[Board] fundraising ideas - National Public Radio style and contractor client support

Tyler Mitchell tmitchell.osgeo at shaw.ca
Fri Jun 3 06:16:21 PDT 2011


Thanks for sharing these ideas Eli, I think they do merit some consideration.  I believe you are correct when you state that encouragement to donate by developers can be more persuasive than by others and would to love to help support trying some of your ideas.  

I suggest also sharing your thoughts on the discuss list, since most of what you suggest could be done by even just one or two projects regardless of any direction from the board list.

I'm always interested in talking about fundraising ideas and it's really encouraging to have others sharing ideas like this.  Thanks for taking the time to put all that down in writing!

Tyler

----- Original Message -----
From: Eli Adam <eadam at co.lincoln.or.us>
Date: Friday, June 3, 2011 1:06 am
Subject: [Board] fundraising ideas - National Public Radio style and	contractor client support
To: board at lists.osgeo.org

> Board, 
> 
> I started this email about six months ago and wanted to keep 
> refining it and adding bits, but, it seems to be the opportune 
> time to send it since it is a current topic for the Board (and 
> it is already far too long - perhaps I should have spend more 
> time removing not adding).  
> 
> I have some ideas pertaining to fundraising that I did not find 
> previously discussed on the board or fundraising email 
> lists.  Searching the wiki and board minutes didn't turn up 
> this discussion either.  Perhaps these ideas have already 
> been discussed and discarded in other venues.  I think that 
> OSGEO projects could get substantial funds from many corporate 
> and agency users in $500-$2,000 increments on an annual 
> basis.  
> 
> I am thinking of a fundraiser very similar to the National 
> Public Radio style in the States.  That is that for one 
> week instead of providing high quality, commercial free, 
> respected news and music, they focus at least 50% of the time on 
> fundraising.  In addition to changing the focus to 
> fundraising they use all methods possible to fundraise.  
> The methods seem almost extreme.  It verges on berating, 
> guilt, coercion, and other less dignified methods.  Here 
> are some clips that highlight some of these methods although 
> mixed with humor, http://www.vpr.net/episode/49677/  If you 
> have never listened to a NPR style fundraiser, I would suggest 
> listening to one (although I also suggest listening to the 
> station for a week without fundraiser to experience some of the 
> more positive aspects of NPR).  There should be one on 
> internet radio currently, perhaps someone can send out a link 
> when their local station is fundraising.  In all the 
> fundraising the focus is that NPR provides unique, high quality, 
> commercial free, respected news and music and that you, yes you, 
> can help provide that unique, high quality, commercial free, 
> respected news and music that you and others value so 
> much.  This is impressed upon you in that familiar 
> authoritative NPR voice which you have come to trust and respect 
> over the years.  
> 
> NPR has the benefit that people listen to the radio for extended 
> periods of time at home, at work, and in the car going 
> places.  To adopt that approach to OSGeo, would be project 
> mailing lists, IRC channels, websites, and other communication 
> methods.  From the mailing lists, it is clear that most 
> users regard OSGeo developers very highly.  If these 
> respected developers asked for $500 support from users once a 
> year, I think that many would respond.  Developers 
> routinely add new formats, functions, fix bugs, answer 10 of 
> thousands of questions through email and IRC, and otherwise are 
> very responsive to the users.  If these developers spent 
> one week a year asking for support and boasting their project's 
> accomplishments, users would respond.  Following in the NPR 
> style, some large donor could offer a limited time match.  
> Company X will match your donation, thus doubling it, up to 
> $1,500 if you donate in the next 24 hours.  We need you to 
> donate to help us get that $1,500. 
> http://wiki.osgeo.org/wiki/How_Can_I_Help websites, 
> planet.osgeo.org, personal blogs, developer signatures used on 
> the email list and everything else would need to be temporarily 
> changed to focus on fundraising.  Just as NPR focuses on 
> "unique, high quality, commercial free, respected news and music 
> and that you, yes you, can help provide that unique, high 
> quality, commercial free, respected news and music that you and 
> others value so much"  I think that OSGEO and Projects can 
> focus on the same thing just replacing "news and music" with 
> "Geospatial software and support"  
> 
> I think that this would only work if it were really supported 
> and done by developers.  A developer who has helped you 
> individually, answered 10's of 1,000's of questions, fixed bugs 
> for you, added new functionality, etc is far more persuasive 
> than someone who might volunteer just for fundraiser (me) or 
> even Tyler.  
> 
> This could be an opportunity to have people sign themselves up 
> as OSGeo members too.  Perhaps donations could include 
> 'premiums' like a shirt and coffee mug.  
> 
> I think that for the States, a good time of year is the spring 
> (April/May).
> I think that the board is looking into lowering the $500 
> minimum.  While that could make supporting even more 
> accessible to some users, agencies, and companies, others that 
> would give $500 may take a $250 option if it is available.  
> It seems fair to have no minimum level for individuals but a 
> higher level for agencies and companies.  
> 
> Benefits:  more funds, broad support from many sources, 
> contributors planned for it as an annual expense, people sign up 
> as members, shirts and coffee mugs everywhere is good 
> advertising, more and greater involvement.
> 
> Drawbacks:  Developers may not want to fundraise for a week 
> (they are already busy doing a ton of work), developers may feel 
> that fundraising is demeaning to them, OSGeo may appear less 
> 'dignified', not all OSGeo projects allow for support through 
> OSGeo, this could generate a lot of paperwork and mailing for 
> Tyler who may be busy with other OSGeo tasks (paperwork that 
> raises money may be considered a benefit also), this really 
> focuses on projects not OSGeo itself (so this may only be 25% as 
> effective as it could be for OSGeo), focusing OSGeo, OSGeo 
> projects, and OSGeo developers on fundraising for a week takes 
> the focus away from the projects, development, email list 
> support, and other tasks that are usually the focus, these are 
> all ideas for the people that already contribute the most to 
> OSGeo to do more, it seems that OSGeo's approach has been to get 
> large sponsors which has been working and this is different than 
> that and could offend large sponsors, changing email signatures, 
> IRC topics, websites, and everything else is a lot of work.
> 
> I have listed more drawbacks than benefits but that is because 
> it is easy to criticize.  Also, some of the drawbacks are 
> probably not really drawbacks and may be positives.  
> 
> I think that any non-profit can have a fundraiser 1-2 times a 
> year without losing prestige.  For instance, here is the 
> wikipedia one currently:
> http://wikimediafoundation.org/wiki/WMFJA6/en/US?utm_medium=sitenotice&utm_campaign=Saturday1113&utm_source=2010_JA1_Banner3_US&country_code=US
> 
> The second funding idea I have is to contact contractors and 
> businesses that use OSGeo software and encourage them to ask 
> clients to contribute to the OSGeo projects that they use.  
> So if you do a project for a client that uses OpenLayers, ask 
> them to consider a tax-deductible contribution to OpenLayers 
> that allowed you to do that project for them for substantial 
> savings.  Also explain that supporting the projects will 
> help implement new features which will keep the software very 
> useful for them continuing into the future as new formats and 
> technologies emerge.  This would essentially be encouraging 
> contractors and consultants using OSGeo to offer their clients 
> the option of adding $200-500 to support OSGeo projects which 
> made the whole thing possible and to help further the projects 
> for their future needs.  Perhaps this idea is an idea for a 
> different thread and discussion.  
> 
> Perhaps these ideas can find a place in the overall fundraising 
> outlined here, http://wiki.osgeo.org/wiki/Fundraising_Strategy I 
> see that some of these are already included in the 2010 page, 
> http://wiki.osgeo.org/wiki/Fundraising_2010
> Bests, Eli
> 
> _______________________________________________
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> Board at lists.osgeo.org
> http://lists.osgeo.org/mailman/listinfo/board
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