Tag Archives: iPhone

Social Media & Planned Giving

Portrait of a senior woman holding a mobile phone and smiling Model Release: Yes Property Release: NA

NPR reports that penetration of social media among those 50 and over nearly doubled in just the past year. It’s still only at 42%, but it’s rising very steeply. That has implications for Planned Giving.

To be sure, you need to know your constituency. If it does not reflect the national trend, you don’t want to allocate time to an initiative that can be very time consuming. Your Facebook page and Twitter stream need constant attention–if you’re going to do them right–and proper social media practice goes well beyond those best-known sites. I leave the details of inaugurating a nonprofit social media presence to more august thinkers.

If social media has deeply penetrated your 50-and-over constituents, your Planned Giving program can ride that wave. There’s potential for sharing testimonials that will engage others; hosting webinars on financial and estate planning; reconnecting classmates at all education levels; virtual donor recognition; coordinating direct mail with web content; and lots of other creativity. Much of your pre-existing online presence may be appropriate for your PG constituency, and you can make them aware of what you offer in ways you might not have in the past.

I’m really interested in ideas you have, or things you’re already doing, with social media for your Planned Giving prospects.

iPhone & Charity Registration

A customer looks at an iPhone 4 at the Apple Store 5th Avenue in New York, in this June 24, 2010 file photo. Apple Inc came clean on July 2, 2010 about an embarrassing software glitch that overstates network signal strength in its hot-selling iPhone, as complaints mounted about the phone's wraparound antenna. Apple admitted its signal strength miscalculation dates back to its original 2007 iPhone. It promised to fix the glitch in a few weeks, but did not directly address concerns that its antenna design causes reception problems for iPhone 4, its newest phone.  REUTERS/Eric Thayer/Files (UNITED STATES - Tags: BUSINESS SCI TECH)

A new iPhone and iPod Touch app will enable mobile donations. Each week, Pocket Philanthropist will feature a different charity to which donations will be funneled.

The thing is, being featured on the app is a charitable solicitation, which triggers state registration requirements wherever the solicitation is made. With the proliferation of iPhones, that’s potentially every state. This becomes really interesting.

iPhones are in every state, but where is this app soliciting?

If I download the app from my home in New York, each (rotating) featured charity would have to register here before it is featured. If I carry my phone on the MetroNorth train into Connecticut, is the charity now soliciting there? I’m not sure. If I carry a solicitation letter into Connecticut that I received in New York, that’s not a Connecticut solicitation. The letter was specifically addressed to me in New York. The iPhone app is made to be portable, so the charity knows (or reasonably should know) that its solicitation is going to be carried around from state to state.

It doesn’t matter whether I make a donation. Mostly what drives the registration requirements is where the solicitation goes out to, not where donations come in from.

The answer would start with a determination whether the state has jurisdiction over the charity, based on the charity’s activities within the state. It’s a legal question, based on analysis of the charity’s full relationship with each state (what the law calls “contacts.”)

Knowing that lots of states haven’t updated their statutes to accommodate even email and website solicitations, I don’t expect iPhone solicitations to garner enforcement attention. (Note that even though statutes are not up-to-date with email and web, many states do have policies that encompass these solicitation methods. In many states, including New York, Florida, Arizona, Illinois and Virginia, the moment your “Donate Now” button goes live on your website, for instance, you are soliciting and must register with state authorities.)

This iPhone app creates interesting academic questions. Any thoughts on my thoughts? How would you look at the problem?