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Mobile Fundraising By Andreas Wiberg Sode, January 2014
20

E-Concept Development BA Project Exam Presentation

Jul 06, 2015

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Our donation approach:

Apple guidelines:
We have the apple guidelines preventing us from introducing an in-app shop with items purchased by donations

Donation button:
Optional feature (not required)
Take the users outside the application and on to a donation website specifically for this purpose
Subpage on the main campaign website
Developed by the internal CR DASP-team

Potential problem:
Losing potential donations by the long and slow process of typing in payment information

Dedicated donors:
Only the most interested/dedicated users
Only those willing to go through the long process will be using the feature



Other options: That each have their own pros and cons

Friend-to-friend fundraising (crowdfunding)
Essentially what Comic Relief is already using for their fundraising
Users can create their own donation page (web) and invite their friends to donate and support CR

JustGiving (UK based company):
Allows those participating to track donations, thank supporters and update followers on their progress
First to integrate fundraising and donating with Facebook
Also allows users to create their own fundraising page
One-click donations (Application) once the users data has been stored

Mobile Card Readers such as PayPal or Square
Very popular amount small businesses

Google Checkout (now Google Wallet): if we decided to develop for Android
Not charging qualified non-profits
Funds go straight to charities
Have been used in Android applications (for donation features)
Only Android

Text-to-give donations within the application (useful for our concept)
Charged directly to the donators phone bill
Donations limited to $10



Why mobile fundraise? - Why should charities focus on mobile fundraising?

Mobile:
Traffic going through the roof
92% of all 18-25 year-old owns a smartphone (expected in 2015) – mentioned in the report
Mobile users share twice as much as desktop users
More funds being donated by smartphone users (provided the process is easy)
Charities should optimise their donation pages for mobile
Important for any charity to get on board or they risk losing out on a lot of potential donations

Facebook:
21 million people login to Facebook every day in the UK (4/5 on a smartphone or tablet)
One in five donations share results in another donation
One FB share generate on average an extra £5 for charities



The future of fundraising?

Peer to Peer Payments
E.g. smartphone to smartphone payments
Payments via email (claimed by typing in a specific pin code)

NFC?
Near Field Communication (short wave radio transmissions) – like (Oyster Card)
Cheaper mobile card readers for non-businesses?

Mobile Wallet?
One-click payments with your phone
Pay with you phone (by tabbing your phone)
Welcome message from author
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Transcript
Page 1: E-Concept Development BA Project Exam Presentation

Mobile Fundraising By Andreas Wiberg Sode, January

2014

Page 2: E-Concept Development BA Project Exam Presentation

• our fundraising approach • other options? • why mobile fundraise? • the future of mobile fundraising? • suggestions for discussion

agenda

Page 3: E-Concept Development BA Project Exam Presentation

• Apple guidelines – no in-game shop

• Donation button – optional feature – outside the application – subpage

• Potential problem – loss of potential donations

• Dedicated donors – those willing to go through the progress

our donation approach

Page 4: E-Concept Development BA Project Exam Presentation

• friend-to-friend fundraising (crowdfunding) – Comic Relief – JustGiving (UK based company)

• mobile card reader • Google Checkout (now Google Wallet) • text-to-give donations

other options?

Page 5: E-Concept Development BA Project Exam Presentation

• Mobile – 92% of all 18-25 will own a smartphone in 2015 – more shares – more donations – optimise for mobile

• Facebook – 21 million users (UK) – 4 out 5 on mobile and tablet – more donations per share – £5 per share

why mobile fundraise?

Page 6: E-Concept Development BA Project Exam Presentation

mobile growth

*http://www.emarketer.com/Article/Nearly-Half-of-UK-Consumers-Will-Use-Smartphones-This-Year/1009956

Page 7: E-Concept Development BA Project Exam Presentation

mobile vs. desktop

*http://blog.justgiving.com/nine-reasons-why-social-and-mobile-are-the-future-of-fundraising/

Page 8: E-Concept Development BA Project Exam Presentation

Facebook worldwide

*http://blog.justgiving.com/nine-reasons-why-social-and-mobile-are-the-future-of-fundraising/

Page 9: E-Concept Development BA Project Exam Presentation

more shares

*http://blog.justgiving.com/nine-reasons-why-social-and-mobile-are-the-future-of-fundraising/

Page 10: E-Concept Development BA Project Exam Presentation

more donations

*http://blog.justgiving.com/nine-reasons-why-social-and-mobile-are-the-future-of-fundraising/

Page 11: E-Concept Development BA Project Exam Presentation

• peer to peer payments – smartphone to smartphone

• NFC? – Near Field Communication (Bluetooth) – Close proximity to another device such as a card

reader or another smartphone

• mobile wallet – goodbye big wallet!

the future of fundraising

Page 12: E-Concept Development BA Project Exam Presentation

familiar?

Page 13: E-Concept Development BA Project Exam Presentation

mobile wallet

Page 14: E-Concept Development BA Project Exam Presentation

• Transmedia Storytelling – Where did the story go? (why down prioritize the story?) Big community (UK and London in particular) vs. a small community (Odense)

• Convergence Culture: Changing the common Protocols around Red Nose Day (as a brand) Creative ways of using Augmented Reality and LBGs How could the “Lost Golden Nose” benefit from Cultural Probes?

• The “Lost Golden Nose” in the future? Could “Lost Golden Nose” be combined with “5 seconds of Fame” (concept idea) somehow?

• Media storm: What consequences can the latest media attention have on our concept and Red Nose Day in general?

suggestions for discussion

Page 15: E-Concept Development BA Project Exam Presentation
Page 16: E-Concept Development BA Project Exam Presentation

• team – budget – resources – time

• previous experience • complex story • duration

where did the story go?

Page 17: E-Concept Development BA Project Exam Presentation

Transmedia Story

Page 18: E-Concept Development BA Project Exam Presentation

cross media

TV shows NOTV Artists

Corporate partners Merchandize Public fundraising

RND Building Blocks

Page 19: E-Concept Development BA Project Exam Presentation

• what Comic Relief originally wanted – story across multiple platforms (with noses hidden)

• Facebook and Twitter • campaign website • video • blogs • real world locations (our application)

– everything should lead up to the show on March 15 – change the way people experience RND – stronger Transmedia story – increase the flow of content across many platforms

• encourage people to seek out new information and make connections among dispersed media content

– participatory culture • invite fans/customers of RND to actively participate in the creation and

circulation of content (why have the red noses disappeared?)

convergence culture

Page 20: E-Concept Development BA Project Exam Presentation

touch-point timeline