Thursday, April 28, 2011

DoGood Ideas of the Week

This week the DoGood Ideas are:


Thing: Office Supplies-  Do you have boxes, shelves and drawers full of office supplies?  There could be someone out there that's looking for exactly what you have too much of.  List it on FundGiving and raise some money for your favorite GoodCause.




Time: Mow Lawn- Tis the season, what a great way to raise money for your favorite GoodCause!!! 
Talent: Cut Hair- Are you a hair stylist?  Well then this is your Do Good Idea for sure!!!  Donate a hair cut, color or even a style.  Everybody gets their hair cut!!













The list of DoGood Ideas is endless, what's your DoGood Idea?  Don't forget... 

Buy Stuff. Sell Stuff. Do Good.

Go Forth and Do Good,

Your FundGiving Friends

Tuesday, April 26, 2011

Feature GoodCause: One Child At A Time

One Child At A Time is a non-profit aid organization dedicated to meeting the needs of children all over the world. Medical supplies, clothing, health needs, school supplies and various other items are collected by volunteers and shipped or hand carried by escorts, volunteers or adoptive parents to be donated to hospitals or child care facilities.

Monday, April 25, 2011

FundGiving News: FundGiving makes the Easter Sunday Paper

We interrupt or regularly scheduled program of our Monday Featured GoodCause with this very important announcement......  We made the Sunday paper!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!  GoodCause feature and regular blog posts will continue tomorrow.  Help us celebrate and get that MarketPlace Rockin' we need donations DoGooders!!

Nashville company aims to put the fun in fundraising

An emergency clown nose is the perfect photo shoot accessory. At least it is if you are Amy Wolanski, one of two chief do-gooders at the new Nashville company FundGiving.

Before posing for the camera, the 33-year-old entrepreneur pops on the spongy adornment, which is a few shades more intense than her apple-colored shoes.

Just so people don’t think she’s crazy, she makes it clear it’s part of her overall message: “Giving is fun.”

Reinforcing that message can be difficult, particularly in a tough economy. As an alternative to opening their wallets, givers often offer volunteer services or to donate an item. But more essential to charities is cash.

FundGiving attempts to bridge that gap by matching a do-gooder’s deeds with a nonprofit’s needs. On the company’s website, which launched April 1, people can sell their items, time and talents and donate the money raised to the charity of their choice.

It is a solution for many organizations struggling to find ways to raise money, and it offers a way for people who can’t afford cash donations to still benefit their causes.

“It’s kind of like Craigslist for charities,” said Matt Clark, programs assistant at nonprofit Blood: Water Mission, which has partnered with FundGiving.

“It’s a great way to reach people of a whole wide range of backgrounds, and also it can give our supporters an alternative way to give to us — a different way than just writing a check.”

Community service

The business idea was born out of a beehive.

While raising funds for Flying Kites Global, Wolanski received a call from a friend who wanted to help but hated asking for cash. Her solution? Sell her services: washing windows, mowing yards, cleaning houses and more.

“She said, ‘I don’t care what I have to do as long as I don’t have to ask for money.’ ”

A week later, the friend received a $250 donation for removing a beehive, and Wolanski was buzzing with an idea. She approached Ann Taormina, a fellow Belmont University MBA student, with the concept last fall. The women launched the business earlier this month.

Sixteen organizations — or good causes, as the company calls them — use FundGiving’s site. Each cause pays an annual fee of $300, then encourages individuals to sign up to sell goods and services to support it.

Local nonprofit organizations including Brown Dog Foundation, Special Olympics Tennessee and Safe Haven Family Shelter are the main users now, but the idea is to create a platform for companies and individuals to sell services to benefit church and school groups.

“We really see this business model not only as a great way to raise money and awareness for good causes everywhere, it’s a great way to bring community service back to neighborhoods,” Wolanski said. “We envision dads going to cut the neighbor’s yard with their child rather than knocking on the door to sell them wrapping paper.

“We want to challenge people to dig deep and think of things that they are good at but never thought about marketing.”

Now available on the site are everything from quilt creation and photo scanning to spreadsheet-making and sober-driving services. People sell items such as old bikes or furniture.

As on Craigslist, buyers can search the site’s marketplace for specific needs. Fifteen percent of each sale goes to FundGiving as a transaction fee. The other 85 percent goes to the cause.

In the past, Carol Smock, board chairwoman of Brown Dog Foundation, has had supporters offer to hold yard sales. But Smock didn’t have time to coordinate such events.

FundGiving appealed to her because it was the same idea, without the work.

“It’s like a virtual garage sale,” Smock said.

Other online services promote similar concepts. EBay has online auctions for charity, as do sites such as biddingforgood.com. Facebook and Twitter are often used as fundraising avenues.

That approach makes FundGiving a good option for organizations looking to move fundraising to the Internet, Smock said.

“I think time will tell, but I am cautiously, extremely hopeful (of its fundraising power). It looks like an easy way to motivate people to do something different.”

And if you do, expect to receive a red clown nose in the mail, courtesy of the chief do-gooders.

Wednesday, April 20, 2011

DoGood Ideas of the Week

Nothing submitted this week so FundGiving will provide the inspiration.  Keep in mind: We really want these ideas to come from our FundGiving Friends.  Please submit your DoGood Ideas to info@fundgiving.com and we'll feature them and YOU weekly in our Blog.  This week the DoGood Ideas are:

Thing: Frequent Flier Miles- Do you have extra miles or hotel points that might expire if you don't get to use them.  Give them a dollar value and put them in the FundGiving MarketPlace to raise money for your favorite GoodCause.








Time: Babysitting- Are you trying to build up your babysitting business.  Donate a few hours to a GoodCause.  You'll find a new family to help and raise money for a cause in need. 
Talent: Fix Computers-  Do you have the gift of being able to fix the machines that none of us can live without?  Donate your talent to your favorite GoodCause, you'll enjoy the work and they'll get the cash!! 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
The list of DoGood Ideas is endless, what's your DoGood Idea?  Don't forget... 

Buy Stuff. Sell Stuff. Do Good.

Go Forth and Do Good,

Your FundGiving Friends

Tuesday, April 19, 2011

FundGiver of the Week: Parrish Ravelli

Parrish Ravelli a project director at Youth Empowered Solutions (YES!) has taken the FundGiving ball and started running with it.  His creative donation of Spreadsheet Development or Repair/Data Entry/Administrative Work to Flying Kites was quickly purchased by a FundBuyer out west.  As soon as his service sold he did what all good FundGivers do, he got right back in the MarketPlace and posted the same item again, this time one for 5 hrs of work and one for 10 hours of work.  Way to be a DoGooder Parrish!!!  It's as easy as that...
Buy Stuff.  Sell Stuff.  Do Good.

Monday, April 18, 2011

GoodCause: Ride for Reading

Featured GoodCause of the week is........

Ride For Reading's mission is to promote literacy and healthy living through the distribution of books via bicycle to children from low-income neighborhoods. In low-income neighborhoods, the ratio of books per child is 1 age-appropriate book for every 300 children. *Reading is an integral part of education, and without books it is hard to build a strong academic base. Our children need materials to read at home and it is our goal to provide the means.

There are ways to get involved, of course you can donate on FundGiving or if you are in Nashville and would like to help with a delivery, here are the details:

We have scheduled our next delivery for Thursday, April 21, 2011!  We will be delivering books to the children of Glenview Elementary .  Like all of our other deliveries, this one will be filled with excitement, books, screaming children, and bikes!  I cannot imagine you will need any more convincing!
We will meet at Two Rivers Greenway parking lot behind McGavock High School at 11:45am on Thursday, April 21, 2011.  This delivery will require intermediate skills and helmets are required.  The route is about 15 miles round trip and has a few hills.  If you are interested in helping out please fill out the volunteer form below.  GLENVIEW ELEMENTARY VOLUNTEER FORM

Friday, April 15, 2011

FundGiving News: "Feel Good" Story of the Year

FundGiving is a version of a National Talent Challenge, it's a long read but worth it!!! This is what we want to do for GoodCauses across the Globe (we'll settle for Nashville now). 

By JustCool on Dec 22, 2007 in Cool People


Warning!  This is a long story and is going to bring tears to your eyes.  So sit back, take a few minutes and enjoy it…
CHAGRIN FALLS, Ohio – The Rev. Hamilton Coe Throckmorton shivered with anticipation as he gazed at the loot: wads of $50 bills piled high beside boxes of crayons in a Sunday-school classroom.
Cautiously, he locked the door. Then he started counting.
It was a balmy Friday evening in September. From several floors below, faint melodies drifted up, the choir practicing for Sunday service.
Throckmorton was oblivious. For hours, perched awkwardly on child-size wooden stools surrounded by biblical murals and children’s drawings, the pastor and a handful of co-conspirators concentrated on the count.
Forty-thousand dollars. Throckmorton smiled in satisfaction as he stashed the money in a safe.
That Sunday, the 52-year-old minister donned his creamy-white robes, swept to the pulpit and delivered one of the most extraordinary sermons of his life.
First, he read from the Gospel of Matthew.
"And unto one he gave five talents, to another two, and to another one; to every man according to his ability."
Then he explained the parable of the talents, which tells of the rich master who entrusts three servants with a sum of money, "talents," and instructs them to go forth and do good. The master lavishes praise on the two servants who double their money. But he casts into the wilderness the one so afraid to take a risk that he buries his share.
Throckmorton spends up to 20 hours working on his weekly homily, and his clear diction, contemplative message and ringing voice command the church. Gazing down from the pulpit that Sunday, Throckmorton dropped his bombshell.
Like the master, he would entrust each adult with a sum of money – in this case, $50. Church members had seven weeks to find ways to double their money, the proceeds to go toward church missions.
"Live the parable of the talents!" Throckmorton exhorted, as assistants handed out hundreds of red envelops stuffed with crisp $50 bills and stunned church members did quick mental calculations, wondering where all the money had come from. There are about 1,700 in the congregation, though not everyone attends each week.
The cash, Throckmorton explained, was lent by several anonymous donors.
In her regular pew at the back of the church, where she has listened to sermons for 40 years, 73-year-old Barbara Gates gasped. What kind of kooky nonsense is this, she thought.
"Sheer madness," retired accountant Wayne Albers, 85, sniffed to his wife, Marnie, who hushed him as he whispered loudly. "Why can’t the church just collect money the old-fashioned way?"
In a center pew, Ann Nagy’s eyes moistened as she considered her ailing, beloved father, his suffering and the song she had written to comfort him near death. She nudged her husband, Scott. "Give me your $50," she whispered. Nagy knew what she would do.
Throckmorton wrapped up his two morning services by saying that children would get $10. He assured the congregation that anyone who didn’t feel comfortable could simply return the money. No consignment to outer darkness for those who didn’t participate.
Throckmorton is warm and engaging and approachable, as comfortable talking about the Cleveland Indians baseball team as he is discussing Scripture. At the Federated Church, he is known simply as Hamilton.
But as church members spilled into the late-summer sunshine that morning to ponder their skills and their souls, there were many who thought: Hamilton is really pushing us this time.
"There was definitely this tension, this pressure to live up to something," said Hal Maskiell, a 62-year-old retired Navy pilot who spent days trying to figure out how to meet the challenge.
Maskiell’s passion is flying a four-seater Cessna 172 Skyhawk over the Cuyahoga County hills. He decided to use his $50 to rent air time from Portage County airport and charge $30 for half-hour rides. Church members eagerly signed up. Maskiell was thrilled to get hours of flying time, and he raised $700.
His girlfriend, Kathy Marous, 55, was far less confident. What talents do I have, she thought dejectedly. She was tempted to give the money back. And then, Marous found an old family recipe for tomato soup, one she hadn’t made in 19 years. She remembered how much she had enjoyed the chopping and the cooking and the canning and the smells. With Hal’s encouragement, Marous dug out her pots. She bought three pecks of tomatoes. Suddenly, she was chopping and cooking and canning again. At $5 a jar, she made $180.
"I just never imagined people would pay money for the things I made!" Marous exclaimed.
Others felt the same way. Barbara Gates raised $450 crafting pendants from beads and sea glass, pieces she had casually made for her grandchildren over the years. Kathie Biggin created fanciful little red-nosed Rudolph pins and sold them for $2.50. Twelve-year-old Amanda Horner pooled her money with friends, stocked up at JoAnn’s fabric store and made dozens of colorful fleece baby blankets, which were purchased by church members and then donated to a local hospital.
And 87-year-old Bob Burrows rediscovered old carpentry skills and began selling wooden bird-feeders.
But it wasn’t the money; everyone said so. It was something else, something far less tangible but yet so very real. For seven weeks, an almost magical sense of excitement and energy and camaraderie infused the elegant red-brick church on Bell Street, spilling over into homes and hearts as the parable of the talents came alive.
In her sun-filled studio on Strawberry Lane, Shirley Culbertson felt it, a joyful sense of purpose that she had rarely experienced since her husband passed two years ago. Culbertson, 81, is a gifted painter, and watercolors fill her house. But she discovered another talent during this time, knitting whimsical 8-inch stuffed dolls with button noses and floppy hats. She raised $90.
Zooming down country roads clinging to the back of a leather-clad biker, Florence Cross felt it, too. For the challenge, Barry Biggin had parked his 2006 Harley-Davidson Road King outside the church, offering 12-mile rides for $30. Cross was the first to sign up. Never mind that she is in her mid-80s, had never been on a bike, or that her husband of 60 years had to hoist her up.
"Oh, it was such a thrill!" said Cross, her face glowing at the memory. Her friends now call her "Harley Girl."
Martine Scheuermann lived the parable in her Elm Street kitchen, transforming it into an "applesauce factory" for several weeks. The 49-year-old human-resources director would rise at 6 a.m. on Sundays in order to have warm batches ready for sampling at church services.
In his origami-filled bedroom on Bradley Street, Paul Cantlay lived the parable, too. Surrounded by sheets of colored construction paper, the 9-year-old crafted paper dragons and stars and sailboats. He set up an origami stand at the end of his street, charged 50 cents to $5 depending on the piece and raised $68.
Talents began multiplying at such a rate that the church held a bazaar after services on two consecutive Sundays for people to display and sell their wares.
The pretty little village on the Chagrin River Falls had never seen anything quite like it. Everyone seemed to be talking about the talent challenge: over the clatter of coffee cups at Dink’s restaurant, at the Fireside bookshop on the green, sipping drinks at the Gamekeeper’s Taverne. Even members of other churches weighed in: Have you heard what’s happening at Federated?
"Anyone can open their wallet and give cash," Kris Tesar said. "This was just an extraordinary process of exploration and discovery and of challenging ourselves. It became bigger than any one of us or than any individual talent."
Tesar, a 58-year-old retired nurse, discovered her talent in buckets of flip-flops for sale at Old Navy. She stocked up on yarn and beads and made dozens of funky, fluffy decorative footwear that were a huge hit with teens. Tesar raised $550 for the church, is still taking orders and is thinking of starting a business. Now, even her children call her the "flip-flop lady."
People also got to know the "hen lady, Gabrielle Quintin, who took to raising chickens on a whim 23 years ago when she moved into a 180-year-old house with a barn. Her "ladies," as Quintin calls her backyard flock, provide a welcome distraction from her nursing job in a cancer center. Quintin decided to put her brood to work for the church. For $10 church members could "hire-a-hen" and get three dozen fresh eggs complete with a photograph of the "lady" who laid them.
Kathy Wellman quilted. Mary Hobbs knitted shawls and penciled portraits. Cathy Hatfield auctioned a ride in her hot-air balloon. Norma and Trent Bobbitt pooled their money with another church member to hire a harpist from the Cleveland orchestra and host an elegant evening dinner party. Folks paid $50 each to attend, and the Bobbitts made over $1,200.
And physician Peter Yang took over shifts from other doctors in his partnership (he used his $50 for gas to get to the hospital) and raised $3,000.
The deadline to return the money was Sunday, Oct. 28. Nervously, some church council members suggested posting plainclothes security guards at services that day. But Throckmorton would have none of it. He insisted that the spirit of the challenge, which had already inspired so much goodwill, would carry them safely through. And it did.
Organ music filled the church as people silently filed down the aisle, dropped their proceeds into baskets and offered testimonials about what living the parable had meant to them. Throckmorton thanked everyone for their generosity. Then, he started counting.
A week later he delivered the joyful news: They had more than doubled the amount distributed.
The initial take was $38,195 over the loan, but the amount is still growing.
The final sum will be divided equally among three charities: One-third will go to a school library in South Africa where the church is involved in an AIDS mission; one-third will go to microloan organizations that provide seed money for small businesses in developing countries; one-third will help theInterfaith Hospitality Network in Cleveland, specifically programs for homeless women.
Throckmorton is asked all the time if the talent challenge will become an annual event, but he is doubtful. It was a special time and a special idea, he says, and he is not sure it could be re-created or relived.
Yet in a real sense, it lives on. Church members who never knew each other have become friends. And orders for applesauce, flip-flops and Rudolph pins are still rolling in for Christmas.
There are other, more poignant reminders. Like Ann Nagy’s haunting tribute to her father, who died of brain cancer on Oct. 11.
Nagy, 44, has always been a singer with a clear lovely voice. It wasn’t until her father grew ill and moved into a hospice that she started writing songs. Borrowing from that theme, Nagy wrote a farewell song for her Dad. She pooled her $50 talent money with her husband’s share and cut a CD to sell to church members. Ironically, it was finished just an hour before her father passed, on Oct. 11. Nagy stood by his bed and sang it for him anyway.
On Nov. 11, her father’s 72nd birthday, Throckmorton preached a sermon about dying. He invited Nagy to the altar. There, accompanied by a cellist and a pianist she sang Before You Go.
Her voice soared. The congregation wept. The parable of the talents had never seemed so alive.
Story by Helen O’Neill, Associated Press

Wednesday, April 13, 2011

DoGood Ideas of the Week

Nothing submitted this week so FundGiving will provide the inspiration.  Keep in mind: We really want these ideas to come from our FundGiving Friends.  Please submit your DoGood Ideas to info@fundgiving.com and we'll feature them and YOU weekly in our Blog.  This week the DoGood Ideas are:

Thing: A Week to Your Vacation Home or Time Share You Can't Use This Year- This could bring in BIG bucks for your GoodCause.  Set the week, the price and then tell everyone you know.  You don't have to sell to a stranger, find a friend that wants it.








Time: Chauffer-  Offer a ride to the airport, a day of driving someone around.  Offer designated driver services for a Friday night or a big upcoming event.  Do you have a super cool car?  Offer to drive for the night of Prom or even donate services for a Wedding.  Sky's the limit on this one, get creative

Talent: Restore Antiques-  Do you love to work on restoring antiques or refinishing a piece of furniture.  This isn't everyone's cup of tea.  Donate your talent to your favorite GoodCause, you'll enjoy the work and they'll get the cash!! 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
The list of DoGood Ideas is endless, what's your DoGood Idea?  Don't forget... 

Buy Stuff. Sell Stuff. Do Good.

Go Forth and Do Good,

Your FundGiving Friends

Tuesday, April 12, 2011

FundGiver of the Week: Laurella Rochat

If the word FundGiver was in the dictionary, you would find Laurella Rochat's name listed. 

Laurella is raising funds for the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society. As a member of Team in Training she is training to participate in a full marathon in Dublin, Ireland in October. She is going to raise $5000.00 and is participating in honor of her cousin Linda, a Lymphoma survivor, and her 6yr old honored teammate Sarah, a leukemia survivor.

Laurella has been a quick adopter of FundGiving and has come up with some brilliant offers in the FundGiving MarketPlace 

Do you have T-shirts (you know the ones that you don't want to get rid of, the ones you never wear, but they have such memories)  laying around, have Laura make them into a quilt!!!  The money she raises will go straight to the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society.  She's also listed yard work, window cleaning I bet if you have a need  and you're in Knoxville, TN and post it on the FundGiving Message Board she'll jump all over.  Three cheers to someone who's figured out how to..

Buy Stuff.  Sell Stuff.  Do Good.

Monday, April 11, 2011

GoodCause: Blood:Water Mission

Featured GoodCause of the week is........

Blood:Water Mission is a grassroots organization that empowers communities to work together against the HIV/AIDS and water crisis in Africa.

We're a group of passionate people who have been inspired by our friends in Africa, friends who face unbearable challenges from the HIV/AIDS and water crises. We creatively and thoughtfully raise awareness and the necessary funds for the provision of clean blood and clean water in sub-Saharan Africa.

Founded by the multi-platinum, GRAMMY Award-winning band, Jars of Clay, Blood:Water Mission began as a call to personalize the HIV/AIDS crisis in Africa. The members of the band were committed to share the often-untold stories: those of creative, compassionate, hard-working Africans bringing health, hope and healing into their respective communities.
Blood:Water Mission first stepped into funding a late stage AIDS hospice and discovered the vital link between living with HIV/AIDS and the need for clean water. As a result, Blood:Water Mission launched the 1000 Wells Project in 2005 as a nation-wide effort to raise enough money to provide clean water and sanitation to 1000 communities in sub-Saharan Africa based on the equation that $1 provides one African with clean water for an entire year.

Since its launch, Blood:Water Mission has raised millions of dollars through the creative efforts of tens of thousands of individuals seeking to make a difference, providing for the completion of the 1000 Wells Project at the end of 2010. To date, we have partnered with more than 1,000 communities in Africa, providing life-saving water and health care for over 600,000 people in 13 different countries. Along the way the 1000 Wells Project has expanded holistically to include a variety of clean water solutions, sanitation and hygiene training, the capacity building of our local grassroots partners to improve their ability to develop sustainable programs, as well as funding health clinics, community health workers, and support groups, which help in the prevention, treatment, care and support of communities affected by AIDS. Although the 1000 Wells Project is completed, we aren't moving on; instead, we are moving deeper. There are still millions without safe water, and our commitment to them continues. Additionally, moving forward we are incorporating HIV/AIDS programs, building on the foundation of ongoing water programming.

The results of our efforts paint a new picture in these communities. Village leaders have the resources and training to bring clean water, sanitation and health care into their communities. Stomach aches, skin diseases and diarrhea have disappeared. Women and children no longer walk several miles a day to carry filthy water. Those with HIV are living longer, stronger lives.
We know these communities. We are connected to them. And through these relationships, we are being transformed, too. Blood:Water Mission's movement engages Americans in social justice, worldview development and thoughtful action. We invite others to be a small part of a larger, beautiful story.

You can help by joining their FundGiving Team. Don't forget to:

Buy Stuff.  Sell Stuff.  Do Good.

 

Friday, April 8, 2011

Week in Review at FundGiving- It's All about the Numbers



Our first week with the Beta site up and running has been more successful than we ever could have imagined.  We're up to:

14 GoodCauses (our goal for the 4-6 week Beta is 20)

43 FundGivers (we were expecting to have 10, so this is a GREAT turnout!!!)

Flying Kites Adventure Challenges is leading the charge with the most raised this week and Bo Parrish is close behind with his LLS Man of the Year Campaign.  Look for Laurella Rochat to move into one of the top spots with her TNT-Knoxville Campaign (she has got some SUPER cool items in the MarketPlace)

Next week we'd like to see the MarketpPlace expand with at least 10 donations!!  Come on FundGivers, get out there and join us in a DoGood Campaign.  So far you have really impressed us!!  Don't forget...

Buy Stuff. Sell Stuff. Do Good.

Go Forth and Do Good,

Your FundGiving Team

Thursday, April 7, 2011

FundGiving News: Giving Statistics

Giving Statistics

Few people realize how large charities have become, how many vital services they provide, and how much funding flows through them each year. Without charities and non-profits, America would simply not be able to operate. Their operations are so big that during 2009, in the midst of a recession, total giving was still more than $300 billion.

How big is the sector?
  • Total giving to charitable organizations was $303.74 billion in 2009 (about 2% of GDP). This is a decrease of 3.6% from 2008 when giving was $315.08 billion.
  • As in previous years, the majority of that giving came from individuals--$227.4 billion (75%). Giving by individuals dropped 0.4%.
  • Giving by bequest was $23.8 billion (down 23.9%), foundations gave $38.4 billion (down 8.9%), and corporations donated $14.1 billion (up 5.5%).
  • 33% of all donations go to religious organizations --$100.9 billion (down 0.7%). Much of these contributions can be attributed to people giving to their local place of worship. The next largest sector was education with $40 billion (down 3.6%).
  • Here's how the other categories of charities performed: gifts to international charities grew 0.6% ($13.3 billion), donations to human services charities increased 2.3% ($27 billion), giving to animal and environment charities charities increased 2.3% ($6.15 billion), giving to health charities increased 3.8% ($22.5 billion), ), giving to arts, culture and humanities organizations decreased 2.4% ($12.3 billion), and giving to public benefit charities declined 4.6% ($22.8 billion.

All data property of Giving USA 2010, the Annual Report on Philanthropy, published by the AAFRC Trust for Philanthropy.  A more detailed synopsis of the report is accessible on Charity Navigator's blog.

Why is this important to FundGiving?  We don't want to see the annual giving number decrease, we want to see it increase and our hypothesis is if there are other ways to give besides cash donations we can not only avoid a decrease we can create an increase in annual giving.  Help us in our mission..

Buy Stuff.  Sell Stuff.  Do Good.

Go Forth and Do Good,
The FundGiving Team

Wednesday, April 6, 2011

DoGood Ideas of the Week

We really want these ideas to come from our FundGiving Friends.  Please submit your DoGood Ideas to info@fundgiving.com and we'll feature them and YOU weekly in our Blog.  This week the DoGood Ideas are:

Thing: Donate a Book-  Just think FundGiving could become the new Amazon.com and the money ALL goes to charity.  Super Cool!!!











Time: Scoop Poop-  Time to get that back yard cleaned up for spring and summer.  It's a dirty job but someone's got to do it and why not do it to raise money for your favorite GoodCause?  This Boxer seems to have it down. 


Talent: Coach Expertise-  Are you a running, biking, baseball, basketball, football, tennis, golf... you see where we're headed with this.  If you have expertise in a particular sport, donate an hour lesson to your favorite GoodCause and then when it sells you might just add a new customer to your list. 








The list of DoGood Ideas is endless, what's your DoGood Idea?  Don't forget... 

Buy Stuff. Sell Stuff. Do Good.

Go Forth and Do Good,

Your FundGiving Friends

Tuesday, April 5, 2011

FundGiver of the Week: Tamera Alexander

Tamera Alexander is the best-selling author of RekindledRevealed and Remembered, the critically acclaimed Fountain Creek Chronicles historical series with Bethany House Publishers. Her second historical series, Timber Ridge Reflections (From a Distance, Beyond This Moment, and Within My Heart), and her stand alone novel (The Inheritance, Women of Faith Fiction) continue her signature style of deeply drawn characters, thought-provoking plots, and poignant prose which has earned her devoted readers—and multiple industry awards.   Tamera's already started donating to Ride for Reading (seems appropriate!!).  Tamera's not only a phenomenal author she's a darn good DoGooder.  Hats off to Tamera from the FundGiving Family.  Don't forget you too can...
Buy Stuff.  Sell Stuff.  Do Good at www.fundgiving.com


Monday, April 4, 2011

GoodCause: Bo Parrish for LLS Nashville Man of the Year


Meet Bo Parrish:  Help Him Raise $50,000 in order to help Jack and Tanner go to Bo Parrish's FundGiving Page
I grew up in Bowling Green, KY and graduated from Auburn Universty in 2002.  I started my professional career in Montgomery, AL but quickly moved to Birmingham.  After a short period of time with Colonial Bank, I moved to Nashville in 2003 to work for Morgan Keegan.  I took the required liscensing examinations and became a registered investment advisor in September of 2003.  I spent the first 4 years with Morgan Keegan in the downtown office focusing my financial services practice on other professionals.  In the summer of 2007, I moved into the Burton Hills office of Morgan Keegan.  This move was very beneficial as I was closer to home and much more mobile.  I continued to serve professionals but also added the country music industry as a niche focus.  Life was good and I was doing the only thing I knew how to do as a mid-twenties professional-WORKING!!!
In the fall of 2006, I was introduced to the LLS program Team in Training.  A very close childhood friend was suffering with Leukemia at the time so I decided to raise money in his honor.  This experience also led me to meet my wife, Team in Training coach, Mari-etta Mahaffey.  So much good came from that experience and I am happy to report that my childhood friend is cancer-free!
In the summer of 2007, I discovered that another close friend of mine had been diagnosed with leukemia.  Unfortunately, it was the same type of leukemia that my childhood friend from Bowling Green had suffered from.  I was able to connect my two friends along with their respective support groups.  I stood by as a means of support as I watched my friend in Nashville suffer and waste away from the radiation and chemotherapy.  This dear friend of mine lost his battle with cancer and it absolutely rocked my world.  It was at this time that I further committed myself to fighting this disease in any way that might present itself.
I had such a positive experience with my first interaction with Team in Training, that just 2 months ago, I accepted a nomination from the 2010 winner to run as a 2011 Man of the Year candidate.  I have plenty of motivation and endless drive to accomplish an aggressive goal of raising $50,000.  I have a period of 9 weeks to raise the money so that we may have an independent research grant awarded with naming rights in honor of all those that have suffered from this terrible disease.  Please join me in my quest as I battle this monster in the form of raising money.  There are far too many stories of those who have experienced leukemia and lymphoma-far too many for me to just accept.  I am very fortunate not to have felt this pain myself but I feel closer to this cause than is necessary to want to set an aggressive fundraising goal and surpass it.
For the Cure,
Bo Parrish

Friday, April 1, 2011

Happy Birthday to You, Happy Birthday Dear FundGiving!!!

It's official FundGiving has been born, we went live with our Beta testing this morning at 8:39 CST April 1, 2011. 

We kicked it off with a good ole' fashion Birthday Party, yes we baked a cake and we even sang.  One might ask, "Why are there no candles?"  Simple answer, FundGiving is only hours old, candles represent years.  Candles will come next year. 

The day has turned out to be very exciting, in a matter minuites we had our first FundGiver Megan Renfro of Brooklyn, NY who donated her babysitting services.  In less than an hour we had our first GoodCause Dogs on Death Row join the FundGiving Family.  By 10:42 CST a purchase had been made by FundBuyer Katheryn Wiseman.  Looks like Chief DoGooder herself Amy Wolanski will be taking care of Kathryn's sweet puppies next weekend and the kids at Flying Kites Global will reap the benefits.  The money Amy charged Kathryn ($70.00) all handled by the FundGiving website will go straight to Flying Kites.  And that, ladies and gentleman, is how it's done. 

Buy Stuff.  Sell Stuff.  Do Good. 

Go Forth and Do Good,

Your FundGiving DoGooders