Archive for December, 2010

December 29, 2010

Microvolunteers to the Rescue: Mapping Impact

by Shauna Carey

The nonprofit: Hug it Forward builds “bottle schools” in Guatemala made of non-compostable trash, cleaning up towns and fostering community engagement along the way.

The challenges:

1) Create a simple interactive map to showcase the location of bottle school projects.

2) Design the marker for the map that will represent the schools.

The results:


GoogleMaps whiz and micro-volunteer extraordinaire Matthew B. worked with Heenal to create the map and make all the necessary code adjustments for it to integrate seamlessly into the Hug it Forward’s website.

At the same time, graphic designer Adrien P. from Google gave the map the final touch it needed — designing a snazzy school and bottle graphic that Heenal could use to mark project locations.  It was crowd-sourced collaboration at its finest, and we think Heenal said it best: “Within a week of this idea being proposed, it’s implemented, tweaked, perfected, and very nearly ready to launch! Who knows how long this might have taken if we’d tried to do it through “traditional” means.”

You can view the final product on Hug it Forward’s website, here.

 


December 28, 2010

Microvolunteers to the rescue: Newsletter 911

by Shauna Carey

The nonprofit: The Miquon School is a small independent coed school in Conshohocken, PA for children ages 3 – 12, committed to progressive education, the preservation of childhood, and environmental awareness.

The challenge: Translate our newsletter from MS Publisher to Adobe InDesign.

The result: In less than a week, superstar volunteer and graphic designer Tim S. created a workable and beautiful InDesign template, using the school’s previous newsletter as a style guide.  For his work on the project, Tim was given an Award of Excellence by Arabella P. of the Miquon School, who pointed out that his template “saved [the school] a lot of time and money that we can better use for more mission-related activities.” Hats off to Tim for putting his spare time and software savvy to such good use!

Courtesy of the Miquon School

December 26, 2010

Nonprofits get a head start with microvolunteering challenge templates

by Ben Rigby

We just had a great question come through on our user forum. Here it is:

Credibility?
I begin to wonder about the credibility of this site when I see the exact same question being asked by different organizations? "A witty thank you letter…", "My staff only has 30 minutes…" what is going on here?

What's going on is that for nonprofits, we've created a "Challenge Template Library" to get them started using Sparked. This library features about 50 different templates across categories like social media, web development, fundraising, and translation.

Here's a screenshot of the landing page:

Screen shot 2010-12-26 at 9.41.57 PM

And here's a screenshot of an open template in the Marketing & Promotion category:

Screen shot 2010-12-26 at 9.42.14 PM

So, you see why many of the nonprofits post the same challenge. We encourage the nonprofits to customize these templates as much as possible – not only because it's more interesting for microvolutneers, but because they'll get more answers, higher quality, and more customized results. You'll see the "Create Your Own" option at the top, where the nonprofit writes a totally custom challenge.

We launched the Template Library about a month after our beta rollout after receiving a bunch of feedback from nonprofits that went something like this:

"We love that we can ask microvolunteers for help. It's a tremendous resource. But we're having trouble figuring out how to ask for help."

We realized that Sparked is a fundamentally new way to ask for and receive help. Nonprofits (and the rest of us) are not used to chunking up work in ways that can be usefully presented to a group of people for action. So, we wrote these challenge templates to give nonprofits a jump start. 

The results have been interesting:

  1. Most nonprofits use at least one challenge template when they first login. It's their introduction to microvolunteering.

     

  2. We've been able to wrap a whole lot of best practices into these templates. This gives nonprofits an extra boost. Not only are they getting work done by microvolunteers, they're learning about what they should be doing in areas like social media and mobile phones.

    For example, a nonprofit may not have known that it's a best social media practice to research and develop a list of bloggers in their field. Through the challenge template, they both learn about the best practice and then get microvolunteers to jumpstart the list. It's a great combo. 

     

  3. On the downside, there are a fair number of similar challenges in the system. As the comment above implies – it doesn't feel right, from the microvolunteer perspective, to see the same challenge more than once. 

    I've got a couple of thoughts about this problem. 

    a) Sometimes, there is a real value in the same challenge being done multiple times for different nonprofits. A logo design, for example, can be repeated ad-infinitum and will always deliver value. 

    b) But, there is also value being lost by repeating challenges. In the blogger list challenge, for example, it'd be great if we could combine all of data into a centralized place, so that this kind of challenge would be an exercise in building on top of previous work, rather than starting from scratch. I'm highly interested in figuring out a solution here – but the technical and user experience challenges here are complex. If you have any, I'd love to hear your ideas about how to do this simply – and in such a way that doesn't confuse first time nonprofits and users.

So, there you have it. That's a long winded answer to the question about repeating challenges. Hope that helps to clarify – and open to any thoughts/feedback/critique that you've got. 

Thanks,

Ben

December 25, 2010

All I want for Christmas is a Challenge Slider.

by Ben Rigby

Believe it or not, through the tireless work of one Boris Korsunsky, Sparked's Lead Engineer, we have just released a major brand new feature. This one is really really exciting. We call it the Challenge Slider. It's a super new way to browse through nonprofit "Challenges" (microvolunteering projects) on your Sparked.com home page. Take a look:

Slider2

You'll have to use it to get the full effect, but the idea is that you can slide through nonprofit challenges quickly and easily (top of page). Just click the forward arrow and you'll be on your way. There are four categories through which you can slide: recommended, my skills, my causes, and team captain's selections.

Recommended: here we use our magical challenge matching engine to determine what we think you'll be most interested in doing. 

My Skills: here we serve you challenges that match your skills.

My Causes: here we serve you challenges that match your favorite causes.

Team Captain: if you're on a team and your captain has selected challenges, you'll see them here. What's a team you ask? If your company is using Sparked to manage its employee volunteering program (EVP), then you'll be on a team with your co-workers. Fun! 

Along the bottom of the page, you'll see our new "Success! Feed" – it shows you challenges that were recently closed and thanked by nonprofits. It's a great way to see all of the wonderful work that's being done by you and other Sparked microvolunteers. 

Boris, thanks for burning the midnight oil all week to get this out by Christmas! Chad, your design rocks, as usual.

December 24, 2010

Why microvolunteering is not virtual volunteering.

by Ben Rigby
Wow, I didn’t know there would be so much interest in the definition of microvolunteering. I got another question about the distinction between micro and virtual volunteering after writing a post yesterday about FreeRice vs. microvolunteering and after writing a formal definition (here) a few weeks ago.

And by the way, since we’ve dived headlong into definitions, we’ve also decided to *spell* microvolunteering without a dash… since that’s how the New York Times spells “microfinance” and since #microvolunteering is the only possible hashtag on Twitter (dashes break hashtags). We’ll be updating all of our instances across Sparked and the blog.

Ok, so micro VS virtual. The battle is on. Just kidding. They’re very closely related and all in the same family of awesome. But here’s where it gets interesting.

Virtual volunteering, as it has been done to date,* is exactly like in-person volunteering, but the work takes place remotely. It’s like telecommuting to work.

So, all of the same management rules are in place. You will usually be trained, vetted, and accepted for a volunteer position. You will have a direct manager. You will do work and will send it to your manager for review. The manager will approve the work or ask for revisions. The manager will tell you that you’ve done an amazing job – or that you could stand a little more training. Communication will happen via email, typically. But it could also happen via a phone call – or via a project management web site like Basecamp. This is volunteering, remotely, from a more convenient location.

If you review my definition of microvolunteering, you can see that virtual volunteering checks off only one of the four key defining characteristics: convenience. Just to review those points briefly, microvolunteering is: convenient, bite-sized, crowdsourced, and network-managed.

Virtual volunteering is convenient, small or large sized, and managed via a traditional one-to-one or one-to-many hierarchical management method.

Why are these distinctions so important? Because they lead to a process of work that is wildly different. And yet, the result of the work may be precisely the same! How’s that for interesting?

Let’s talk nuts and bolts with an example. Let’s say that that Room to Read (a great kids’ literacy nonprofit) wants a new holiday badge for their home page. The dimensions are 300x400px and it should say “the 2010 Holiday Gift Catalog” on it with a link that says “Unwrap World Change.”

Using a virtual volunteering model, Room to Read would first search for a virtual volunteer. They’d probably post a listing on Volunteer Match, which is the-place-to-be for virtual and in-person volunteer listings. They might also post a “volunteer graphic designer wanted” ad on Craigslist or even on their own home page. Multiple volunteers would apply for the position. They’d review portfolios and then choose one. Let’s call her Anne. So, then, Room to Read would send Anne the design brief and she’d get to work. She’d deliver three versions. Room to Read would select one for refinement and Anne would deliver a final version of that design. Done. Let’s see the badge!

Screen shot 2010-12-24 at 12.04.41 PM

This badge wasn’t actually done by a volunteer, I just screen-snapped it from Room to Read’s home page for the sake of this example.

So done! But not quite, actually, because Room to Read has just invested so much time in finding and working with Anne, that they don’t want to waste the investment. So, assuming Anne was a great designer and easy to work with, they’d ask her to provide graphic design skills on an ongoing basis.

Let’s pause here. Because we’re at an important inflection point. This scenario is implausible. Room to Read would never have gone through all of this work just to get one holiday badge designed. Anne delivered an amazing badge and was really easy to work with. They’re not going to want to see her go.

Because the process of work is so involved, this kind of relationship needs to extend beyond a single project. It’s a waste of time for both parties to engage in a single smaller project. The process requires a longer-term relationship in order to be viable.

Ok, so now let’s take a look at this same project through the lens of microvolunteering. Again, Room to Read wants a holiday badge for their home page. So, they post their design brief online to a place where microvolunteers can find it (right now, the only place to post microvolunteering projects is Sparked.com, but there will be others in the very near future, like this promising-looking project called ChangeMachine coming out of the University of Chicago).

Big distinction: instead of posting a “help wanted” ad, the nonprofit has posted the “project brief” complete with pixel dimensions, copywriting, and a deadline. In a microvolunteering scenario, the nonprofit is not looking for a person. They are looking for a specific result.

Immediately after the project is posted, one or many microvolunteers start to do the work. And they all post their badge designs to the microvolunteering site. Some of these designs are really really bad. Some of them are phenomenally good. Many of the microvolunteers start to critique each others’ work. Non-designers get into the action with critiques and ratings. The best designs filter to the top.

The nonprofit manager returns to the site to check out the progress. They see the peer-reviewed picks at the top – and the rest below. The nonprofit says that they really like the top pick… and an element from one of the others further down. And there's one that they absolutely hate, because of the way it portrays kids as victims of poverty rather than as inspired want-to-be readers. Room to Read provides all of this commentary online.

So now, the designers go at it again. They revise and rework and deliver a new batch of fresh designs. And now, there’s one that Room to Read really loves. Here it is!

Screen shot 2010-12-24 at 12.04.41 PM 

Same result. Very very different process.

Is one method inherently better than another? No way. They’re both good for different purposes. Virtual volunteering is great for when you want to develop a long-term relationship with a committed volunteer. Microvolunteering is great when you want to get a specific project done with a minimum of fuss.

Does microvolunteering mean that long-term relationships don’t happen? No. We’re seeing the same microvolunteers come back and back again to work on their favorite nonprofit's projects. We’re also seeing microvolunteers turning into virtual volunteers – when they get really interested in a nonprofit and want to form a deeper and longer-term relationship.

So, that’s the distinction. Hope it’s clear how virtual volunteering and microvolunteering are different. But in case it's not, and if you’ve got any juice left to read, here’s a final note about the possibilities that microvolunteering opens up.

If you read the microvolunteering example above, you can see that there was a flurry of work all done online for the nonprofit. Pause here. To reiterate – all of the work was done and delivered online, and in a place where anyone can see it. It's public. In fact, the more public it is, the better, since it can attract more microvolunteers and more peer-reviewers. It would be possible to have a private or semi-private microvolunteering system, but each gate you throw up reduces the quality of end result. Understandably, there are some cases in which you'd want a more private system, but that's the trade-off. 

At NCVS this year, I heard a speaker say that "You don't hire every volunteer" as a strategy for managing volunteer programs. His point was that you don't want to waste your time managing volunteers who do bad work. It's not worth the nonprofit's time. 

With microvolunteering, "You hire EVERY volunteer." The end result gets better as more people work on and peer-review your project. You turn no-one away. If someone's work is not good, that's just fine. It's helpful to the process. And don't worry about offending the microvolunteer. They come into the relationship knowing that their work may not be selected as the "final result." And their work was, in fact, helpful because it served to drive the process forward. Using the example above, their badge may have been the one that the nonprofit hated. Which is exactly what you're looking for in a design process: strong reactions. 

And now, since all of the work was done online and in public, it can be tracked and rewarded online also! For each microvolunteer, we can start to do things like:

  1. Track time spent microvolunteering
  2. Track peer ratings over time
  3. Track interest on a per-nonprofit, per-skill, or per-cause basis
  4. Give awards for great work
  5. Give awards for most improved
  6. Give awards for participation
  7. Connect microvolunteers with one another on the basis of interests
  8. Give tools for showing off work done on Facebook and Twitter
  9. Recommend similar microvolunteering projects
So now, we've created a vibrant ecosystem of data around the microvolunteers… and this kind of data is really different and special. Never before have we been able to (easily) gather and showcase information about volunteering. Suddenly, we’ve got the skills, interests, and work-quality history for each microvolunteer. And the history has been vetted and reviewed both by a body of peers and by the requesting nonprofit. We can then apply this data to creating even more satisfying and effective microvolunteering experiences for both parties. That's really exciting. 

If you’ve stuck with me this far, thanks for reading!
Love to hear your comments.

-ben

* This post refers to virtual volunteering as it's been done and defined to date. You could reasonably make a case that microvolunteering is also done virtually (remotely) and therefore, should be also called 'virtual volunteering.' The problem with this approach is that, (#1) for the reasons outlined above, virtual volunteering as it is currently known is quite different from microvolunteering. Therefore, using the same term to define both would be confusing. In addition, (#2) there's really no reason that microvolunteering can't be done in-person! You could use all of the same techniques to flashmob serving sandwiches to homeless people. That would be microvolunteering, but decidedly not virtual. 
December 23, 2010

Are FreeRice.com and other “click-to-donate” schemes forms of micro-volunteering?

by Ben Rigby

The other day, a friend asked me if I’d consider the vocabulary quiz-game, FreeRice.com, to be a good example of micro-volunteering. In this game, each time you click a guess, FreeRice.com makes a small donation to a charity.

Screen shot 2010-12-23 at 6.21.12 PM

I’d just posted my definition of micro-volunteering (here), but thought I’d elaborate a bit with a blog post – in order to address this specific use case. Because in my book, while FreeRice is a really clever tool (and one I’m fond of) it’s quite far from micro-volunteering.

Here’s the distinction. FreeRice monetizes you by capturing your attention. They sell ads to sponsors who want to sell you their goods. You are being advertised to, plain and simple. In the screenshot above, Avis is paying for your eyeballs. And FreeRice gives a portion of that advertising revenue to charity. FreeRice is similar to most online and mobile phone games, where revenue is generated by selling ads. But in this case, you feel extra good about it because some of that money goes to a good cause.

It’s a cool model. It’s a fun game (i’m a logophile). But it’s not micro-volunteering. It’s advertising with a twist. And there are a ton of similar schemes like this across the web, where you can “click to donate.” It’s not that your click (or stellar vocabulary skills) results in work being done for a nonprofit. Each of your clicks results in you being advertised to – and the nonprofit gets a cut. At the core, FreeRice and similar schemes are monetizing the probability that you will purchase a product after seeing an ad.

If the Sierra Club asked you to come to their office to watch ads on television all day. And they told you that they were going to earn $15/day because advertisers were willing to pay to have you sit there, would that be volunteering? I think it’d be a very far stretch.

Let's use a more direct analogy. Let's say that Macy's is hiring cashiers for the holidays at $20/hr. But they have this special deal where you work as a cashier for two weeks and 50% of your salary will be donated to Greenpeace. And they're also going to pocket the other half. So, you'll get paid $0 for your work. And Greenpeace will get a total of $800 after two weeks. 

Is that volunteering? I don't think so. It's an interesting model (and maybe Macy's should try it!), but it's not volunteering. Macy's is, of course, analogous to FreeRice in this example.

The very clever thing about online click-to-donate is that we don't stop to consider the economic model. We just have fun doing it – and a nonprofit gets paid. Fun and clever: yes. Micro-volunteering: no.

Love to hear your thoughts.
-ben

December 20, 2010

Micro-volunteering Monday: Design logos, T-shirts, Twitter backgrounds, badges

by Britt Bravo

We’re experimenting with a new blog post series, Micro-volunteering Monday, where we highlight a sampler of micro-volunteering challenges up on Sparked.  This week’s Micro-volunteering Monday is focused on Design.

To start working on one of these, or other micro-volunteering challenges, log into your Sparked account

If you work for a nonprofit that needs help with a design challenge, create an account for your organization on Sparked, and post your challenge.

Britt Bravo writes for the Sparked.com blog and her personal blog, Have Fun, Do Good.




December 19, 2010

Micro-volunteering features of the week

by Ben Rigby

Over the last few weeks, I've been doing a weekly blog post summing up the new product features that we've rolled out over the week. We practice continuous deployment, so there's something new (or tweaked) every day – and usually multiple times per day. Thanks to Alon Salant over at Carbon 5 for helping us to jumpstart into our current (awesome) continuous deployment practice. 

The week of Dec 13th was light in terms of public facing features. We made a lot of tweaks to our back-end administrative tools and updated components of the notification system.

When you participate in a challenge, we send you an email when another micro-volunteer also participates in that challenge. In an ideal scenario, you're waiting on the edge-of-your-seat to hear what people think about your challenge answer. But, we know that this may not always be the case.

So, now, you can "unfollow" a challenge in which you've participated.  We want to make extra-sure that we're only sending you emails that you want to receive. Here, you can see that new option:

Screen shot 2010-12-19 at 4.55.36 PM

And we've made a few more refinements to our algorithm for selecting your personalized weekly challenge. Our challenge routing engine is getting smarter and smarter. Here's a screenshot from a weekly challenge that was sent to a micro-volunteer named Vani:

Screen shot 2010-12-19 at 4.50.41 PM
Thanks to www.vark.com for email formatting inspiration. We loved their notification format so much that we borrowed a good chunk of it!

Love to hear your thoughts on our notifications system. Are you getting too much, too little, or just the right amount of email from us? Any and all ideas welcome. 

December 17, 2010

Sparked.com Facebook Page, Twitter Feed + #microvolunteering

by Britt Bravo

SparkedonTwitter To coincide with the launch of Sparked.com, the world's first micro-volunteering network, we've also created a new Sparked.com Facebook Page and Twitter feed, @SparkedCom.

We hope you'll join us in both places to chat about how micro-volunteering can change the world!  Be sure to add the hashtag #microvolunteering to your tweets so that we can follow your micro-volunteering ideas, stories and news.

Sparked.comFacebookPage

 

Britt Bravo blogs for the Sparked.com blog and her personal blog, Have Fun, Do Good.

December 14, 2010

Awards for Micro-Volunteers!

by Ben Rigby

We've just launched some exciting new functionality and I want to share it with you. We've been talking (internally) about how we can let nonprofits really make their micro-volunteers feel special… especially those that go above and beyond the call of duty for a challenge. Well, after a long gestation, I'm proud to announce that we now have an awards system!

For nonprofits, after your challenge closes, you can now thank all of your volunteers en-mass with a witty and wonderful thank you note. You can also choose to give up to 2 very special "Awards of Excellence." Screenshots of the user interface are below.

Love to hear your thoughts. Do you like the new system? 

Award Giving Interface

ChalClose_v1u_03

Awards display on the Challenge Profile after they've been given

ChalClose_v1u_09

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