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Barry Frankfurt

ByBarry Frankfurt, Barry Frankfurt

Opinion

Why every little tweet helps

November 28, 2011 11:05
2 min read

While writing this, I was asked for money by Stephen Fry. Not for himself but for one of his pet charities. I get that a lot from Stephen, or should I say "@stephenfry", the Twitter feed of one of world's most prolific users of social media. No sooner had he written 140 characters than his nearly 3.5million "followers" received the charity's web address and priceless celebrity endorsement. Not-for-profits cannot buy that level of exposure. Thanks to the likes of Twitter and Facebook, they don't need to.

A recent survey commissioned by social media agency Umpf showed that three-quarters of Britain's adults have an active Facebook profile. More than half of over-65s use Facebook regularly. A third of us are active on Twitter. A society that is maligned for being "selfish" is, in some respects, sharing more than ever. Often this is in the form of pictures of our children in the snow (riveting) or that OJ Simpson and Amanda Knox share birthdays and acquittal dates (Or so Twitter tells me). But, in between the trivialities and amateur photography, is the ability to do good.

When a mother-of-three from Edgware died from a sudden brain haemorrhage last November, aged 27, the community wanted to do something. Friends set up a Facebook group with a link to the JustGiving page for the charity, GIFT. Within a week, hundreds of people had donated close to £50,000. In context, GIFT's total income in 2009 was less than £80,000. Social networks make a difference. For charities, this creates as many challenges as it does opportunities.

The likes of UJIA, Jewish Care and Norwood have long been considered the major players in the Jewish charity sector. They have the largest budgets and the biggest databases. Once upon a time they had the ability to reach further than most. Not any more. Facebook and Twitter have opened the field. Now donors have unparalleled choice and, more significantly, unparalleled access to choice.