Wednesday, February 14, 2007

Change.org: a social change site review


Many sites use a combination of blogging, commenting, voting, tagging, social networking to capture user-generated content and user interest in niche markets/themes. The mix of communication to the community, and communication among and between members (directly to one another or indirectly, "in front of" an audience) drives interest and participation. I've been looking at various sites with an interest in how the mix of user contributions, news, blogging, voting, commenting etc achieve the site's goals. How do sites capture user contributions such that the end result is greater than the sum of the parts? How do sites use votes, tagging, commenting, linking and so on to produce an aggregate view of community member interests? Change.org struck me as a job well done, and in contrast to sites that organize micro-funding, or that just engage users in talking about change, Change.org adds actions and asks members to make commitments. It's got a bit of 43Thingsand a bit of Yelp.com. Members identify their change interests, and find others they agree with. They compliment each other by voting in agreement with other members' commitments to change. Those compliments become complementary; like-minded members create momentum for change. But there's a risk to organizing the site around affirmations. Read on...

  • Change.org has done a good job at offering this combination, and might be considered a reference standard among change-oriented sites

  • Change.org also asks members to submit an action, and to relate it to a change

  • Changes on change.org increase or decrease in value based on their tags velocity (number of users plus recency)

  • Yet change.org still asks members to describe what they do

  • And the connections that change.org makes among actions members are engaged in, and changes supported by members, are based on member votes on acts as well as member commitments to changes.

  • In other words, if members express the same interest in doing something, either in an action, or by committing to a change, they can then easily find each other

  • We might assume that in time, it will be possible to find people in one’s neighborhood who are into recycling, planting trees in urban areas, and riding bikes

  • It seems that the thrust of change.org is to capture like-mindedness on the basis of shared interests

  • What is traded among members is common interests

  • What is captured by the site are opinions, perspectives, and to the extent that we can trust the integrity of digg-like votes, momentum

  • The risk in this kind of social engine is of course that it intentionally blurs the difference between interest in a change and interest in other members

  • Members will commit to changes and will vote on actions for social reasons—to be doing what others are doing, to be visible within the site, and popular within the community, etc.

  • If members distinguish themselves on the basis of their change commitment and actions, their proximate motivation (the one that gets us to click) might in fact betray their principles and big picture interests

  • Again, it pays to be nice online, and it pays to affirm online


Insofar as this site is user-centric, that is, based on the interests of members and not on, say, fundable overseas development projects, it takes a very local approach. I’ll be interested to see how it does.

Comments: :

Anonymous Anonymous said...

You will be interested in this:

A new nonprofit website, www.ChangingThePresent.org, lets you choose exactly what you want to do to make the world a better place. For just a few dollars, you can choose from among such opportunities as:
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Browse by cause, see what experts or friends suggest, or search by name for your own favorites. With thousands of specific donation opportunities addressing virtually every cause, you’re sure to discover something that moves you.

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Profile pages with favorite causes and favorite nonprofits let us share our enthusiasm and passions with others. Giving becomes more than a transaction; it becomes a way to share your interests and passions with others.

The deep expertise behind ChangingThePresent is seen in a Board of Advisors with over 150 prominent leaders from the nonprofit sector, as well as innovators from the worlds of business and technology. Among them are the heads of:
• Ashoka
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• International AIDS Vaccine Initiative
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• Rainforest Alliance
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• Sierra Club

Finally, be sure to visit the Stupid Gift Hall of Shame, which memorializes those gifts we hope never to receive. Submit your favorite for a chance to win a sweet prize: pints and pints of Ben & Jerry’s.

A final word on the efficiency of alternative donation portals: ChangingThePresent has the lowest fees, so more of your money gets to the nonprofits you want to fund.
NetworkForGood 4.75%
Change.org 4.5%
ChangingThePresent 3% and 30 cents

The site is still in beta, with new features being added constantly.

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8:59 AM  
Blogger steven edward streight said...

What an interesting find. Change.org sounds like my style, grassroots activism to overthrow all domination systems.

Will check it out. Thanks.

http://twitter.com/vaspers

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