hydroazuanacaine
bluelighter
- Joined
- May 17, 2007
- Messages
- 8,493
i was in a committee meeting today and an issue came up. we are raising money for a nonprofit/ngo through an online peer-to-peer fundraiser. the campaign involves getting friends of the organization -- like board, staff, and other committee members -- to get their friends to donate. we give them success stories about the organization's work in the form of text, photos, and videos that they can send to their friends with a link that allows them to go to our online site and donate. shows up in a thermometer.
we all plan to donate during this campaign. we are going to anonymously pledge money using an online survey. we're not relying on that; after the anon pledge, we will do a real pledge. but only a nonprofit employee who also serves on the committee will ever know exactly who donated what. so then we will use that money to create a 1 for 1 match that we can utilize as a marketing tool at some point in the campaign. this money will be donated no matter what amount of money we receive. it is certain that we will raise much, much more than the committee is able to put up. this is just a tool to incentivize for a period of time during the campaign. maybe at the end. but you can use it at any point by saying, "until [campaign name] reaches $10,000 or the end of tomorrow, your contribution will be matched dollar for dollar and go twice as far!"
so the issue raised is that the donor's dollar is not actually causing another dollar to be donated. it is being paired with another dollar given in order to advertise the opportunity. ethical?
we all plan to donate during this campaign. we are going to anonymously pledge money using an online survey. we're not relying on that; after the anon pledge, we will do a real pledge. but only a nonprofit employee who also serves on the committee will ever know exactly who donated what. so then we will use that money to create a 1 for 1 match that we can utilize as a marketing tool at some point in the campaign. this money will be donated no matter what amount of money we receive. it is certain that we will raise much, much more than the committee is able to put up. this is just a tool to incentivize for a period of time during the campaign. maybe at the end. but you can use it at any point by saying, "until [campaign name] reaches $10,000 or the end of tomorrow, your contribution will be matched dollar for dollar and go twice as far!"
so the issue raised is that the donor's dollar is not actually causing another dollar to be donated. it is being paired with another dollar given in order to advertise the opportunity. ethical?
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