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Wednesday, June 27, 2012
Sunday, June 17, 2012
Wednesday, June 13, 2012
Need Answers: LinkedIn Has Them
Need Answers: LinkedIn Has Them:
Note from Beth: I'm just finishing up an intensive training here in Rwanda. I was out in a rural area where Internet connectivity was a huge challenge, so was not able to blog, But now that I'm back in Kigali with a good Internet connection, expect to hear more about my experience teaching social media and the Networked NGO. Right before I left for this trip, Geri Stengel, shared a guest post about nonprofits and use of LinkedIn that was of interest to many folks. So, when Geri offered up this second post about nonprofits and LinkedIn, I couldn't resist.Need Answers: LinkedIn Has Them – guest post by Geri Stengel
LinkedIn groups are an interesting way of taking the pulse of a specific community on a topic and collecting feedback on challenges you face. It’s also a way of becoming a thought-leader, by answering the questions of others. Yet, it is not one of the top five reasons nonprofits use social media.
As an example, here’s a philosophical question for you, one that needs practical answers: To what extent can you engage with unethical partners without becoming tainted yourself? Or, as posed on the Chronicle of Philanthropy LinkedIn Group:
Can philanthropy ever be evil? Do nonprofits have an obligation to consider morality of the sources of their funding? Has anyone ever confronted this issue?
Much of the “good” done throughout history has been financed by what one could call “repentant sinners,” such as Carnegie with his libraries, funded by the exploitation of labor in the days of the robber barons.
Some might put the new David Koch theater at Lincoln Center in that category as well yet how are libraries and other social needs to be funded if we turn down money from “tainted” sources?
Komen for the Cure is a perfect example of this conundrum. At one point, it entered a partnership with KFC, whose menu is viewed by many as contributing to many health problems and thus is a bizarre partner for Komen, which is dedicated to women’s health. But a lot of money was raised for women’s health.
In the LinkedIn discussion, Suzanne McDonald gives the example of Coca Cola, which is funding AIDS prevention in Africa but being sued in India for contaminating groundwater. Is the work in Africa worth the lives of those in India?
But, in Marshall McNott’s opinion, we are all flawed in some way and nonprofits would be defunct if donors had to pass an ethical/moral litmus test.
How should a nonprofit weigh the source of funds against the importance of its own mission?
Our choices and our voices matter.
Which is why LinkedIn discussions are important. You get a variety of opinions, options to weigh, and ways to proceed (policy about funders anyone?) as well as being able to show who you are by voicing your own opinion.
What would you answer to the question posed above? What is your organization’s policy about the source of funding?
If you liked this article, you may also like:
- Putting the Power of LinkedIn to Use for Your Nonprofit
- How LinkedIn’s New Profile Section Can Help Nonprofits Fundraise, Find the People They Need
- Social Media for Your Nonprofit: Take Charge!
- How LinkedIn Can Improve Nonprofit Governance
- Social Media: A New Way to Pass Wisdom on to Leaders
Thursday, June 7, 2012
Value Creation
Measure Value Creation with CRI for Long-Term Success | Management Innovation eXchange: Oscar Wilde saw value as a matter of perspective: “A cynic is a man who knows the price of everything and the value of nothing.” and “A sentimentalist is a man who sees an absurd value in everything, and doesn’t know the market price of a single thing.”
Wednesday, June 6, 2012
Tuesday, June 5, 2012
Today’s Unforgiving Economic Environment
MidMarketMandA: “In Today’s Unforgiving Economic Environment,: it’s become increasingly important for profe... http://t.co/3F249c0Q #summerdecisions2012: MidMarketMandA: “In Today’s Unforgiving Economic Environment,: it’s become increasingly important for profe... http://t.co/3F249c0Q #summerdecisions2012
Sunday, June 3, 2012
Remember this fact about what is next for you...
"Eventually everything connects—people, ideas, objects…the quality of the connections is the key to quality per se” - Charles Eames