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Editor: "You want to do an issue on open sores? Ick!" Holly: "No, open source." Editor: "Oh. Okay, then." If you like what you read, support us by becoming a member. INTRODUCTION Amazingly, nearly 2,000 of you are getting this newsletter from NTEN for the first time. Welcome! Each month, we choose a theme and invite a variety of voices from the NTEN community to share their thoughts. This month, we're exploring open source. Nonprofits are increasingly using open source software in their work, whether it's the FireFox browser or a CiviCRM database. It's apparent that open source is more than just software, though. Open source is giving us new models for how we approach our work in the sector. As Michelle Murrain points out, it's giving us new ways to think about the value of software. While open source is part of our big picture for the sector, it's also making an immediate practical impact. The team from Idealware explore open source donor management options, and Jonathan Hedstrom -- yes, he's Karl's brother! -- talks about buliding community in Drupal. We hope you enjoy this issue, and look forward to chatting with you again next month when we present the Best of the 2009 Nonprofit Technology Conference. Best, Holly
That's right, I said it. What I really mean is that open source, as we knew it, is dead. Over the last decade, what we've been talking about when we say "open source" is "open code" -- a set of zeroes and ones that we can configure to our heart's desire. But, have you ever implemented an open source solution? We have here at NTEN. We use all kinds of open source tools, including our content management system, Drupal. Sure, it's highly customizable -- by a highly trained staffer, or a highly paid consultant. The code was free, but we paid tens of thousands of dollars to get our implementation up and running. To me, open source code isn't necessarily any better than proprietary code. The costs, in time and money, are just placed elsewhere. The old arguments for open source software adoption are dead to me. But please: promise to read the rest of this before you start sending me hate mail. For years and years -- basically, as long as software has been purchased by nonprofit organizations -- the basic model has been: a nonprofit organization pays a fee (sometimes rather large) to a software maker for a copy of software to install on your desktop or server to do a particular task, whether it be tracking donations and constituents, tracking clients, running campaigns, or the like. What this meant was that each individual organization spent thousands -- or tens, or hundreds of thousands -- of dollars a year to implement software for their organization. The economics of that form of IT investment are hard to manage in a climate where the survival of nonprofits is increasingly endangered, and many are closing or merging. But other models exist -- namely implementing, investing, and collaborating in open source software.
Any community, online or otherwise, is about communication between individuals. As such, when it comes time to create or grow an online community, tools that allow for and encourage communication and interaction are vital. There are two major hurdles that must be overcome for an online community to succeed: the selection of appropriate community (or "social-networking") features that make sense for the community in question, and, secondly, actually implementing those features in your online application. The first is often overlooked in favor of the more exciting second step. When this happens, the community rarely benefits from the resulting application. Every community has unique needs that determine how they should select features. Once a community has determined its needs, however, utilizing open source software presents a more rapid, sustainable path to implementation.
Donors are the lifeblood of nonprofit organizations. You need them to survive. But how do you manage all the information about their giving along with all the personal details that are key to maintaining successful relationships, all for a price that won’t break your bank? A donor management system is sometimes called a fundraising system or a donor database. At its most basic level, it’s a system that manages information about donors and gifts so you can understand how much you’ve raised, keep track of all the useful information you know about your donors, manage mailings, emails and campaigns, and print reports on all this information. There are a huge number of systems available, ranging from the basic to those that offer all sorts of additional features and functionality. Costs vary as well -- and there are even some Free and Open Source options. In our free report, "A Consumers Guide to Low Cost Donor Management Systems", we take a look specifically at 33 lower cost systems, but here, let's take a quick look at four of the FOSS options.
A monthly roundup of our favorite nonprofit tech resources. Read more posts on our blog.
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IT STAFFING REPORTDid you know that among self-identified technology leaders, 57 percent say their organizations have a formal plan for technology, compared to just 32 percent of the other respondents in our 2008 Nonprofit IT Staffing Survey? No, you probably didn't, since we just published the report. But you can be among the first to read it. It's free! NTC SESSION MATERIALSWe've badgered our 2009 NTC session designers into sending us their slides and other session materials. Short of hiring Hugh Jackman and his mutton chops to move from badgering to wolverining, we've gathered as many as we can -- and they're now available online. Yes, that includes videos of the Clay Shirky and Eben Moglen pleneries. Just remember: (Open Source newsletter issue aside) NTEN is not a socialist organization. PURCHASE OUR BOOKHave you heard? We wrote a book, Managing Technology to Meet Your Mission: A Strategic Guide for Nonprofit Leaders. We're pretty sure you'd like it. Heck, we even made an entire wiki to support it, with added goodies from our chapter authors. Notice how it doesn't really look like a wiki? Yeah, that's just how we roll. UPCOMING WEBINARS
NTEN members save up to 50% on our topical online classes. Upcoming webinars include:
MEMBER DISCOUNTSYour NTEN Membership lets you save on a host of products and services: Track Records Software FundRaiser Software |
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NTEN CONNECT is the monthly e-newsletter of the Nonprofit Technology Network (NTEN). |
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