were denied reimbursement by this same "big" group.

I find it fascinating that the larger animal non-profits really don't seem to understand the value of marshalling the grassroots people. Even if one can only get 10% of them moving in the same way, wow.

On the web issue, when I owned a web firm, we donated a number of sites. And I became fascinated by the dilemma some groups were in -- they were afraid of looking too organized or too professional. As if people thought that they were wasting money. I think some groups were stuck on the we want to keep our identity, we're small role. Others didn't seem to grasp the old adage that winners stick with winners, etc. So success breeds success. And if you mark your graphics/site/print as "donated by" -- first you demonstrate that someone believed enough in your cause to participate and if you look credible, people will be more inclined to participate as well.

Thanks for the great article and source. Perhaps more might discover this as well.

Best regards, Laurel


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