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	<title>innovation Archives - Socialbrite</title>
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		<title>Disrupting the nonprofit sector</title>
		<link>https://www.socialbrite.org/2014/03/19/disrupting-the-nonprofit-sector/</link>
					<comments>https://www.socialbrite.org/2014/03/19/disrupting-the-nonprofit-sector/#comments</comments>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Caroline Avakian]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 19 Mar 2014 13:07:21 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Activism]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Best practices]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Board of Directors]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Campaigns]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[International]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Nonprofits]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[philanthropy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Social impact]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Socialbrite]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Strategy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Technology]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Allyson Kapin]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Amy Sample Ward]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[disruption]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[innovation]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[lean startup]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Nonprofit organization]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Nonprofit Technology Conference]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[NTEN]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Rad Campaign]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[United States]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Washington DC]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.socialbrite.org/?p=23593</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>A scene from last year&#8217;s NTC (Photo by JD Lasica). Target audience: Nonprofits, cause organizations, foundations, NGOs, social enterprises, businesses, educators, journalists, general public. The 2014 Nonprofit Technology Conference, which took place last week in DC, is a conference that so many nonprofit tech and communications staffers look forward to every year because of the [&#8230;]</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://www.socialbrite.org/2014/03/19/disrupting-the-nonprofit-sector/">Disrupting the nonprofit sector</a> appeared first on <a href="https://www.socialbrite.org">Socialbrite</a>.</p>
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										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img fetchpriority="high" decoding="async" class="alignnone size-large wp-image-22992" alt="ntc crowd" src="http://www.socialbrite.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/04/ntccrowd-525x350.jpg" width="525" height="350" srcset="https://www.socialbrite.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/04/ntccrowd-525x350.jpg 525w, https://www.socialbrite.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/04/ntccrowd-300x200.jpg 300w, https://www.socialbrite.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/04/ntccrowd-449x300.jpg 449w, https://www.socialbrite.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/04/ntccrowd.jpg 640w" sizes="(max-width: 525px) 100vw, 525px" /><br />
A scene from last year&#8217;s NTC (Photo by JD Lasica).</p>
<p><strong>Target audience:</strong> Nonprofits, cause organizations, foundations, NGOs, social enterprises, businesses, educators, journalists, general public.</p>
<p><a href="/author/caroline-avakian/" target="_blank"><a href="https://www.socialbrite.org/author/caroline-avakian/"><img decoding="async" src="https://www.socialbrite.org/wp-content/uploads/userphoto/caroline-avakian.jpg" alt="Caroline Avakian" class="sig nob" /></a></a><span class="dropcap">T</span>he 2014 <a href="http://www.nten.org/ntc" target="_blank">Nonprofit Technology Conference</a>, which took place last week in DC, is a conference that so many nonprofit tech and communications staffers look forward to every year because of the great sessions, useful tips and tools, and awesome people committed to using technology to advance social good.</p>
<p>I was pretty excited when I saw that there was a “Disrupting the Nonprofit Sector” session. I like forward-thinking panels of this type because I look to conferences for two things: practical tools and updates on my sector that I can use straightaway on Monday morning, and importantly, sessions on the future of our sector.<span id="more-23593"></span></p>
<p>Here are some of the high-level thoughts and takeaways from the “Disrupting the Nonprofit Sector” session hosted by Amy Sample Ward, CEO, NTEN, Allyson Kapin, Partner, Rad Campaign, and Sheila Katz, Director, Ask Big Questions, Hillel International.</p>
<p>There are currently 1.5 million nonprofits in the US – that’s 60% growth in 10 years. That’s certainly great news but the bad news is that it is estimated that nonprofit giving will not get back to pre-recession levels until about 2018.</p>
<h4>13 ways nonprofits are keeping up</h4>
<p>So how are nonprofits supposed to keep up? One of the ways nonprofits are staying afloat is by innovating and adding alternative revenue streams.</p>
<p>Here are 13 ways they’re doing it:</p>
<ol>
<li>They are thinking like a startup and using lean startup principles – fail cheap, fail quick, fail often.</li>
<li>Amy Sample Ward gave the example of how at NTEN, failure is great. They’re just trying to do things differently which isn’t failure. They encourage failure but with zero mistakes. There’s a big difference.</li>
<li>The advice to nonprofits looking to innovate is that the money needs to be there first. Think like an investor. So, if the program fails, you’re not caught in a bad situation.</li>
<li>Get feedback on your new project or innovation. Start small and test. In nonprofit lingo, this would translate into conducting a pilot project and then working on your proof of concept.</li>
<li>Be OK with the messiness of innovation</li>
<li>Buy-in for your new innovation or project has to come from the top. If the top is ok with seeing this as an experiment and is comfortable with the possibility of failure, then there’s less finger-pointing. But if senior management doesn’t really believe in it, it can easily put people on the defensive.</li>
<li>Make innovation part of your annual budget. Make a new line item for it every year. It will set the stage for innovation to become part of your organization&#8217;s work.</li>
<li>All your nonprofit stakeholders need to be involved in your experimentation. Include your board members! Ask yourself how are they part of the conversation from the beginning, so that they&#8217;re integrated and feel part of the success or the failure.</li>
<li>Ask yourself before you start: What do we do with the failures when they come?</li>
<li>If we’re going to start scaling a project or innovation broadly, it has to come from the field-level. Take a risk on grassroots ideas.</li>
<li>There are nonprofit cultures that allow for collaboration and failure. How can you create this type of culture in your organization so innovation and failure becomes part of your organization&#8217;s value-system?</li>
<li>Be honest: It’s great that people want to experiment but you have to be realistic about your expectations. For example, you’re not going to raise a ton of money online if you haven’t grown an existing network of supporters.</li>
<li>Find pilot programs at nonprofits that have been successful and connect to those folks. Talk to them about how they did and what are the lessons-learned and take-aways.</li>
</ol>
<p>Are you innovating within your organization? Intra-preneurs abound everywhere – tell us your story!</p>
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</div><p>The post <a href="https://www.socialbrite.org/2014/03/19/disrupting-the-nonprofit-sector/">Disrupting the nonprofit sector</a> appeared first on <a href="https://www.socialbrite.org">Socialbrite</a>.</p>
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		<title>Innovation: Taking cues from nature</title>
		<link>https://www.socialbrite.org/2011/08/18/innovation-taking-cues-from-nature/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[kiwanja]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 18 Aug 2011 15:49:37 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Best practices]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Technology]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[appropriate technology]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[innovation]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[nature]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.socialbrite.org/?p=14353</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>&#8220;Our life is half natural and half technological. Half-and-half is good. You cannot deny that high-tech is progress. We need it for jobs. Yet if you make only high-tech, you make war. So we must have a strong human element to keep modesty and natural life&#8221; Nam June Paik, Artist (1932 &#8211; 2006) There&#8217;s a [&#8230;]</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://www.socialbrite.org/2011/08/18/innovation-taking-cues-from-nature/">Innovation: Taking cues from nature</a> appeared first on <a href="https://www.socialbrite.org">Socialbrite</a>.</p>
]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em>&#8220;Our life is half natural and half technological. Half-and-half is good. You cannot deny that high-tech is progress. We need it for jobs. Yet if you make only high-tech, you make war. So we must have a strong human element to keep modesty and natural life&#8221;</em></p>
<p style="text-align: right;"><strong>Nam June Paik, Artist (1932 &#8211; 2006)</strong></p>
<p><a href="/author/kiwanja/"><a href="https://www.socialbrite.org/author/kiwanja/"><img decoding="async" src="https://www.socialbrite.org/wp-content/uploads/userphoto/kiwanja.jpg" alt="kiwanja" class="sig nob" /></a></a><span class="dropcap">T</span>here&#8217;s a saying in the technology world which asks &#8220;What would Google do?&#8221; When I&#8217;m confronted with a problem, I&#8217;d rather ask &#8220;What would nature do?&#8221; Why? Well, if you believe Google have the answer then you&#8217;re immediately assuming that modern technology &#8211; in some shape or form &#8211; is the solution. More often than not that&#8217;s the wrong place to start.</p>
<p>I recently sat on a panel at the <a href="http://www.aspenenvironment.org" target="_blank">Aspen Environment Forum</a>, which focused on the use of social media in the environmental movement. (You can watch the video <a href="http://www.kiwanja.net/blog/2011/06/the-environmental-network/">here</a>, or read my summary of whole the event <a href="http://www.kiwanja.net/blog/2011/06/the-aspen-environment-forum-in-tweets/">here</a>.) Many people had already made their minds up that Facebook, Twitter, YouTube and so on were &#8216;the&#8217; answer, before really thinking through what they were really trying to do, what their message was, or who the different audiences would be. That&#8217;s also the wrong place to start.</p>
<p><img decoding="async" src="http://www.socialbrite.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/08/Crayon.jpg" alt="" title="Crayon" width="423" height="179" class="alignnone size-full wp-image-14360" srcset="https://www.socialbrite.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/08/Crayon.jpg 423w, https://www.socialbrite.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/08/Crayon-300x126.jpg 300w" sizes="(max-width: 423px) 100vw, 423px" /></p>
<p>Asking what nature might do immediately pulls us away from looking for a modern, high-tech solution and more towards a simpler, low-tech (and potentially more appropriate and sustainable) one. It also encourages us to think entirely out-of-the-box.</p>
<p><em>So, if you were to ask &#8220;What might nature do?&#8221;, what kind of solutions might you come up with which you otherwise might not have?</em></p>
<h4>1. Elephants</h4>
<p>Some of my earliest mobile work back in 2003 was in Southern Africa where I was asked to help understand and apply modern communications technology to local conservation efforts. One of the bigger problems people were trying to tackle back then was human-elephant conflict &#8211; elephants &#8216;encroaching&#8217; on farmland and destroying livelihoods literally overnight. In response, some farmers resorted to poisoning or shooting elephants. Not a good conservation outcome.<span id="more-14353"></span></p>
<p>All kinds of modern technology solutions were proposed, and many trialled, to try and solve the problem. Electric fences, RFID tagging, sensors and live-GSM-tracking among them. Few proved as successful as hoped, or particularly replicable or affordable.</p>
<p><em>So, what might nature do? </em></p>
<p><img decoding="async" class="alignnone size-full wp-image-5208" style="margin-top: 2px; margin-bottom: 2px; border: 1px solid black;" title="Photo via the BBC News website" src="http://www.kiwanja.net/blog/wp-content/uploads/2011/08/Elephant-Bees.jpg" alt="" width="423" height="276" /></p>
<p>It turns out that elephants run a mile when they encounter bees. According to this <a href="http://www.bbc.co.uk/nature/14106484" target="_blank">BBC article</a>, early research in Kenya indicates hives can be a very effective barrier, so much so that 97% of attempted elephant raids were aborted. Where satellites, RFID tags and mobile phones failed, humble honey bees might just be the answer.</p>
<h4>2. Pigeons</h4>
<p>Each summer, as tennis players battle it out on the lawn courts at <a href="http://www.wimbledon.com" target="_blank">Wimbledon</a>, the authorities do battle trying to stop pigeons interfering with play. All manner of modern technology is available to deter birds &#8211; lasers and radio controlled aircraft to gas guns and ultrasound emitters. Again, each have varying degrees of success and many can be expensive.</p>
<p><em><span style="font-style: normal;"><img loading="lazy" decoding="async" class="size-full wp-image-5218 alignnone" style="margin-top: 2px; margin-bottom: 2px; border: 1px solid black;" title="Rufus. Photo: PA Newswire" src="http://www.kiwanja.net/blog/wp-content/uploads/2011/08/Rufus1.jpg" alt="" width="423" height="200" /></span></em></p>
<p><em>What would nature do?</em></p>
<p>Wimbledon&#8217;s answer doesn&#8217;t involve anything more high-tech than a <a href="http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-13939805" target="_blank">bird of prey</a>. A few laps by Rufus around the tennis courts are enough to scare the hardiest of pigeons away. No batteries &#8211; or lasers, or sound emitters &#8211; required. Simple, sustainable and replicable.</p>
<h4>3. Wasps</h4>
<p><img loading="lazy" decoding="async" class="alignright size-full wp-image-5221" style="margin: 2px 5px; border: 1px solid black;" title="The &quot;Waspinator&quot;" src="http://www.kiwanja.net/blog/wp-content/uploads/2011/08/Waspinator.jpg" alt="" width="125" height="171" />You&#8217;d be forgiven for thinking that the grandly-named &#8220;<a href="http://www.waspinator.co.uk" target="_blank">Waspinator</a>&#8221; was a little black box with wires, buttons and flashing lights. No doubt there <span style="text-decoration: underline;">have</span> been attempts to develop high-tech wasp deterrents in the past, but the Waspinator isn&#8217;t one of them. In fact, if you saw one you&#8217;d likely be a little disappointed. This particular solution looks like nothing more than a brown paper bag. <em>But don&#8217;t be fooled &#8211; nature has very much influenced its development.</em></p>
<p>According to the website:</p>
<blockquote><p>The Waspinator is a fake wasps nest. Wasps are very territorial and will aggressively defend their nest against wasps from another colony. When a foraging wasp sees another wasps nest it will rapidly leave the area for fear of being attacked by the nest&#8217;s defenders.</p>
<p>Wasps have a very long range of vision and when they see a Waspinator they think it&#8217;s an enemy wasps nest and quickly leave the area for somewhere safer, leaving the area around the Waspinator completely free of wasps</p></blockquote>
<p>It couldn&#8217;t be simpler. And no moving parts (if you exclude the wasps).</p>
<p><strong>So, drawing on these examples, what five lessons does nature teach us?</strong></p>
<p>1. Understand the context of your target audience/user.<br />
2. Use locally available materials wherever possible.<br />
3. Low-tech is not poor-tech.<br />
4. Keep it simple.<br />
5. The answer is likely already out there.</p>
<p><em>Next time we look to develop a technology solution to a problem, we might be best asking what nature might do before turning to the likes of Google, or any high-tech solution provider for that matter. Mother Nature usually knows best.</em></p>
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</div><p>The post <a href="https://www.socialbrite.org/2011/08/18/innovation-taking-cues-from-nature/">Innovation: Taking cues from nature</a> appeared first on <a href="https://www.socialbrite.org">Socialbrite</a>.</p>
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		<title>Want to take action on a cause? The road ahead just got easier</title>
		<link>https://www.socialbrite.org/2011/01/21/want-to-take-action-on-cause/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Guest]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Fri, 21 Jan 2011 14:11:50 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Activism]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Open source]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Technology]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[APIs]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[innovation]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[open APIs]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[social actions]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.socialbrite.org/?p=10684</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>Peter Deitz, the whirlwind behind Social Actions. (Photo by JD Lasica) &#160; Social Actions moves the open source ball forward for the cause community Guest post by Amy Sample Ward amysampleward.org I’ve followed and supported the work of Peter Deitz and Social Actions ever since hearing about his passion and ideas a few years ago. [&#8230;]</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://www.socialbrite.org/2011/01/21/want-to-take-action-on-cause/">Want to take action on a cause? The road ahead just got easier</a> appeared first on <a href="https://www.socialbrite.org">Socialbrite</a>.</p>
]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a title="Peter Deitz by jdlasica, on Flickr" href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/jdlasica/3576771631/"><img loading="lazy" decoding="async" src="http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2449/3576771631_22bd3cc5e1.jpg" alt="Peter Deitz" width="500" height="332" /></a><br />
Peter Deitz, the whirlwind behind Social Actions. (Photo by JD Lasica)</p>
<div class="spacing6">&nbsp;</div>
<h3>Social Actions moves the open source ball forward for the cause community</h3>
<p>Guest post by <strong>Amy Sample Ward</strong><br />
<a href="http://amysampleward.org/" target="_blank">amysampleward.org</a></p>
<p><span class="dropcap">I</span>’ve followed and supported the work of <a href="http://peterdeitz.com/" target="_blank">Peter Deitz</a> and <a href="http://socialactions.com/" target="_blank">Social Actions</a> ever since hearing about his passion and ideas a few years ago. There’s  a lot happening with Social Actions right now, but one bit of news is  really exciting and needs to be highlighted: some incredibly important  technical enhancements have recently been made to the Social Actions  API. (Here&#8217;s <a href="http://www.socialbrite.org/sharing-center/glossary/#api">what an API is</a>.) Earlier this week, I got ahold of Peter to get the full scoop! Here&#8217;s our exchange:</p>
<p><span class="qa">Let’s start at the beginning: What is Social Actions and where does the API come in?</span></p>
<p>I describe Social Actions as an aggregation of actions people can  take on any issue that’s built to be highly distributable across the  social web. We pull in donation opportunities, volunteer positions,  petitions, event, and other actions from 60-plus different sources. That’s  today. A few years ago, microphilanthropy had just a handful of pioneering platforms.</p>
<p>The Social Actions project began in 2006. I wanted to make some kind  of contribution to the world of microphilanthropy. My intent was to  inventory every interesting action I came across to make it easier for  people to engage in the causes they cared about. There wasn’t much  scalability in the way I was pursuing the project.</p>
<p>In 2007, I realized that a much more effective way to aggregate  interesting actions would be to subscribe to RSS feeds from trusted  sources. I wrote about the potential for aggregating RSS feeds of giving  opportunities in a blog post called, <a href="http://my.socialactions.com/profiles/blogs/2062983:BlogPost:3701">Why We Need Group Fundraising RSS Feeds</a>. Three months later I had a prototype platform aggregating actions from RSS feeds, with a search element around that content.</p>
<p>Around  the time of the <a href="http://nten.org/">Nonprofit Technology Network</a>’s  2008 NTC conference, an even brighter lightbulb went on. I remember  sitting in a session by Kurt Voelker of ForumOne Communications,  Tompkins Spann of Convio, and Jeremy Carbaugh of The Sunlight  Foundation. They were talking about <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Api">APIs</a>.  (API stands for Application Programming Interface, and refers broadly  to the way one piece of software or dataset communicates with another.)  In fact, the name of the session was “APIs for Beginners.”</p>
<p>I knew I wanted to be in the session even without really knowing why.  It was there that I realized my RSS-based process for aggregating  actions could be so much more with a robust distribution component. I  wrote a blog post called, <a href="http://my.socialactions.com/profiles/blogs/2062983:BlogPost:335">Mashups, Open APIs, and the Future of Collaboration in the Nonprofit Tech Sector</a>. I left that session knowing exactly the direction I wanted to take Social Actions.</p>
<p><span class="qa">And what would you describe as the purpose of Social Actions&#8217; API?</span></p>
<p>There’s a groundswell of interest, on the part of “non-nonprofit  professionals,” to engage with social movements and causes. It’s  well-documented at this point that people are hungry to engage with  causes they care about in various forms.</p>
<p>The premise behind Social Actions is that there are enough actions  floating around on the Web that nonprofits produce, but that they’re not  linked up properly or adequately syndicated. There are a million  opportunities to take action on a cause you care about, but it’s not  easy to find them. The Social Actions API attempts to address the  distribution and syndication challenge while also encouraging nonprofits  to make their actions more readily available.<span id="more-10684"></span></p>
<p><span class="qa">What were the limitations that Social Actions and its API were hitting up against before the recent updates?</span></p>
<p>We have encountered a number of challenges over the years.  Originally, adding actions manually was difficult. That challenge was  resolved by creating a platform that used RSS feeds to pull in  opportunities,  which in turn evolved into the Social Actions API,  allowing people to access the full dataset from any application that  connected to it.</p>
<p>The vast majority of applications that have been built since 2008  match actions with related content: for example, by reading a blog post  and searching the Social Actions dataset for related actions. The  quality of the search results were limited by our querying capabilities  and relevancy ranking. The results we were able to produce didn’t  reflect the full contents of our database. They tended to reflect only  the most recently added actions, not the most relevant. As a result, we  weren’t equipping developers with a platform that allowed for more  accurate location- and issue-based searches. Until the recent  enhancements, producing the best possible search results for a given  phrase or keyword was the biggest challenge.</p>
<p><span class="qa">What did the recent updates accomplish, and how did the opportunity to make them come about?</span></p>
<p>The updates introduce <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Semantic_analysis_%28linguistics%29">Semantic Analysis</a> and <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Natural_language_processing">Natural Language Processing (NLP)</a> capabilities to the Social Actions API and begin to connect Social Actions to the wider Linked Open Data community.</p>
<div class="pullquote">If today&#8217;s Web is a collection of links between pages, the Web envisioned for tomorrow will be a collection of links between discrete bits of knowledge or datasets. </div>
<p>The enhancements effectively put Social Actions back on the cutting  edge of social technology. These were changes that we had wanted to make  for a long time. In spring 2009, we were approached by a group that was  building an advanced video + action platform and that wanted to draw on  the Social Actions API. Link TV, in prototyping their <a href="http://viewchange.org/">ViewChange</a> platform, noticed that the Social Actions API wasn’t producing the best  possible results. They invited us to explore with them what would be  involved in updating our platform so that ViewChange could feature more  relevant results.</p>
<p>Link TV, along with Doug Puchanski and Rob DiCiuccio of <a href="http://definitionstudio.com/">Definition</a>,  helped us articulate the changes that would need to occur and then  connected us with a funder who could underwrite what amounted to a very  significant enhancement to our code base. In one month, we had  approximately as large an investment in the technology as we’d had in  total up until that point. It has been incredibly exciting to see how  open source projects like Social Actions tend to grow in fits and  bursts, depending on the demands and resources made available by users.</p>
<p><span class="qa">What do “Semantic Analysis” and “Natural Language Processing” mean, and how do they make the Social Actions API better?</span></p>
<p><a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Semantic_analysis_%28linguistics%29">Semantic Analysis</a> and <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Natural_language_processing">Natural Language Processing</a> both have to do with the process of identifying the meaning of a  collection of words together. Semantic analysis, for example, can help  to identify the meaning of a phrase like “poverty relief” as distinct  from what “poverty” and “relief” mean independently. The Social Actions  API now uses a tool called <a href="http://www.zemanta.com/">Zemanta</a> to apply these processes when searching the actions contained in the  dataset. As a result, we can say with more confidence what an action is  about and where it is taking place. When searching for the phrase  “poverty relief,” for example, not only are the search results more  accurate, but Zemanta helps us to identify other actions that might not  in fact use that phrase but are nonetheless linked in meaning to it.  It’s a difficult concept to explain, but hopefully this makes sense.</p>
<p><span class="qa">And what does “Linked Open Data” refer to?</span></p>
<p>Just like in 2008 when I had an “aha moment” about APIs, in June 2009  I had an “aha moment” about Linked Open Data. I was presenting Social  Actions at the <a href="http://semtech2011.semanticweb.com/">Semantic Technology Conference (SemTech)</a>,  describing how Social Actions was an open database and how we  encouraged developers to build open source applications that distributed  this data widely. Ivan Herman from <a href="http://www.w3.org/">W3C</a> listened to the presentation asked, “Why are you building something  that’s so closed? Why aren’t you publishing this data in RDF?”</p>
<p>I was surprised, to the say least. Defeated, in fact. I had spent close  to three years trying to build this open platform only to have someone  more tech-savvy than me explain that what we had built was in fact still  a closed platform. It turns out I was at the epicenter of the Linked  Open Data community. Their mission is to link the world’s knowledge in  the same way that all of the world’s web pages have been linked to one  another.</p>
<p>If you can imagine that today the web is a collection of links  between pages, the web of tomorrow (proposed by these folks and Tim  Berners-Lee) will be a collection of links between discrete bits of knowledge or datasets. Anyone will be able to follow the connection that’s been  made between one repository of data and another the same way people can  now hyperlink between one web page and another.</p>
<p>Linked Open Data essentially refers to building connections between  these repositories in a standard format not unlike HTML and hypertext.</p>
<p><span class="qa">What role do APIs, and the people who build them, play in Linked Open Data?</span></p>
<p>The stewards of databases are no longer just asked to open up their  datasets but to make them available in such a way that they link with  other data repositories by design. In the case of Social Actions, Ivan  from the Wc3 was effectively saying, “It’s great you have all of this  data on actions people can take, but what are you doing to link that  data with other datasets? What are you doing to help people make the  connection between ‘poverty relief’ as an issue, for example, and  existing data sets on the prevalence of poverty in a specific location?”</p>
<p>The Social Actions API now cross-references issues and locations with  universal identifiers that have been assigned to them. Just like you  might cross-reference the subject of a book with a Dewey Decimal number,  we are now cross-referencing each action with a universal identifier  that helps to link it to related data. Using <a href="http://developer.zemanta.com/">Zemanta</a>, we are able to provide URIs (Uniform Resource Identifier) from <a href="http://www.freebase.com/">Freebase</a> and <a href="http://dbpedia.org/About">DBPedia</a> that make the connection between actions in our system and other material on the web that relates to the same topic.</p>
<p>You can see examples of this at <a href="http://search.socialactions.com/">http://search.socialactions.com</a>. Search for any phrase. Below each result you’ll see a link to “Entities.”</p>
<p><span class="qa">Can you tell me more about what ViewChange has done?</span></p>
<p>ViewChange is an example of an application that queries our actions  using Freebase and DBPedia URIs as well as traditional keywords and  phrases. The application says to Social Actions, “Show me everything  that matches this URI.” The same query is submitted to the Social  Actions API as is submitted to any data repository – news articles,  videos, blog posts, etc. It’s truly commendable that Link TV, through  the ViewChange project, has driven these enhancements on our platform.</p>
<p>A lot is also owed to Doug Puchalski, a programmer with Definition who helped lead the development of ViewChange.</p>
<p><span class="qa">To you, what might the future look like for people who want to take action on the causes they care about?</span></p>
<p>The technology exists for us to do really amazing things when it  comes to matching people with actions they can take to make a  difference. The technology itself is advancing, opening up more  possibilities for even smarter applications.</p>
<div class="pullquote">&#8220;The technology exists for us to do really amazing things when it comes to matching people with actions they can take to make a difference.&#8221;</div>
<p>The future of social technology, specifically creative  implementations of the Social Actions API and similar open source  platforms, is very exciting provided nonprofits and foundations continue  to make rich data available and link it up with other repositories in  the way I’ve attempted to describe. The future is also very bright if  we continue to experiment with how these linked data repositories can be  deployed for forms of community engagement that we would not have  thought possible a few years ago.</p>
<p>If everything goes incredibly well in the coming years, what might  emerge is ubiquitous infrastructure of enabling technology and  complementary applications that continuously present individuals with  meaningful and relevant opportunities to enact change.</p>
<p><em>The Social Actions API – a pioneering open source project since  2008 – continues its boundary-pushing agenda by embracing the semantic  Web and contributing to the Linked Open Data cloud, encouraging the  sector as a whole to leverage open source software and linked data for  greater impact. </em></p>
<p><strong>Visit <a href="http://socialactions.com/">socialactions.com</a> today to learn more!</strong></p>
<p><em>Cross-posted from <a href="http://amysampleward.org/2011/01/20/social-actions-api-semantic-web-and-linked-open-data-an-interview-with-peter-deitz/">Amy Sample Ward&#8217;s blog</a></em>.</p>
<h6>Related</h6>
<p>•<a href="http://www.socialbrite.org/sharing-center/tools/social-actions/"> Social actions toolset</a> (Socialbrite)</p>
<p>• <a title="Permanent Link to Social Actions: Toward a  philanthropic Web" rel="bookmark" href="/2008/10/20/socialactions-toward-a-philanthropic-web/">Social Actions: Toward a philanthropic Web</a> (Socialbrite)</p>
<p>• <a title="Permanent Link to How open standards can benefit  nonprofit tech" rel="bookmark" href="/2009/07/17/how-open-standards-can-benefit-nonprofit-tech/">How open standards can benefit nonprofit tech</a> (Socialbrite)</p>
<p>• <a title="Permanent Link to A new open database about  social entrepreneurs" rel="bookmark" href="/2009/09/03/a-new-open-database-about-social-entrepreneurs/">A new open database about social entrepreneurs</a> (Socialbrite)</p>
<p>• <a title="Permanent Link to All for Good: A Craigslist for  service" rel="bookmark" href="/2009/06/14/all-for-good-a-craigslist-for-service/">All for Good: A Craigslist for service</a> (Socialbrite)</p>
<p>• <a href="http://www.archive.org/download/JDLasicaSocialActions/socialactions.mp4">Making social causes actionable</a> (JD Lasica&#8217;s 2008 interview with Peter &#8212; Archive.org)</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://www.socialbrite.org/2011/01/21/want-to-take-action-on-cause/">Want to take action on a cause? The road ahead just got easier</a> appeared first on <a href="https://www.socialbrite.org">Socialbrite</a>.</p>
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		<title>GoingGreen: Innovations in green tech</title>
		<link>https://www.socialbrite.org/2009/09/30/goinggreen-innovations-in-green-tech/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Guest]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 01 Oct 2009 01:38:35 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Education]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Events]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Public interest]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Social impact]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[AlwaysOn]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[biofuels]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[clean tech]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[clean technology]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[electric cars]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[geothermal]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[GoingGreen]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[green buildings]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[green tech]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[green technology]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[innovation]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Silicon Valley]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[smart designs]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[tech]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Technology]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.socialbrite.org/?p=2936</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>Photo by Salem Kimble By Salem Kimble East Bay Green Tours Earlier this month, amid the picturesque backdrop of the Cavallo Lodge in Sausalito, Calif., a flurry of venture capitalists and industry innovators came together at the GoingGreen Conference from AlwaysOn. There were all manner of industries represented, from cement that absorbs carbon (Novacem) to [&#8230;]</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://www.socialbrite.org/2009/09/30/goinggreen-innovations-in-green-tech/">GoingGreen: Innovations in green tech</a> appeared first on <a href="https://www.socialbrite.org">Socialbrite</a>.</p>
]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img loading="lazy" decoding="async" src="http://www.socialbrite.org/wp-content/uploads/2009/09/closeup.JPG" alt="closeup" title="closeup" width="500" height="375" class="alignnone size-full wp-image-2957" srcset="https://www.socialbrite.org/wp-content/uploads/2009/09/closeup.JPG 500w, https://www.socialbrite.org/wp-content/uploads/2009/09/closeup-300x225.jpg 300w" sizes="auto, (max-width: 500px) 100vw, 500px" /><br />
<span class="spacing6">Photo by Salem Kimble</p>
<p>By <strong>Salem Kimble</strong><br />
<a href="http://www.ebgt.org">East Bay Green Tours</a></p>
<p><span class="dropcap">E</span>arlier this month, amid the picturesque backdrop of the Cavallo Lodge in Sausalito, Calif., a flurry of venture capitalists and industry innovators came together at the <a href="http://alwayson.goingon.com/ecom/productview/7539">GoingGreen Conference</a> from AlwaysOn. There were all manner of industries represented, from cement that absorbs carbon (<a href="http://www.novacem.com/">Novacem</a>) to low frequency wireless technology for long range monitoring (<a href="http://www.onrampwireless.com/">On-Ramp Wireless</a>) to completely architected materials (<a href="http://www.nanosysinc.com/">Nanosys</a>) and everything in between.</p>
<p>In fact, there was so much going on, let&#8217;s break down a few of the more intriguing elements.</p>
<h4>Smart designs for buildings</h4>
<p><a href="http://www.projectfrog.com">Project Frog</a>, a slick and friendly outfit from San Francisco, showed off their super quick building construction from partially pre-fabricated buildings that minimize waste during construction, save 50 percent in energy once built, and go up in an incredible six weeks&#8217; time. Their smart designs take into consideration the building process and include things like designing doors and walls to fit the size that the wall material is when sold. Their flagship installation is at Crissy Field in San Francisco.</p>
<p>Buildings are important, but perhaps more intriguing are the people who are re-engineering the building blocks themselves, as Novacem has done. They have an alternative to Portland cement (standard material used in the majority of construction) that has a lighter carbon footprint at the outset and over the long term. Says Novacem&#8217;s Stewart Evans, &#8220;The big win is that Novacem has the potential to not only remove the 5 percent [of carbon] from creation [of the cement] but to take out 4 percent of carbon [from the atmosphere] over time.&#8221; <span id="more-2936"></span></p>
<h4>Electric cars: From sports cars to &#8216;bicycles&#8217;</h4>
<p><figure id="attachment_2942" aria-describedby="caption-attachment-2942" style="width: 225px" class="wp-caption alignright"><img loading="lazy" decoding="async" src="http://www.socialbrite.org/wp-content/uploads/2009/09/Tesla1-225x300.jpg" alt="Tesla Roadster" title="Tesla" width="225" height="300" class="size-medium wp-image-2942" srcset="https://www.socialbrite.org/wp-content/uploads/2009/09/Tesla1-225x300.jpg 225w, https://www.socialbrite.org/wp-content/uploads/2009/09/Tesla1.jpg 400w" sizes="auto, (max-width: 225px) 100vw, 225px" /><figcaption id="caption-attachment-2942" class="wp-caption-text">Tesla Roadster</figcaption></figure>The state of electric cars is surprisingly advanced, with enterprising companies <a href="http://www.codaautomotive.com/">Coda</a>, <a href="http://www.aptera.com/">Aptera</a> and <a href="http://www.teslamotors.com/">Tesla</a> on the scene. Coda is a company jointly working in China and the US on both the battery development and the electric car. According to CEO Kevin Czinger, they will have electric cars available to the public as early as fall 2010 with a 100-mile distance battery life and competitive price point of $30,000.</p>
<p>Aptera is a company with an entirely different strategy that currently has them legally classified as a bicycle &mdash; a car designed with only three wheels. Aptera&#8217;s strategy has been to tackle aerodynamics first and foremost in design so that less energy is needed for transport in the first place.</p>
<p>Tesla, the most widely known and covered in the press, strikes one as the equivalent of an Apple &mdash; emphasizing value beyond price and design focused development in which they build all their own software. Their most recent project, the upcoming roadster, is being created from scratch, which will allow a clean slate for the chassis and battery to have greater efficiency.</p>
<p>The less sexy but very economically savvy <a href="http://www.brightautomotive.com/ ">Bright Automotive, Inc.</a> is tackling the commercial fleet market of delivery vans. They might seem ho-hum, but as an investment at scale they provide the highest economics savings, says Bright Chairman Rueben Munger. As investments, electric fleet vehicles &#8220;are price positive on day one,&#8221; he said.</p>
<h4>Energy: Biofuels and geothermal</h4>
<p>There were quite a few biofuels folks. It appears we&#8217;re more than fine when it comes to the availability of fuels as there is no shortage of biofuels solutions. Jatropha, the miracle plant of <a href="http://www.sgfuel.com/">SG Biofuels</a> that is easy to grow, doesn&#8217;t compete with food crops. They say they could produce cost-competitive biofuels at a price point equivalent to oil&#8217;s $42 a barrel.  Similarly miraculous, <a href="http://www.rentechinc.com/">Rentech</a> offers &#8220;synthetic fuels for jet and diesel engines [made from] trash, sewage sludge, forestry and agricultural waste, energy crops and fossil resources.&#8221;</p>
<p>Then there&#8217;s the perennial grass feedstock Miscanthus from <a href="http://www.mendelbio.com/ ">Mendel Biotechnology</a>. I wouldn&#8217;t be surprised if it were engineered so effectively as to walk off the field and pump our gas for us.</p>
<p>Geothermal is something I haven&#8217;t heard much about lately as a feasible option, but <a href="http://www.potterdrilling.com/">Potter Drilling</a>, backed by Google.org, is working on a patented technology that would allow much deeper drilling than is currently possible, which suddenly makes geothermal a viable option in many more regions. They are beyond the first stages of research and are working with a physical prototype.</p>
<p> <img decoding="async" src="http://www.socialbrite.org/wp-content/uploads/2009/09/Sierra-Energy2-525x59.jpg" alt="Sierra Energy" title="Sierra Energy" width="525"  class="nob" /></p>
<p>There were also a few gasifer companies, including <a href="http://www.sierraenergycorp.com/">Sierra Energy</a> and <a href="http://www.zeropointcleantech.com/">Zeropoint Clean Tech</a>. Sierra Energy has an added bonus of focusing on tying in existing steel mills into their business design to revitalize old steel towns where many jobs have been lost.</p>
<p>As far as efficiency solutions and carbon tracking, the contenders in the field at this conference included <a href="http://www.joulelabs.com/">Joule Labs</a>, <a href="http://www.getgreenbox.com/">Greenbox Technology</a> and <a href="http://www.firstcarbonsolutions.com/ ">FirstCarbon Solutions</a>.</p>
<h4>Technology: data collection applications</h4>
<p>One of the striking presentations came from San Diego-based On-Ramp Wireless, a company with technology that harnesses uses and prices for wireless that don&#8217;t currently exist on the market. In simple terms, their technology harnesses low-frequency (non-regulated) wireless and allows for data collection within a range of up to 10 or 12 miles. That data collection application can be used on everything from finding a leak in a tube under city cement to automatically sensing that a farmer&#8217;s field needs watering.<br />
Another technology leader was Nanosys, a San Francisco company with a vision for architected materials to become the modern equivalent invention of assembly lines.</p>
<p>Some applications of their work have shown up in reduced data center power consumption from (using higher density Nano Flash drives) and improved battery performance  (re-engineered battery anode material) and remote phosphor for blue LED backlights. One of their intriguing materials is an engineered substance that when separated into various sizes in tubes causes the tubes to reflect light from an LED pointer in the colors of the rainbow. Unlike others in their nano-tech field, Nanosys has been working on technology development that is designed with the eventual large-scale production in mind from the beginning.</p>
<p>Altogether, it was enough new technologies to leave one&#8217;s head spinning, but in a hopeful direction. The overlap of sustainability and profitability is undeniable, especially when it comes to natural resources and large industries. I was surprised by the impression at this event that the greatest challenge lies not in innovation and creation of new technology, but in how those inventions and improvements can create a pathway to market and eventual widespread use.</p>
<div class="tagline"><img loading="lazy" decoding="async" src="http://www.socialbrite.org/wp-content/uploads/2009/10/Salem-Kimble.jpg" alt="Salem-Kimble" title="Salem-Kimble" width="80" height="88" class="alignleft size-full wp-image-2971" /><strong>Salem Kimble</strong> is operations manager of <a href="http://www.ebgt.org">East Bay Green Tours</a>. This is her first article for Socialbrite. </p>
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<p><a rel="license" href="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/"><!-- <img decoding="async" src="http://i.creativecommons.org/l/by/3.0//88x31.png" alt="Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported" class="alignleft" style="margin-top:4px;" /> -->
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</div><p>The post <a href="https://www.socialbrite.org/2009/09/30/goinggreen-innovations-in-green-tech/">GoingGreen: Innovations in green tech</a> appeared first on <a href="https://www.socialbrite.org">Socialbrite</a>.</p>
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		<title>Social Media Innovation Camps</title>
		<link>https://www.socialbrite.org/2009/08/14/social-media-innovation-camps/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[JD Lasica]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Fri, 14 Aug 2009 22:19:23 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Education]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Nonprofits]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[foundations]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[innovation]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Social media]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[social media bootcamp]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[social media camp]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[social media experts]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[social media training]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[social media workshop]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.socialbrite.org/?p=2386</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>Social Media Summit (Oct. 20-23, 2008, in New York) and Social Summit 2008 (Nov. 8, 2008, in Oakland, Calif.) In addition, there are many social media marketing and search engine optimization training workshops and webinars, but such ventures are not centered around civic media and thus fall outside the scope of this study. As social [&#8230;]</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://www.socialbrite.org/2009/08/14/social-media-innovation-camps/">Social Media Innovation Camps</a> appeared first on <a href="https://www.socialbrite.org">Socialbrite</a>.</p>
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										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img decoding="async" src="http://www.socialbrite.org/wp-content/uploads/2009/08/3051192386_d9c7f002bf_m.jpg" alt="Social media photo" title="Social media photo" width="270"  " class="alignnone size-full wp-image-2388" /></p>
<p><a href="/author/jd-lasica/"><a href="https://www.socialbrite.org/author/jd-lasica/"><img decoding="async" src="https://www.socialbrite.org/wp-content/uploads/userphoto/jd-lasica.jpg" alt="JD Lasica" class="sig nob" /></a></a><span class="dropcap">L</span>ast year, I was involved in discussions with several organizations &mdash; and received a grant from the <a href="http://www.centerforsocialmedia.org/ ">Center for Social Media</a> &mdash; to research a proposal to launch a series of Social Media Innovation Camps around the country (and eventually the world). </p>
<p>In the past year, Social Media Bootcamps have begun to sprout up all over, some of them from marketing organizations, others by well-known public-spirited not-for-profits like <a href="http://www.socialmediaclub.org">Social Media Club</a>, which has been a pioneer in this field, and the series of Europe-based <a href="http://www.nesta.org.uk/">NESTA</a>-funded <a href="http://www.sicamp.org/">Social Media Innovation Camps</a>, with plans for a camp in Brisbane, Australia, in March 2010.</p>
<p>Meantime, I recently co-presented a <a href="http://www.socialmedia.biz/2009/07/23/newspapers-and-blue-sky-thinking/">social media workshop</a> for 10 daily newspapers at the Knight Digital Media Center, and I&#8217;m giving (with David Cohn) a <a href="http://www.socialbrite.org/2009/08/04/social-media-bootcamp-at-seize-the-moment/">Social Media Bootcamp for ethnic media publishers</a> at <a href="http://seizethemoment.us/">Seize the Moment</a> at San Francisco State on Aug. 28, as well as other workshops later in the year. </p>
<p>With that preface, I&#8217;m reproducing here (and taking down from Zoho) a Foundation Proposal that we developed &mdash; but never sent to any foundations &mdash; so that if any interested parties happen to come across it, you can <a href="mailto:team@socialbrite.org">contact us</a> for more information. I still believe the idea has a great deal of merit (though would revise the project in several areas), and that a series of traveling Social Media Innovation Camps can be especially useful to the nonprofit community.</p>
<p><span style="font-weight: bold;">To:</span> Foundation(s) to be named<br />
<span style="font-weight: bold;">Applicant</span>: Socialbrite</span><br />
<span style="font-weight: bold;">Organizations we&#8217;ve consulted with on this proposal:</span><br />
• Center for Future Civic Media at MIT<br />
• Society for New Communications Research<br />
• Institute for Civic and Community Engagement at San Francisco State University<br />
• Social Media Club<br />
• Berkman Center for Internet and Society at Harvard University<br />
• Center for Citizen Media<br />
• Media Giraffe Project at the University of Massachusetts<br />
• Center for Renaissance Journalism at San Francisco State University<br />
• Ourmedia.org</p>
<p><span style="font-weight: bold;">Contact</span>: J.D. Lasica (jd at socialbrite dot org)</p>
<p><span style="font-weight: bold;">Duration of project: </span>1 year, then self-sustaining</p>
<p><span style="font-weight: bold;">Description of project:</span> Nationwide series of educational bootcamps focused on increasing civic engagement through social media. The effort is undergirded by an online community of social media mentors and a resource center for social media, online curricula and peer-to-peer learning.</p>
<p><span style="font-weight: bold;">Geographic area served by project: </span>The plan targets 10 cities and communities in the United States in the first year. We intend to expand after that to Canada, Mexico and Europe after additional funding is secured from corporate sponsors.</p>
<p><span style="font-weight: bold;">Beneficiary groups targeted</span>: Independent and ethnic media makers; NGOs and nonprofits seeking to take up the tools of social media; publishers of citizen media, community news and hyperlocal news sites; college and university educators; K-14 educators involved in traditional schools and in after-school programs; public broadcasters; newspapers and broadcast news organizations seeking to deploy tools that enable community participation; and citizens seeking to contribute to the community.</p>
<p><span id="more-2386"></span></p>
<p><span style="font-weight: bold;">Methodology</span>: Rather than invite all stakeholders to all Innovation Camps, we will initially focus on separate constituency groups. Thus, the first bootcamp would be aimed at ethnic media makers; the second would be aimed at nonprofits; a third would serve publishers of citizen and community news sites. By aggregating the output of these gatherings, we will, over time, add to and enrich our collective resource center as the project moves forward.</p>
<h4>Executive summary</h4>
<p>This proposal calls for the creation of an ongoing series of traveling Social Media Innovation Camps supported by an online community focused on education, collaboration and innovation around public-spirited social media. The resource center will make available learning materials freely shareable under Creative Commons licenses.</p>
<p>The Social Media Innovation Camps will take place 10 times in the first year in major cities around the United States. In year two, contingent on securing funding through corporate sponsorships, we will add smaller communities; target Mexico City, Toronto and London; and increase the frequency to 15 times a year.</p>
<p>Each camp will have two &#8220;hosts&#8221;: the project facilitator and a local social media evangelist/expert from the target community. In addition, a rotating series of trainers/mentors, drawn from a prequalified pool of workshop presenters and chiefly from the local area, will lead separate workshop tracks. The small project staff (we envision two people initially) would be paid; the workshop presenters would be paid an honorarium and expenses.</p>
<p>The goals of the Innovation Camps and online support community are:</p>
<p>1. To foster wider adoption of public-spirited social media by making these tools more easily accessible to publishers of all ages and income levels (both citizen publishers and online news organizations)<br />
2. To identify innovative technologies and practices in the field of social media that advance the public interest<br />
3. To spotlight the technologies (including social media, social networking tools, open source content management systems, widgets, etc.) and best practices for both professional journalists and citizen publishers<br />
4. To provide NGOs, local community groups and citizen publishers with a basic citizen media website built on an open source platform<br />
5. To provide NGOs, local community groups, citizen publishers and new media managers with an online community to support their efforts<br />
6. To encourage local media collaboration<br />
7. To plant the seed of knowledge that camp participants will spread throughout their community after the camp concludes.</p>
<p>This initiative starts with the following set of assumptions:</p>
<p>• that the growth in civic and social media is a positive development for society<br />
• that civic and social media initiatives should serve a wide array of public interests: community and &#8220;citizen media&#8221; publications, Web 2.0 start-ups, civic organizations and other alternative news sources as well as traditional outlets such as newspapers and broadcast news<br />
• that local media companies are not the sole owners of civic media initiatives but should be stakeholders in such efforts<br />
• that the output of such initiatives should accrue to the public&#8217;s benefit rather than to a company&#8217;s bottom line<br />
• that the knowledge to use these tools is not contained or owned by any individual or group and therefore should be shared widely and freely.</p>
<p>With this starting point in mind, we believe that an ongoing series of Social Media Innovation Camps will:</p>
<p>• introduce civic media to an entirely new set of stakeholders<br />
• broaden the impact of civic media upon our democratic institutions<br />
• funnel the best practices and case studies highlighted by national organizations to the local context<br />
• help existing news organizations sustain community journalism efforts through adoption of participatory media strategies<br />
• give disenfranchised citizens a voice in their community and a platform upon which to be heard<br />
• recontextualize civic media and drive wider adoption of the concept.</p>
<h4>Definitions</h4>
<p>The kind of user-empowering media outlined here is now a broadly understood notion, though it has gone by several names: civic media, public media, community media, participatory media, democratic media. Some of the terms, such as civic media, have been constrained to some extent by past practices in which local newspapers took control of the term to promote a local agenda.</p>
<p>We use the broad term &#8220;social media&#8221; here because that is what the public calls this phenomenon – by a very wide margin, as a Google search shows – and this effort needs is primarily aimed at the public rather than academics or news professionals. (The term “civic media” draws 81,300 results; “social media” has 19 million results.) While we use the terms civic media and social media somewhat interchangeably throughout this document, we are referring to a single idea:<span style="font-style: italic;"> developing and utilizing knowledge and skills to increase civic engagement and enhance the public good. </span></p>
<p>The following needs to be underscored: this initiative will be highlighting tools and practices being used to advance society&#8217;s well-being. In this project, we use social media as shorthand to refer to the use of social media tools – blogs, video, podcasts, social networks, RSS feeds, wikis, social bookmarking, forums, open APIs and the like – for the public good.</p>
<p>In the end, the actions, not the labels, are what is important. The Social Media Innovation Camps will focus on any form of communication that strengthens the social bonds within a community or creates a strong sense of civic engagement among people. Not every forum post or Twitter tweet will advance the public good, of course, but on the whole the promulgation of democratic media forms will ensure that all citizens have a voice and the means to hear all voices.</p>
<h4>Project details</h4>
<p>Currently, discussions to promote civic media occur at fixed locations, such as MIT&#8217;s Center for Future Civic Media or the J-Lab at American University, or in random and fleeting posts in the blogosphere. Instead of sponsoring one or two conferences on the topic in a year, we would bring insight into the use of democratic media to several regions across the country, helping to spread the benefits of public-spirited social media organically and at the grassroots level. A traveling series of Innovation Camps would represent a sustained effort that engenders cross-pollination across fields and brings discussion of these topics to local communities.</p>
<p>We see the immediate beneficiaries of Social Media Innovation Camps as follows:</p>
<p>• Civic and community organizations, which often have no new media team but do have volunteers who are willing to embrace simple, accessible civic publishing solutions that empower their members to accomplish more.<br />
• Ethnic, independent and community media-makers seeking to reach their audiences through new tools.<br />
• NGOs and nonprofits looking to adopt social media tools that serve the public interest.<br />
• New media staffs at news organizations, which face the daunting task of keeping up with developments in the field while pushing their parent media companies to embrace their digital destinies with an understaffed, resource-deficient team<br />
• Citizen publishers at community publications, who are often unaware of free resources and tools available to them<br />
• Staff and volunteers at public broadcast stations, who seek to fulfill a civic mission but are constrained by budget shortfalls and program limitations.<br />
• Educators teaching students in primary, secondary and colleges who need to get up to speed on the tools being used by their students. In addition, trainers working at after-school programs that are geared toward the community involvement of students.</p>
<p>At present, it&#8217;s difficult for professional journalists and citizen publishers to keep track of the dizzying array of Web 2.0 and civic media tools coming into the marketplace that can help enrich the news experience and strengthen community organizations&#8217; ties to their members. The era of the empowered user is just beginning, and media publications have been slow to introduce participatory media concepts into the newsroom, while nonprofits and small community organizations have felt ill-equipped to do so. A nationwide series of Social Media Innovation Camps would help address both problems and serve as a model for peer learning and information sharing.</p>
<p>Are the interests of these sometimes competing groups mutually exclusive? We think not. We believe news professionals have begun to see the importance of providing readers with tools for conversation and citizen journalism. While some members of the public wish to route around the traditional media, others are receptive to turning news publications into true community forums. Bringing these people into the same room is the first step toward understanding and, perhaps, collaboration. Alternatively, there could be occasions where a private workshop is held for a newspaper&#8217;s executive and new media managers, and a public camp is held for the community.</p>
<p>In addition, the online community of social media innovators and mentors will help sustain community efforts and citizen media publications that rely on social media tools and techniques. We look at this as a grassroots ecosystem that requires a lightweight framework (in the form of bootcamps, online resources and a community of mentors) to provide a rich knowledge base and valuable support center.</p>
<p>Once this initial series of camps proves successful, additional funding will be identified to expand the program to additional cities. We will tap resources from the private sector and educational community to make this program financially sustainable on an ongoing basis beyond the group of initial communities supported.</p>
<h4>How it would work</h4>
<p>We see the Innovation Camps as taking the best elements of both structured workshops and unstructured BarCamp-style &#8220;unconferences&#8221; where participants set the agenda.</p>
<p>Wikipedia defines BarCamp this way: &#8220;BarCamp is an international network of user generated conferences — open, participatory workshop-events, whose content is provided by participants.&#8221; The first BarCamp was held in Silicon Valley in 2005. Since then, BarCamps have been held in more than 350 cities around the world. A BarCamp might best be described as an &#8220;unconference&#8221; where people gather with little advance planning, session leaders tack up proposed sessions on a whiteboard and participants decide which sessions suit their interests. Anyone can initiate a BarCamp, using the BarCamp wiki. While loosely structured, the gatherings adhere to a strict set of rules. Wikipedia adds: &#8220;Everyone is also asked to share information and experiences of the event, both live and after the fact, via public web channels including (but not limited to) blogging, photo sharing, social bookmarking, wiki-ing, and IRC. This open encouragement to share everything about the event is in deliberate contrast to the &#8216;off the record by default&#8217; and &#8216;no recordings&#8217; rules at many private invite-only participant driven conferences.&#8221;</p>
<p>Similarly, PodCamps — the first one was held in Boston in September 2006 — are unconferences focused on the new media community.</p>
<p>Innovation Camps will borrow from the BarCamp/PodCamp model, relying heavily on the ethos of participation and openness. But we believe BarCamps and PodCamps have organizational shortcomings. Innovation Camps will provide a different approach in several key respects:</p>
<p>• We will offer more structure to the workshops.<br />
• We will offer richer training tools and a vetted community of trainers and mentors.<br />
• And, significantly, we will offer a platform that encourages sustained, ongoing discussion and collaboration in the weeks and months after a camp ends. It is this lack of organization and follow-through that is one of the key shortcomings of BarCamps and PodCamps.</p>
<p>Innovation Camps will include general sessions and breakout tracks, with &#8220;trainers&#8221; leading track sessions while participating informally as members of the audience in other sessions. The host and community members would create a pool of experts to draw upon for each camp. Trainers/mentors will include:</p>
<p>• Social media and new media trainers<br />
• Journalists and developers from online news organizations<br />
• Executives, technologists and thought leaders from the private sector, chiefly Web 2.0 companies and start-ups<br />
• Key members of the academic community, including K-12 educators and college professors fluent in social media<br />
• Local citizen media leaders who will be key to furthering the spread of this knowledge after the workshop is over.</p>
<p>Each party listed above brings different strengths to the table: executives and technologists from Web 2.0 start-ups have a wide grasp of the Web 2.0 tools and platforms that could be leveraged in a community context; traditional media and online news executives and programmers have the ability to explore how these tools could be harnessed for bringing together the community and enlightening the public; educators could demonstrate some of the cutting-edge work being done in the classroom, analyze the successes and failures of disparate experiments, and help capture, organize and archive relevant materials.</p>
<p>We envision these camps not as academic sessions but as lively, interactive workshops where people learn by doing. In keeping with the principle of conversation and interaction, participants (not &#8220;attendees&#8221;) would be encouraged to share their own learnings and techniques.</p>
<h4>Operational costs</h4>
<p>This initiative will incur the following expenses:</p>
<p>• a full-time host/organizer (salary, travel, lodging at camps)<br />
• a full-time or part-time assistant/coordinator (salary, travel, lodging at camps)<br />
• stipends for locally based volunteer trainers<br />
• a contract developer to prototype and build the community blog, wiki and resource center<br />
• modest expenses for snacks and beverages</p>
<p>Venue costs will be waived as a condition of holding the camp; in most cases we will partner with local media organizations, nonprofits or universities to host the camps at little or no cost. There may be occasions where it makes sense to hold a camp at the beginning or end of a national conference to solicit participation both by speakers and attendees. In addition, no office or equipment costs are anticipated.</p>
<p>We may experiment with charging a modest registration fee for some events, although the default would be to have them open and free to attract as many participants as possible. We believe we can defray costs associated with holding local Innovation Camps by generating sponsorships from local media companies, technology companies and other sponsors who could offer scholarships.</p>
<p>In general, two to four trainers (including the host) will be regular staples of the camps to provide cohesion and continuity to the program; the speakers will rotate in from a master list of Social Media Innovation Mentors from around the country that the host/organizer will develop in tandem with the local hosts, with trainers (social media specialists, journalists, academics, technologists) speaking at nearby camps depending on proximity and availability, and participants (not passive audience members) attending from traditional news organizations, broadcast stations, community and civic organizations, nonprofits and businesses. Drawing from local trainers/mentors will help keep travel expenses reasonably low. This project will be run on a shoestring budget.</p>
<p>After the initial year, costs will drop as the community mentoring site will have been built and more Innovation Camps are held modeled on successful forerunners. Unlike many new media and civic media projects, the community will provide a good deal of the mindshare and creative energy in this endeavor, and rather than a one-year training initiative we see a path to ongoing sustainability through corporate sponsorships.</p>
<h4>The camps</h4>
<p>The Innovation Camps will be composed of a daylong series of training workshops generally with one or two tracks. We will encourage participants to register in advance. Camps could range anywhere from 20 to 300 people, and we will have to devise the venue logistics accordingly. At the outset, we will target about 50 people attending on average.</p>
<p>The organizer/host, with the input of an advisory board or trainers, will devise a curriculum that would have standing components as well as fresh components relating to the particular region or venue after soliciting input from participants to help set the agenda. In Philadelphia, for example, participants could vote in a wiki to hold one track on community publications and a second track on social media tools for the classroom. A camp in Oklahoma City might have one track that focuses on improving the local news organizations&#8217; community engagement and a second track on nonprofits setting up their own social news sites.</p>
<p>We will borrow some of the best practices of the BarCamps but do it in the form of concurrent tracks. Topics might include:</p>
<p>• Introduction to key civic media concepts<br />
• How blogging can increase civic engagement<br />
• Making money and increasing influence through social media<br />
• How to set up a group blog<br />
• Effective use of video<br />
• Podcasting essentials<br />
• Videoblogging &amp; videocasting<br />
• RSS feeds<br />
• The importance of tagging<br />
• Social bookmarking (del.icio.us, ma.gnolia, etc.)<br />
• Social news sites (Digg, Reddit, Furl, Newsvine)<br />
• Social networks (Facebook, Twitter, Flickr)<br />
• Best practices in search and reearch<br />
• How to use monitoring services to listen and stay up to date<br />
• Legal rights and responsibilities<br />
• Wikis for collaboration<br />
• Getting and producing better interviews<br />
• Participatory media success stories<br />
• Best practices in emerging public media, with a handout<br />
• Metrics of success: How to gauge the success of a civic media campaign or long-term strategy</p>
<p>Trainers will jump in and out of topics depending on their level of expertise in a particular area. A local attorney, for instance, might speak to the legal issues that citizen publications need to be aware of. Handouts highlighting the trainers&#8217; background and services will be permitted, but commercial overtures during the camps prohibited.</p>
<p>We will continually underscore the peer to peer, participatory nature of the camps, and so the output from participants will also prove invaluable. New insights, case studies and best practices will be captured, organized in the resource center and carried over to the next camp.</p>
<p>As with BarCamps, PodCamps and other unconferences, the information shared in the camps will be produced as media (audio/video/text) to be distributed online.  There is the potential to partner with a streaming video company like UStream.tv to also live-stream the camps into people’s homes or remote viewing locations for people unable to attend.</p>
<p>After a number of Innovation Camps are held, the goal is to have them become self-replicating, as BarCamps are, so that groups of participants in various localities could hold their own lightweight camps without the need for the project staff to appear in person or to provide much assistance.</p>
<h4>A citizen media site in a box</h4>
<p>Social Media Innovation Camps will not be limited to training and learning. We want to put the right tools and resources into the hands of potential civic media publishers.</p>
<p>With that goal in mind, in October 2008 we approached Acquia, a Boston company that offers support services for Drupal sites. Drupal is considered the top open-source content management system and publishing platform powering citizen media sites.</p>
<p>In principle, Acquia agreed to the following relationship:</p>
<p>Before every Innovation Camp, we will offer registrants the opportunity to create their own citizen media site on the Drupal platform. Upon registering, a person who opts in will receive an email directing them to their new citizen media site installation.</p>
<p>The Drupal-Acquia partnership underlines the relationship between open source solutions and civic media goals. The Innovation Camps project staff, working with Acquia, will offer camp participants a free instantiation (setup) of Drupal, hosted by Acquia. During the camp and afterward, NGOs, community-based organizations (CBOs) and citizen publishers could configure the modules to reflect their site&#8217;s mission and membership. The publishers could transfer the installation to their own servers or continue to have Acquia host the site for a small fee; additional support and services would also be offered at discounted rates.</p>
<p>We will offer camp participants a similar option to create a WordPress blog.</p>
<p>Because we are agnostic with regard to technology and publishing platforms, we will offer discussions around the benefits and drawbacks of various publishing platforms, including Joomla, Ruby on Rails and TypePad.</p>
<p>The Innovation Camps, then, are not just about learning but about community building. Organizations and individuals who want to participate in community publishing will be offered a robust out-of-the-box publishing solution that they could build upon.</p>
<h4>Follow-ups and actionable items</h4>
<p>We believe that one of the major shortcomings of many one-off training and education workshops is that they miss an opportunity for sustained progress on community issues because at the conclusion the attendees disperse, never to see each other again. There&#8217;s no opportunity for follow-up, much less follow-through.</p>
<p>For all of our Innovation Camps, we will do the following:</p>
<p>• offer the public more information about each of the participants, their affiliation and their projects in the workshop wiki in the days before the camp begins, with pointers to new or ongoing community initiatives and local resources such as mailing lists;</p>
<p>• set aside some time at the conclusion of the workshop for local participants to discuss action items and recommendations on the best ways to keep the conversation going;</p>
<p>• ask the participants at registration whether they are willing to share their contact information and with whom, through a tiered system that filters queries.</p>
<h4>Mentors network and resource center</h4>
<p>Through this initiative, we will attract and build a community of Social Media Innovation Mentors. The trainers/mentors network will evolve into a knowledge base around innovative uses of social media. This community will serve as the common ground upon which engaged citizens can connect with one another, access new knowledge, share their lessons learned and find both the intellectual and emotional support they need to be successful.</p>
<p>We will build a group blog on WordPress, an open source platform, to allow mentors to post entries (or cross-post from their own blog), to interact with each other and the public, to highlight their backgrounds and to share resources.</p>
<p>We will build the Social Media Resource Center as a knowledge gateway – a combination of wikis, downloadable how-to documents and resource pages that make it easy to share, process and filter relevant information related to social media tools, platforms and successful social media initiatives. There is a plethora of information around civic and social media projects but no directory that pulls it together.</p>
<p>The Resource Center will include:</p>
<p>• Learning modules with annotations and pointers to relevant resources, social media learning centers (including kcnn.org, j-lab, poynter, newsu, etc.), interesting developments, key figures, etc.<br />
• A mentors network, as described above, with social media experts, trainers and educators providing profile information, contact information and availability.<br />
• A Best Practices section with summaries of social media/civic media case studies.<br />
• Slide shows, videos, presentations and training materials that are used in the Innovation Camps, both for reference purposes and for access by camp participants.</p>
<p>The wiki and website will highlight useful social media tools and resources while also making them easy to understand and access. And, importantly, the output from such a site should be open sourced and made available under a Creative Commons license.</p>
<p>We would like to explore building in functionality (similar to eventful.com) that would let readers in a city request a Social Media Innovation Camp be held in their community. We could provide (a) tools that let them set up their own Innovation Barcamp, and (b) access to our mentors database (for those mentors who opt in) to see if local or regional trainers want to take part.</p>
<h4>Timeline</h4>
<p>Phase 1: Creation of wiki for registration, planning and development of initial Innovation Camp.</p>
<p>Phase 2: Hold initial Innovation Camp with small number of vetted trainers, experts and mentors. We will .</p>
<p>Phase 3: Build-out of a group blog on WordPress and a content management system for fielding queries and requests. Planning and execution of second and third camps.</p>
<p>Phase 4: Build-out of an online resource center based on content from participants and mentors.</p>
<p>Some of these phases will overlap. The initial segments of all four phases will be completed within six months of project launch.</p>
<h4>Partnerships</h4>
<p>We believe it&#8217;s important not to run Social Media Innovation Camps as a siloed operation but to tie it into successful ventures in this field wherever possible. Thus, this initiative has the following backing:</p>
<p>• The Society for New Communications Research, a global nonprofit 501(c)(3) think tank dedicated to the advanced study of the latest developments in new media. SNCR puts on two or more conferences a year in varied locations. SNCR is interested in hosting an Innovation Camp in conjunction with one of their events.</p>
<p>• The Center for Future Civic Media at MIT will evangelize the Innovation Camps and offer a venue to host one or more camps at minimal cost.</p>
<p>• San Francisco State University will evangelize the Innovation Camps and offer a venue to host one or more camps at no cost.</p>
<h4>Information silos and the unconference model</h4>
<p>An ongoing series of locally focused Social Media Innovation Camps and a public resource center would be an exercise in breaking down information silos and reaping the whirlwind of knowledge sharing. Academics say they face challenges in taking innovation in the classroom and transferring it to real-world venues, such as online news operations. Online news managers tip their hands that they have trouble keeping up with the latest developments driving the social media revolution. And too many tech start-up CEOs think of journalism as an outdated notion.</p>
<p>But there are voices seeking out collaboration and common cause. At a recent Aspen Institute roundtable on mobile technology and civic engagement, Katrin Verclas, founder and editor of MobileActive.org, pointed out that the mobile space was rife with innovative experiments. &#8220;Some really interesting things are happening, but no one is aggregating the knowledge. The lessons learned sit in innovation silos. You need to start silo busting – that&#8217;s how innovation spreads, by sharing and picking through these little pockets of good stuff.&#8221;</p>
<p>In Silicon Valley and among technology geeks, the &#8220;good stuff&#8221; is partly spread through camps. Starting with BarCamp and extending to newer gatherings like DevCamp, the &#8220;unconference&#8221; phenomenon has spread, with makeshift gatherings springing up from Seattle to Bangalore. It&#8217;s time for news people and social media adherents to tap into this wellspring of energy and creativity.</p>
<p>Opportunities for cross-pollination abound. In May 2008 at NetSquared, a nonprofit gathering held at Cisco in San Jose, J.D. Lasica interviewed the CEO of YourMapper.com, a small start-up in Louisville, Ky., dedicated to the proposition that public records should be accessible by the public. Lasica wrote about YourMapper:</p>
<blockquote><p>The young start-up hopes to make a business in part by helping the public gain public access to public records. The company has already licensed its mapping technology to at least one news publication.</p>
<p>Central to YourMapper&#8217;s plan is an open API (application programming interface), which can prove incredibly powerful when paired with the proper datasets. The site&#8217;s founder even waged a months-long battle with Kentucky officials wielding only the Freedom of Information Act before the state attorney general came down on his side.</p>
<p>News organizations ought to get behind this effort by releasing their own open API to public records in their communities. Now, here&#8217;s the important twist: Instead of just making the data available internally, for its staff to analyze and reinterpret, news publications ought to bring readers and users into such efforts.</p></blockquote>
<p>This is a perfect example of small group of civic-minded non-journalist technologists who are eager to work with either local newspapers or community organizations to help ferret out all kinds of public data and recontextualize it in interesting, newsworthy, public-spirited ways.</p>
<p>We believe that breaking down some of these information silos will benefit the public sphere by introducing elements of start-up culture — which extols experimentation, accepts failure and rewards out-of-the-box thinking — to newsrooms and community enterprises across the country. No current social  media initiative takes this approach.</p>
<p>Our hope is that success will breed imitation. The principles and routines of the unconference are simple to replicate, but by funding a set of high-profile Social Media Innovation Camps, and recording the results, we can model the benefits of this approach.</p>
<h4>Workshop trainers and community mentors</h4>
<p>We expect that we will eventually have hundreds of experts in the social media field volunteer to serve as workshop trainers. Toward that end, we envision a well-structured Social Media Mentors Network, perhaps leveraging participants&#8217; profile data on Linked-In. The database will detail a short bio, photo, areas of specialty and contact information for workshop trainers. Mentors will have the ability to opt in or opt out of receiving queries from interested members of the public, from corporations looking to bring in social media experts for special events or from nonprofits and NGOs or CBOs looking to invite experts to speak at conferences and workshops.</p>
<p>We have not begun an outreach effort to scores of civic media and social media pioneers in different areas of the country, but the following individuals are the kind of people we would target as Innovation Camp mentors with the expectation that they would participate as a trainer at least once a year. This list should not be read as a commitment by these individuals but rather to give you a flavor of the cross-disciplinary approach we envision:</p>
<p>[list of prospective mentors withheld from public view]</p>
<h4>Project team</h4>
<p>This initiative was developed with input from the following individuals and organizations:</p>
<p>• J.D. Lasica, Founder, Ourmedia.org<br />
• Jessica Clark, Director, Future of Public Media Project, Center for Social Media, American University<br />
• Ellen Hume, Research Director, Center for Future Civic Media, MIT<br />
• Persephone Miel, Fellow, Berkman Center for Internet and Society, Harvard Law School<br />
• Bill Densmore, Director, Media Giraffe Project at the University of Massachusetts<br />
• Gerald Eisman, Director, Institute for Civic and Community Engagement, San Francisco State University<br />
• Chris Heuer, Founder, Social Media Club</p>
<p>The idea for this initiative was born at NewsTools2008 at Yahoo! headquarters in April 2008 during a breakout session with Geneva Overholser, the incoming director of the USC Annenberg School of Journalism, that tackled journalism, technology and the public interest. Some 20 high-level new media representatives, technologists and academics discussed the need to connect local communities with innovations taking place (or ready to take place) in the emerging media world. The conversation began with the observation that gatherings like NewsTools were valuable for high-level conversations, but that this &#8220;think tank&#8221; approach was ultimately less valuable than a framework that emphasized action and continuity.</p>
<p>The participants agreed that:</p>
<p>• Results from such an effort should be open sourced.</p>
<p>• The goal should be to advance journalism and the public interest without regard for whether such efforts support existing media business models.</p>
<p>• Experiments, prototypes and case studies in different fields should be reviewed, aggregated and shared openly.</p>
<p>We believe that an ongoing series of Social Media Innovation Camps would serve that function and bring about a wider adoption of social media that advance the public interest.</p>
<h4>Budget</h4>
<p>Will be shared at foundation&#8217;s request.</p>
<h4>Training projects</h4>
<p>The notion of increasing civic engagement through social media is not a new one, but it has taken on widely differing forms depending on which constituency is being targeted. The kind of user-empowering media envisioned in this project is now widely understood, though it has gone by several names: civic media, public media, community media, participatory media, democratic media.</p>
<p>Naturally, the kind of workshops and skills training taking place in this space depends on who&#8217;s doing the training. We&#8217;ve found that the training falls into three distinct groupings:</p>
<p><span style="font-weight: bold;">Grouping 1: New media training</p>
<p></span>This grouping emphasizes new media, multimedia and citizen journalism workshops put on by media organizations, universities and institutes. It should be noted that the vast majority of these workshops focus chiefly on journalism rather than social media or grassroots media tools.</p>
<p>These include such noteworthy efforts as:</p>
<p>• The <a href="http://www.mediagiraffe.org/events">Media Giraffe Project</a> at the University of Massachusetts has organized a number of participatory events since 2006, including &#8220;New Pamphleteers/New Reporters: Convening Entrepreneurs Who Combine Journalism, Democracy, Place and Blogs,&#8221; co-sponsored by the Minnesota Journalism Center, June 4-6, 2008, in Minneapolis; &#8220;Journalism That Matters &#8211; Silicon Valley: NewsTools2008,&#8221; a concept-design mashup for journalists, technologists and entrepreneurs, co-sponsored and held at Yahoo! in Sunnyvale, Calif., on April 30-May 3, 2008; the interactive seminar &#8220;The New(s) England Revolution: From Politics to Courtroom to Classroom,&#8221; held April 7, 2007, at the Univ. of Mass. Lowell, and &#8220;<a href="http://rji.missouri.edu/fellows-program/densmore-b/stories/conference/index.php">Blueprinting the Information Valet Economy</a>,&#8221; to be held Dec. 3-5, 2008, in Columbia, Mo.</p>
<p>• The <a href="http://www.knightdigitalmediacenter.org/">Knight Digital Media Center</a>, housed jointly at University of California, Berkeley, Graduate School of Journalism, and the University of Southern California Annenberg School for Communication, focuses chiefly on multimedia and new media training rather than social or civic media. In addition, a rich set of resources for citizen journalists is offered through the <a href="http://www.kcnn.org/" target="_blank">Knight Digital Media Center</a>.</p>
<p>• The National Press Club holds occasional professional development events such as <a href="http://npc.press.org/training/profdev.cfm%20">this one</a> on social media.</p>
<p>• The J-Lab in the past has conducted <a href="http://www.j-newvoices.org/index.php/site/story/citizens_media_summit_ii_agenda/">Citizen Media Summits</a> in the past with an emphasis on the success stories of hyperlocal community sites.</p>
<p>• The MIT Media Lab has included tracks on citizen journalism in some of its public conferences, such as the Future of Civic Media gathering in May 2008.</p>
<p>While the Poynter Institute <a href="https://www.poynter.org/seminar/seminar.asp?id=4220%20">teaches</a> journalism education, leadership and online, multimedia, reporting and other skills, we could find no sessions devoted to social media. Similarly, the Committee of Concerned Journalists offers Traveling Curriculum Modules, but none focus on social media or civic media. The Online News Association holds workshops in advance of its annual conference but these cater to online journalism and new media interests. The Associated Press Managing Editors Association Foundation <a href="http://www.journalismfoundation.org/news.asp">offers</a> NewsTrain regional training workshops and the Online Journalism Credibility Project, a project to test innovative and model approaches in online news.<br />
<br style="font-weight: bold;" /><span style="font-weight: bold;">Grouping 2: Grassroots media training</span></p>
<p>These are social media and civic media workshops that occur in varied locations by various hosting institutions &#8212; specifically, one-off bootcamps, BarCamps, PodCamps and unconferences put on by grassroots organizations, nonprofits, public media advocates and individuals. Unlike Grouping 1, which are professionally run conferences with a primary focus on journalism and multimedia training, these workshops span a wide range of topcis and constituencies and come closest to the Innovation Camps model we envision.</p>
<p>• Global Voices conducts an annual Citizen Media Summit, most recently June 27-28, 2008, in Budapest, Hungary.</p>
<p>• Individuals have organized scores of <a href="http://podcamp.pbwiki.com/">PodCamps</a> and <a href="http://barcamp.pbwiki.com/">BarCamps</a>, such as the <a href="http://barcamp.org/PublicMediaCamp">Public Media Camp</a> in Santa Cruz in November 2008 geared toward public media consituencies. As cited above, we believe these gatherings are valuable but often lack a cohesive framework, a reliable set of expert trainers and mentors, a curriculum that participants can take away and a follow-through apparatus that enables participants to communicate and collaborate with each other after the sessions end.</p>
<p>• <a href="http://www.socialmediaclub.org/">Social Media Club</a> regularly holds social media workshops in locations around the world.</p>
<p>• <a href="http://www.netsquared.org/">Netsquared</a> occasionally holds workshops and webinars for nonprofits that center on social media tools.</p>
<p>• The organization <a href="http://oneworld.net">Oneworld.net</a> holds workshops around the world on a wide variety of subjects, such as computer training, journalism, social justice and many other topics.</p>
<p><span style="font-weight: bold;">Grouping 3: Corporate social media</p>
<p></span>The past year has seen a large increase in the number of social media workshops focusing on social marketing and enterprise strategies put on by event planners, consultants and marketing firms. For the most part, these efforts train attendees how to use collaborative tools but generally do not focus on the civic engagement or public good aspects of social media.</p>
<p>• The <a href="http://www.sncr.org">Society for New Communication Research</a> offers one-day workshops in social media by experts in the field as part of its twice-a-year conferences. SNCR conferences are attended by marketing and PR professionals, advertising and corporate communications managers and journalists.</p>
<p>• One-off workshops and conferences around business uses of social media are on the rise, such as the <a href="http://www.aliconferences.com/conf/socialmedia_summit1008/index.htm>Social Media Summit</a> (Oct. 20-23, 2008, in New York) and <a href="http://www.realtimematrix.com/summit/summit-agenda.html">Social Summit 2008</a> (Nov. 8, 2008, in Oakland, Calif.)</p>
<p>In addition, there are many social media marketing and search engine optimization training workshops and webinars, but such ventures are not centered around civic media and thus fall outside the scope of this study.</p>
<p>As social media evolves to become an even larger part of the media landscape, we believe there&#8217;s an opportunity for foundations and corporations to play a greater role in helping to train the key stakeholders creating the media hubs of the 21st century. The first step toward that vision is to train the trainers through an ongoing series of Social Media Innovation Camps that serve the public interest.</p>
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</div><p>The post <a href="https://www.socialbrite.org/2009/08/14/social-media-innovation-camps/">Social Media Innovation Camps</a> appeared first on <a href="https://www.socialbrite.org">Socialbrite</a>.</p>
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		<title>Creating a compendium of Competitions for Change</title>
		<link>https://www.socialbrite.org/2009/07/02/creating-a-compendium-of-competitions-for-change/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 02 Jul 2009 20:02:32 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Activism]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[4change]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[challenges]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[competitions]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[innovation]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[socialchange]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.socialbrite.org/?p=1914</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>The June #4Change chat topic focused on Challenges/Competitions for Social Change. Early on in that online chat, the request emerged for a compendium or other list of “all” the Challenges and Competitions focused on social benefit. Such an overview would let those interested in participating or facilitating a competition review the full landscape of options, [&#8230;]</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://www.socialbrite.org/2009/07/02/creating-a-compendium-of-competitions-for-change/">Creating a compendium of Competitions for Change</a> appeared first on <a href="https://www.socialbrite.org">Socialbrite</a>.</p>
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										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="/author/amy-sample-ward/"><a href="https://www.socialbrite.org/author/"></a></a><span class="dropcap">T</span>he June #4Change chat topic focused on <a href="http://4change.memeshift.com/2009/06/june-11th-4change-chat-recap/">Challenges/Competitions for Social Change</a>. Early on in that online chat, the request emerged for a compendium or other list of “all” the Challenges and Competitions focused on social benefit. Such an overview would let those interested in participating or facilitating a competition review the full landscape of options, characteristics of each, and so on.</p>
<p>So, to answer that call, the <a href="http://4change.memeshift.com/authors">#4Change crew</a> has started building the compendium and now it’s your turn to chip in!  Here’s the link to <a href="http://spreadsheets.google.com/a/memeshift.com/ccc?key=ri-LxtzJE5wIk0sd9idvwbA&amp;inv=morgan@memeshift.com&amp;t=7533588119028775920&amp;guest">see what we have so far</a>.</p>
<p><a href="http://4change.memeshift.com/2009/07/competitions-for-change-compendium/"><strong>Please contribute to the Competitions for Change Compendium!  Simply click here to add to the resource! </strong></a></p>
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<p><a rel="license" href="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/"><!-- <img decoding="async" src="http://i.creativecommons.org/l/by-nc-sa/3.0//88x31.png" alt="Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported" class="alignleft" style="margin-top:4px;" /> -->
<img decoding="async" src="https://www.socialbrite.org/wp-content/plugins/wplr/images/cclogo.gif" alt="Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported" class="alignleft" style="margin-top:4px;" /></a>This work  is licensed under a <a rel="license" href="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/">Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported</a>.</p>
</div><p>The post <a href="https://www.socialbrite.org/2009/07/02/creating-a-compendium-of-competitions-for-change/">Creating a compendium of Competitions for Change</a> appeared first on <a href="https://www.socialbrite.org">Socialbrite</a>.</p>
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