Jump to: Page Content, Site Navigation, Open.com Navigation
FedEx Global Brand Management Director Monica Skipper shares a cost-effective way to build a bigger brand for your small business.
Learn moreThink that mobile social apps are a waste of time and energy? What if you could use them to make the world a better place? Inhabitat took a look at mobile-based applications and systems designed to promote positive social good. Here are five rising social impact apps to watch.
The Extraordinaries
Unable to fit volunteering into your jam-packed schedule, but you still want to contribute towards a cause? The Extraordinaries launched an app that breaks large scale volunteering efforts down into micro-tasks that you can complete, right on your smart phone, and now online. The app has a huge breadth of micro-volunteering opportunities. Anything from Big Cat Rescue – helping to catalogue animal rights abuses to The Sierra Club – helping to map trails in California. As one user expressed, “I love this app! When I feel like fiddling with my iPod I can make my playtime helpful to someone. No more wasted time! It's a stellar example of using technology for social good.”
Causeworld
Karma points donations are starting to show up in Twitter feeds and Facebook streams everywhere, and is a favorite of marketing guru Joe Jaffe. The free app works like any location-based social game, but instead of earning virtual badges or winning prizes, members earn karma points donations and get to choose which charity receives their donation, and then broadcast their good works to their peers. Sponsored by brands like Kraft and Citi, Causeworld is looking to connect shopping and buying with location-based, real-time cause marketing, turning us all into mini-philanthropists.
Frontline SMS
Frontline SMS is a service created to allow citizen activists to monitor and track post election violence in Kenya (Frontline SMS and the web portal Ushahidi finds additional use in disaster recovery). The service has been used by non-governmental organizations in both Haiti and Chile to track down urgent messages in order to coordinate disaster relief. Volunteers as disparate as a Swiss graduate student in Boston, an engineer for Haiti’s biggest wireless company, and a social media innovator at the State Department used the service to find survivors, develop a communications protocol, and rapidly rebuild cellular infrastructure. Recent case examples such as the Haiti coordination are best practices for how government, talented volunteers, and citizens can rapidly self-organize to support people in need.
mGive
mGive is responsible for routing more than 90 percent of all funds raised to date through the mobile donations, and works with more than two hundred nonprofit clients, including the Red Cross, the Salvation Army, and the United Way. By not limiting the payment system to a specific kind of phone or service, mGive has wider market penetration than a comparable iPhone or Android based app. During the recent fundraising drive to support Haiti, you may have responded to the Red Cross call to text funds using the “90999” SMS short code. The Red Cross raised over $24 MM via mGive to help the Haiti recovery effort.
Project Noah
Project Noah started as a student project at NYU’s ITP school, the free mobile app allows citizens to become scientists. The goal is huge in its mission – to become the common mobile platform for documenting the world’s organisms. Users snap photos of local birds, plants, trees, and other species, and can either identify the organism or leave the classification up to the crowd. Project Noah conducts specific research projects in the form of field missions. Who wouldn’t want to join a mission called “Project Squirrel” – inviting you to contribute squirrel observations, or “The Lost Ladybug Project” – to understand ladybug species distribution. Join a mission today!
Nice! We ran an article on 10 mobile apps for social good 4 weeks ago -- http://www.socialbrite.org/2010/04/01/10-mobile-apps-for-social-good/ -- and four of the five you cited were on our list, too. Didn't know about Project Noah, thanks for that!
I'm definitely more likely to give using mobile tech than through traditional methods. Thanks!
This is a fantastic round up. I'll definitely be grabbing a couple of these tonight to make sure my spare time is put to good use.
These apps make it so easy to give back. Hopefully more apps can be like this.
Wow, these are really amazing applications! How wonderful to know that you can help out during your day on your smartphone. I love that people are using technology for such great causes!
Thanks all for your comments - and let me know if you see more apps like this on the horizon.
Wow, I love all of these apps. The first thing I thought when learning about Foursquare is how all we ever do is find different venues for promoting consumerism. I am so pleased to see that others have used technology to promote altruism and social progress.
It's supremely inspiring to see crowd-sourcing applications like these motivating people to make the world a better place!
I found myself texting 90999 on several occasions in the weeks following the earthquake in Haiti. mGive is brilliant. So are the other companies listed in this awesome round-up. This just goes to prove that good apps CAN save the world.
Think you're paying too much in business taxes? Learn more about some possible deductions with our latest crash course.
Javascript is currently disabled. Please enable javascript for the optimal OPEN Forum experience.
Musical Money Magnet 2 years 0 months and 4 days ago
The Extraordinaries project is especially admirable and has great potential to improve the world. Their for-profit business model is also something close to my own heart. (What better organization to reinvest profits into, than the very one proactively developing the worthwhile, effective ideas and coordinating/driving the global improvement?) Well done, Extraordinaries. Thank you for devising and implementing an absolutely brilliant idea and harnessing an all-too-easily wasted, irreplaceable global resource: time.