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New media

Plan UK take on Facebook’s Open Graph

Facebook's Open Graph platform allows you to build applications that pass information between Facebook and your website then publish back to Facebook.

Rovio’s Angry Birds take up the fight for Bird Life International

Angriest Birds - Angry Birds support of BirdLife International

They say birds of a feather flock together and that’s certainly true in the case of the Rovio and Bird Life International.

A Fantastic Video Advent Calendar!

Prix de Lausanne have come up with this great idea and have executed it well.

Moving to the Cloud: Oxfam's experience

Dr Graham Oakes

Traffic to Oxfam’s website surged by 400% within 12 hours of the Haiti earthquake. For the Pakistan floods, the peak was lower but it lasted longer.

What are you tweeting for? A twitter guide for charity fundraisers

What are you tweeting for? A twitter guide for charity fundraisers

There is more or less an expectation for charities to be on Twitter, but when was the last to you stopped to think why your charity is on social media and are you acheiving what you set out to?

Valuing and sourcing fundraising news in the age of paywalls

With Third Sector’s announcement last week that it is to start charging for acc

Google+ Pages are here - what does it mean for fundraisers?

Yesterday Google has rolled out new feature on their fairly new social network Google+ - Google+ branded pages.

Are web problems damaging your fundraising messages?

Bit of a longer blog this week but I hope you’ll bear with me as I’ve come across an interesting issue that more and more charities, small businesses, community groups etc. are going to need to think about in relation to their web presence.

It stems from the increasing popularity of multiple browsers now being used by many of us to access the web.  I should admit right now that I use a PC and a Blackberry but I’ve asked the views of colleagues with Android phones and Apple products and they experience the same issue (albeit in different ways).

Put simply, I’m baffled by how different the same thing can look on different browsers and the fact that some things don’t work at all in some browsers whilst everything is tickety-boo in others!

How important this is depends on how we are trying to deliver our core messages.  Consider these examples;

I was looking at the RSPCA’s website and had cause to try and find some information about their rescue teams.  The charity chooses to use videos to show footage of their teams in action and I think this is a great tool to support both campaigning and fundraising.

I watched the video in my preferred browser, Firefox but the delay in the film starting irritated me sufficiently to switch to Google Chrome, which is usually a faster browser.  The video did indeed start more quickly (well, it actually started!) and I watched the team in action, hanging over the edge of a very high cliff to rescue a ram.

Two Twitter swearjars raise funds to fight famine

The swearbox has come to Twitter. Indeed, it is such a good idea that there are at least two swearboxes on Twitter that are helping to raise funds for charity.

Where's Captain Kirk?

Integrating Digital Fundraising

In our office there is much ongoing discussion about digital and associated fundraising activities.

Your UK Fundraising

UK Fundraising - improving the effectiveness of charity and non-profit fundraisers

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