Google’s One Today App Aims To Make Charitable Donations A More Social, And Frequent, Experience

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Today, Google quietly ushered in a new application built on top of its nonprofit arm, Google.org. The app is called One Today, and it’s currently invite only for Android users at this time. The aim is to get people to donate $1 to different organizations, while getting the complete information about how your donation will be used up front. This is a huge stumbling block for nonprofits usually, as people are afraid that their money won’t actually get spent on making a real difference. One Today aims to change that.

Additionally, One Today has a social component to it, letting you set a cap to how much money you’ll match if your friends donate to a cause. By using Google Wallet, you can simply pay off your “donation balance” once all of your friends have used up your cap. It’s a pretty interesting way of crowdsourcing donations. When I talk to people about giving money to causes, the first problem they have is that they can’t find one that they’re passionate about. By allowing you to put the choice of who to donate in your friends’ hands, this problem simply goes away and there’s no excuse not to give. You don’t have to involve others though, as you can participate by yourself or interact with the app’s community.

Currently, the landing page allows you to request an invite, even though the app itself is available for download on Google Play. If you open the app, you’re shown the invite screen yet again and there’s no word on when One Today will start opening itself up to users and donations.

Some other interesting aspects of the app are that it’s populated only with nonprofits that Google for Nonprofits is currently working with, so you know that they’re pre-screened. Other sites, such as Causes, are filled up with organizations that have little or no information about itself or what is done with the money that they’re raising. That’s clearly not the case with this app, according to the programs that will be pre-populated:

Organizations can also register to be included.

From the looks of the app screenshots, One Today seems extremely polished and well thought out. This is an app that Google hopes you use daily:

The reason for putting this together is addressed in the app’s FAQ:

Google has a long-standing commitment to supporting nonprofits and to do doing good. One Today makes fundraising easy for nonprofits, it also makes giving simple and fun for users.

But yes, Google does collect a 1.9 percent credit card fee, but that’s not much considering that it takes care of the processing and donation routing for you. These donations are also tax deductible, of course.

The idea of accepting one dollar at a time is easy enough for anyone to chew on, and get into the rhythm of daily giving, which could be a more rewarding experience than giving a lump sum to just one charity every year, for example. As you donate more, the app will start recommending other organizations that might interest you, which is a Google Play app-like purchasing experience. When you tap “give,” it’s actually a pledge, and you’ll be notified to settle your balance once you’ve pledged to a few organizations.

With this approach, micro-donations could actually catch on and raise more money for these nonprofits than ever. In many situations, it’s not the actual amount that you donate, it’s the awareness that your social actions bring. One Today is an amplification tool, and it will be interesting to see how the project evolves once it opens to the masses.


5 Social Fundraising Alternatives to Facebook Causes


Geoff Livingston co-founded Zoetica to focus on cause-related work, and released an award-winning book on new media Now is Gone in 2007.

When it comes to social fundraising tools, Facebook Causes often comes to mind first. In reality, it is just one of many tools available to non-profits that want to integrate donation capabilities into their online effort.

That’s good news, because to date, a relatively small amount of donations has been raised on Causes: $22 million. What’s more, only a small fraction of non-profits manage to raise more than $1,000 on Causes, according to an M+R study.

Almost every non-profit fundraising platform enables more traditional e-mail database capture than Causes, a primary issue with the platform. While Facebook Causes is moving to address e-mail sharing with its non-profit partners on an opt-in basis, the real differentiators tend to come down to social grassroots functionality and donation capabilities, including fees.

Here are five alternatives to consider when it comes to social fundraising.


1. Razoo


With more than $20 million raised on its platform, Razoo offers a robust platform for non-profits seeking an alternative to Causes. Fundraising fees are paid for by Razoo, so 100% of donations are passed through.

From a usability standpoint, sign-up is relatively easy. Non-profits can have their own page, and can also build project specific pages for events or fundraising drives. Razoo’s DonateAnywhere widget allows non-profits to port their fundraising initiative to other social sites, and also enables donors to share on their Facebook and Twitter networks. The one hiccup is that DonateAnywhere currently does not allow for recurring donations.


2. Twitpay


Facebook Causes works well with Facebook, but you may want a different platform for Twitter. Enter Twitpay, and its RT2Give platform, designed specifically for everyone’s favorite 140 character-based social network.

Twitpay does charge a percentage of the donations actually paid, including a small per transaction fee. However, it focuses on the viral nature of Twitter, creating donations based on re-tweets — and of course, re-tweets equate to more visibility. Currently, donation amounts are fixed at certain numbers set by the non-profit ($10 or $25 for example).


3. Crowdrise


The Crowdrise platform works for both charities and fundraisers. Ideally, it’s a grassroots fundraising service that creates fun ways for your network to go and promote, including contests, giveaways and promotions. In exchange for its grassroots capability, Crowdrise does take a significant portion of donations — anywhere between 7.5% to 10% depending on the size of the donation.

Signing up for Crowdrise is simple, and the user interface is very clean. Additionally, the site enables one-click Facebook and Twitter sharing, as well secondary integration to other social networks through sharethis.

“We are currently enamored [with] Crowdrise for its fun approach to peer-to-peer engagement, easy to use fundraising and volunteering tools, and kitschy call to action messaging on social media outposts,” said Kate Olsen, of Network for Good. “How can you resist the tag line ‘If you don’t give back, no one will like you?’”


4. ChipIn


A simple widget, ChipIn allows a non-profit to have complete control of funding via PayPal (which does take a percentage for credit card fees). Cause representatives simply enter their information — either about the non-profit, the event, or the initiative — and build the widget.

From a technical standpoint, non-profits embed the ChipIn widget on a variety of websites or create their own ChipIn page. The widget does integrate a wide variety of social network portability beyond the big two (Facebook and Twitter), including Digg and Delicious.


5. ammado



Based in Ireland, ammado’s big differentiator is its international reach, with more than 30 currencies accepted. Non-profits have to become an ammado member to receive donations, and according to its terms of service, generally ammado charges a 5% fee from donations received.

Non-profits can accept donations directly through ammado, via the ammado Giving Widget, or via the Giving Circle Facebook application. Individuals can create their own grassroots pages, provide recurring donations, and share their donation or fundraising project via the most popular social networks.


More Social Good Resources from Mashable:


- How Non-Profits Can Maximize a Foursquare Account
- 5 Cool Non-Profit Uses of Location-Based Tech
- Are Social Media Giving Contests Good for Non-Profits?
- How Open Data Applications are Improving Government
- HOW TO: Turn Slacktivists into Activists with Social Media

Image courtesy of iStockphoto, AndrewJohnson

More About: charity, crowdrise, facebook, fundraising, non-profit, nonprofit, social good, social media

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