Target audience: Nonprofits, social change organizations, NGOs, foundations, educators, individuals.
Guest post by Allyson Kapin
Partner, Rad Campaign
The tools for taking action and effecting social change are getting more robust all the time. Here are five of my current favorites:
Frogloop
1I think Care2’s Frogloop is one of the most trusted sources among nonprofit campaigners for having the latest resources and best practices to engage activists and donors using multiple channels including email, texting and social media. Full disclosure: I’m the Blogger-In-Chief but I don’t think that clouds my judgment. :~)
OpenStreetMap
2OpenStreetMap is a free editable map of the nation and the world created by regular people, Wikipedia-style. It’s a fantastic tool that nonprofits should be using more. It contains a lot more open data than Google Maps.
Threadsy
3If you’re the type of nonprofit campaigner who thrives off of multitasking, Threadsy could be a life saver. In a nutshell, it’s a dashboard that allows you to manage email, Twitter, Facebook, instant messaging – all in one place! It was in beta but now it has just been released to the public.
Idealware
4Idealware provides some of the best research and data to help nonprofits make smart software decisions – anything from choosing open source content management systems and the differences between them to low-cost data visualization tools.
The Petition Site
5Care2’s The Petition Site enables anyone — not just nonprofits — to start a petition around social action issues, from stopping the Sable Island seal slaughter to protecting against new drilling.
In this series
• Change-makers share 10 of their favorite tools
• An educator’s 5 top tools for social change
• 12 open source tools you should be using
• 6 productivity tools for social change
• A developer’s 5 favorite social tools
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported.
Laura Quinn says
Thanks for the kind words, Allyson — we really appreciate them!