Thursday, February 19, 2009

Beth Kanter: One of the Web's First Social Networkers [-Congratulations, Beth! We are proud of you and your work]

Beth Kanter

Beth Kanter is a trainer, blogger, and consultant to nonprofits and individuals in effective use of social media. Her expertise is how to use new web tools (blogging, tagging, wikis, photo sharing, video blogging, screencasting, social networking sites, and virtual worlds, etc) to support nonprofit. She has worked on projects that include: training, curriculum development, research, and evaluation. She is an experienced coach to "digital immigrants" in the personal mastery of these tools.

She is a professional blogger and writes about the use of social media tools in the nonprofit sector for social change.

Beth Kanter has been tapping into the Internet to raise funds for her Cambodian charity, the Sharing Foundation, for more than a decade

February 9, 2009

By Stephen Baker
Business Week



Beth Kanter remembers it as the year that Yahoo ruined the holidays. In was late 2006. The Boston-based Kanter had already notched lots of successes in fundraising for her Cambodian charity, the Sharing Foundation. But when Yahoo (YHOO) offered $50,000 to the do-gooder who could enlist the most contributors, Kanter shifted into overdrive.

"I showed the people on the [charity's] board how to send the e-mails pointing people to the site. I made my husband go to work. I went totally nuts. We were starting to get gifts that were second or third degree out. (That's social networking lingo for friends of friends.) On New Year's Eve, we were watching the ball drop and suddenly donations went up $15,000 from someone we didn't know. We raised $53,000 and won the $50,000. And we doubled our donor list."

A Social Media Pioneer

Ask Kanter about fundraising, and her strategy quickly becomes clear. She reaches for every tool that can connect with people, and she works them tirelessly. Each birthday is a fundraising occasion. ("In lieu of cards or gifts…" she tells her network.) For one fundraiser, she promoted a "naked picture of me." Those who clicked landed on a Flickr site with her baby picture—and a pitch to donate.

Each friend in Kanter's world is a potentially powerful ally. And in her circles, some are prodigious. New media consultant Chris Brogan, to name one, has 38,300 followers on Twitter, and Kanter makes sure they're in the loop. Through her work, Kanter has not only built a supportive community around the Sharing Foundation; she has also become a fount of lessons and connections for charities and nonprofits worldwide.

Kanter, 52, was a pioneer in social media. Trained as a musician and a longtime employee of the Boston Symphony, she plunged into the Internet in the early '90s. She learned how to code. She was active on early social networks like The Well. She remembers helping to organize cyberspace, as a so-called "Gopher mistress," when "you could sit down with a bottle of beer on a Saturday afternoon and go through the whole Internet."

Exponential Growth

In 2000, Kanter was adopting two children from Cambodia and was blogging her experience. "My blog started out just for me. I needed a place to write and to learn," she says. "I was shocked when I got my first comment, and it was from a Cambodian blogger."

At that point she started to catalog the bloggers in Cambodia. That got her started, first helping the bloggers, and then moving to the rest of their country. In 2005, she was raising money to sponsor the college education of a single Cambodian woman. She stared with the "couple hundred readers" she had on her blog. She raised $800. Not bad.

But in Kanter's social networking world, numbers tend to expand exponentially. It was only a year later that she was raising tens of thousands of dollars. And again, she uses every trick. Last August, she found herself speaking at the Gnomedex technology conference, sponsored by Chris Pirillo. "I looked up and I saw that I had 300 hard-wired geeks in there." So she challenged them to a live fundraising experiment. "I put it out there. It lit up Twitter." The result: $2,500 more for her charity in 90 minutes.

Baker is a senior writer for BusinessWeek in New York
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5 comments:

Anonymous said...

There is nothing to be proud about westerner setting ground for Khmer to kill Khmer, Mee Jkout (Socheata).

Anonymous said...

Dear Sir/Madam @ 2:57PM,

Thank you a bunch for your colorful depiction of yours truly. I couldn't thank you enough for that.

Now, if Beth's fundraising to help Cambodians is "setting ground for Khmer to kill Khmer" as you mentioned, I'd dare say that Beth's work is indeed "Killing me softly with her [charity] song". Just in case you are not aware of this famous song by Roberta Flack, please watch it on Youtube at:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zqss0y3I12o

Again, Dear Sir/Madam, have a good day. Please have some laugh from time to time, as it may help prolong your life so you can go on dispensing your charming invectives.

G'day Sir/Madam!

Yours truly,

Socheata

Anonymous said...

Fundraising to help Cambodians? I say you must be under the influence of narcotic drug or some sort. Just how many people have she saved from starvation from the hundreds of thousands that she raised?

Stop embarrassing yourself here, will ya? Even the westerner's missionary ain't no angel as they seem to be, and she's not even close to anything like a missionary.

Anonymous said...

Thanks you Beth Kanter for your good heart for cambodian, and we are proud of you.

Please ignore those comments above as i think they are uneducated and they don't understand what 'good heart' is, or the word 'helping' is?

If we all can contribute a litle bit to the society then we can make a different to lots of people who are in need.

Again thank you for your good heart!

Dina

Anonymous said...

Making Khmer kills Khmer is no good heart.

Don't do us any favor, bitch!