Category Archives: Media

Philanthropy Radio on NPR Member Station

National Public Radio member station WXEL has a show called Fundraising Success. Since they launched a couple of months ago, they have featured Peter Panepento of the Chronicle of Philanthropy’s Give & Take blog talking about various philanthropy and nonprofit blogs. This week, Peter brought me on the show to talk about Tactical Philanthropy. You can find podcasts of archived episodes on WXEL’s podcast website. You can hear my interview by clicking the play button next to the July 15, 2007 episode. My segment begins at the 47:16 mark and runs about 10 minutes.

Peter profiled this blog back in May and in various other episodes has talked about:

Most bloggers use a combination of Google Alerts, Technorati and some sort of blog stat program (I use MyBlogLog) to keep on top of when their blog is mentioned online. I don’t know of any program that can track audio mentions. Since no one has blogged about Fundraising Success that I know of, I assume the bloggers being talked about are unaware of the show.

Does anyone know of any other audio or video programming that has mentioned philanthropy blogs? If so, let me know. I guess it still takes good old fashion word of mouth to stay on top of these mediums. Or maybe Beth Kanter will save the day and point us all to a nifty new gadget that makes things easier (Beth Kanter: The Batman of nonprofit technology! “Where does she get all those wonderful toys?").

Private Foundation Public Relations

BusinessWeek has an article out about the importance of public relations as a tool for private foundations:

In the veiled world of private philanthropy, the practice of public relations is eschewed by many foundation leaders. Some believe that proactive media outreach is tantamount to inviting the Internal Revenue Service in for an audit, while others feel that publicity in some way diminishes the altruistic nature of giving. Yet over the last few years, a shift has begun to take place and foundations are seeing how external communications can complement and even strengthen their giving.

PR can be an invaluable tool for foundations of all sizes. It shines the spotlight on grantee successes; inspires action among constituencies; creates an environment for collaboration among multiple stakeholders; advances key issues; and perhaps most importantly, it highlights the foundation’s role as a good community citizen that is leading by example.

The article mentions the Philanthropy Awareness Initiative, which was behind the Demonstrating Impact session that generated so much interest at the Council on Foundations conference.

Tactical Philanthropy reader Bruce Trachtenberg left a comment on the BusinessWeek website arguing that foundations have a long history of external communications, but they need to change the focus of their message:

I don’t think there has been any lack of willingness among foundations to have active, sometimes aggressive communication programs… Instead, I think what the PAI report and other research has shown is that foundation communication activities have overemphasized money and process, and not enough effort has been spent talking about outcomes, or even before that, what our grantmaking is meant to achieve.

Bruce’s Op-Ed in the Chronicle of Philanthropy last summer had a similar thrust.

We call this time in history “The Information Age”. Philanthropy as an industry has not embraced “information technology”, but we are seeing some early ventures in this area like NetSquared and Packard’s Nitrogen project. I can sense the interest is rising. A lot of the foundation employees who read this blog work in the communications department. They understand information and they understand the power of information tools to enhance the impact of philanthropy.

The Council on Foundations is going to replicate the Morphing Media session from their annual conference at their Community Foundation conference this fall. They’ve invited me to be one of the speakers. Personally, I think that understanding how humans process information and how to tell your story in a way that sticks is the big competitive advantage right now. Think about the story that Apple tells, or Starbucks or Nike. I think that philanthropy as a whole, and foundations in particular, need to begin to tell the public a story. A story that excites and inspires, that invites the listener into an exhilarating world where our most honorable actions are celebrated and where we have the ability to co-create the world we want (hat tip to Peter Karoff).

I’m not a communications expert. If you want to read someone who really understands how to tell stories that change the world, check out Seth Godin’s blog. It’s on my daily read.

Tactical Philanthropy Podcast: Jeff Martin Interview

My guest today is Jeff Martin. Jeff is Director of Media Relations for
the Council on Foundations. Jeff discusses the events that led up to
bloggers being invited to attend the recent conference, plans to
provide streaming video of conference sessions next year and the need
for transparency to be embraced by foundations.

Expand this post using the link below to read the transcript.

Read More »

Keeping the Discussion Going II

In response to my post about using social media tools to keep the discussion started at the COF conference going, Lucy Bernholz has a question for the attendees:

Another way of asking the question Sean asks is this. You spent several days in Seattle. What question do you have that is still unanswered, that is related to what is in your inbox, and that you’d like to keep discussing? What will happen to that question if you continue with business as usual? What ways might you actually pursue an answer or a discussion about the question if you could stay in touch with other participants, speakers, or people you passed in the halls of the Seattle Convention Center?

Email me or email Lucy your thoughts.

Demonstrating Impact: Philanthropy’s Urgent Call to Action

Before I came to Seattle, I told my readers that they could assign me to cover the sessions they found most interesting. Holden Karnofsky, whose project GiveWell he refers to as The World’s First Transparent Grankmaker, dropped me the following note:

To me [Demonstrating Impact: How Foundations Can Show Their Value] is the one that you most have to go to. You have argued consistently (and strongly) for more foundation transparency. You should ask the foundations the questions you pose in your posts: why not share everything they have on a website? Why not publish things that are currently “internal,” like evaluations of specific charities (as opposed to “overall programs”)? Why not blog?

Mark Sedway, director of the brand new Philanthropy Awareness Initiative, had shot me an email last week encouraging me to attend. Reading the description of the session it looked like a class on how foundations can engage in better PR.

I was wrong.

Demonstrating Impact was an incredible session. The room was packed, every corner of the room full of people pressed against the walls and people outside trying to poke their heads in through the doorways. I have over five pages of single-space, type written notes. What I want to share with you isn’t just a blog post. I’m going to have to figure out how to put this all down on paper in a more comprehensive way, but I’ll share some highlights now.

The panelists were:

  • James Canales, CEO, The James Irvine Foundation
  • James Knickman, CEO, New York State Health Foundation
  • Joel Fleishman, author of The Foundation: A Great American Secret

The discussion was nominally about how foundations can do a better job letting influential Americans and the general public know about the good work they do. But at the root of this is a discussion about identifying and measuring the impact of foundation grantmaking. And at the root of that is a discussion about transparency and the sharing of information about what works AND what doesn’t work.

Yes, foundations do great things and most people don’t understand the magnitude of these good works (the very existence of emergency 911 service is attributable to the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, Fleishman pointed out). But what I found so incredible about the session was the advocating for communication to be designed right into the program strategy from day one. Fleishman talked about The Wallace Foundation and how they do grantmaking in teams with Program, Research and Communications all taking part in strategy design from the beginning.

To me the most important part of Fleishman’s message, the most important message of the session and maybe the conference, is that transparency is NOT about public accountability, it is about improving the sector of philanthropy. It is about improving the way that all of us do our jobs. It is about transforming ourselves from a series of silos to an integrated, robust intellectual capital platform upon which all future grantmakers, big and small, can draw.

Sharing the good works of philanthropy is not enough. A good bit of debate centered on how and why foundations should share their failures as well. To me the issue of why failures should be shared, and why doing so is not a risk for the organization if handled correctly, was nailed by James Knickman:

“We need to frame our release of “failures” as an attempt to learn. No one tells scientists they are a failure when one of their experiments don’t work!”

That’s it right there. What philanthropy is engaged in is an experiment. An experiment in how we can all make the world a better place. We don’t know what the right answer is. In fact, the “answer” is probably evolving as quickly as we can design experiments. But by being transparent, by sharing successful ideas and failed ideas. By judging ourselves not on the outcomes of each grant, but on the body of knowledge that we contribute to the field, we will truly transform philanthropy.

Knickman gave as an example a project that The James Irvine Foundation did on end of life care (if readers know more about this project, email me the relevant links) (see correction). He called it “the most successful failure I’ve ever seen”, because it really changed the way people approached the issue since the project really seemed like it should have worked.

Humans don’t like to talk about their own “failures”. But halfway through the session, someone from the audience who identified herself as a professor of marketing stood up to say that people who admit their mistakes publicly are viewed with more trust afterwards. We need to reframe transparency away from some sort of thing that philanthropy is being forced to consider by outside forces and instead celebrate transparency as the mark of an organization that is truly committed to improving the field.

I’m writing furiously in a Starbucks with a half eaten sandwich next to me. I have another session I have to attend soon. The great thing about blogging is that there is no page limit and there is no final draft (the same could be said of philanthropy). I wanted to get my first impression of the Demonstrating Impact session down while it was still fresh. I’ve completely ignored important themes of the debate that I can’t cover right now. But I’ll be returning to this topic frequently.

Thanks for reading.

Web 2.0 Media & Philanthropy

I’m a bad blogger. I don’t buy into all this Web 2.0 bubble talk that bloggers are going to replace the “mainstream media”. For me, the important element about blogs is the technology that allows for the information stream to run back and forth and around and around instead of simply being piped in one direction. This kind of technology is best suited to debating opinions, not revealing facts. For the most part bloggers debate the meaning of the facts rather than reporting them.

Last October, a survey was released that focused on how the wealthy practiced philanthropy. At 7:11am on the morning the news was reported, I posted my thoughts regarding the implications of the survey results. I think that this symbiotic relationship between bloggers and the mainstream media is the future.

To me, the importance of blogs to philanthropy is that most philanthropy reporting focuses on the size of a grant or the focus of the grant, but not the implications of various philanthropic actions. For instance, everyone read in the mainstream media about the fact that Bill Gates was going to work at his foundation full time. And they read about the dollar amount of the gift that Buffett made to The Gates Foundation. But what were the implications? Philanthropy doesn’t have magazines like The National Review or The Atlantic Monthly that provide a forum for deep analysis and opinion. With philanthropy still an area of niche interest, blogs provide an ideal forum for this deep analysis and opinion sharing to develop without the need for an economic model to support a mainstream media outlet.

During the Morphing Media session, I was struck by Maxwell King’s assertion that in an era of “dramatically increasing complexity”, it is not possible that there is not significant economic value to good information and analysis. I think he is exactly correct. However, I also think that philanthropy, unlike most other media spheres, doesn’t need a functioning economic model to finance the sharing of information and analysis. This is because the sharing of information and analysis about philanthropy, even without an economic return, produces large social returns. If a foundation CEO writes about the successes and failures of a new program, she will increase capital flows from other philanthropic entities towards the reported successes and away from the revealed failures. Since foundations and other philanthropic entities are not competing against each other, but instead can measure success by challenges jointly conquered, there already exists a functioning model to reward the sharing of good information and analysis.

Huffington’s diagnoses of attention deficit disorder in the mainstream media and obsessive-compulsive behavior among bloggers got a good laugh, but it also has some important implications for philanthropy. In a world where philanthropy is still of niche interest, it takes an obsessive-compulsive personality to write constantly about areas of interest to the philanthropic community. Look at NetSquared for a good example. To my knowledge, there has been no mainstream media coverage to date. But the Giving blogs have been talking about it constantly. This is of no small importance to philanthropy. According to CompuMentor/TechSoup the following foundations are going to be attending and/or sponsoring NetSquared:

  • Charles Stewart Mott Foundation
  • W.K. Kellogg Foundation
  • Ford Foundation
  • The Case Foundation
  • Surdna Foundation
  • The William and Flora Hewlett Foundation
  • Google.org
  • Sunlight Foundation
  • California Emerging Technology Foundation
  • Schwab Charitable
  • Community Foundation Silicon Valley

And Mark Bolgiano, former Chief Information Officer of the Council on Foundations had this to say about NetSquared:

"I’m in awe. The projects, the energy, the votes, the outcome, and the people paying attention to flaws and suggesting improvements… all of it feels to me like something that will be looked back on with a "Wow.  I was there when it happened… when it got started"…

So what if this turns out to be a scale model of something bigger that turns philanthropy inside out?  What if we could do this with a just ONE TENTH OF ONE PERCENT of foundation grants next year?  That’s at least $20 million.  What if we involved folks outside our motivated/activist/subversive tribe, say only a million of the people who would love to weigh in on these proposals?  Best of all, what if this new way of doing things convinced a lot of new  people with good ideas to go for it…?

I’m serious.  It really could happen…"

All of this attention on what I believe is a groundbreaking moment for philanthropy and there’s been zero press coverage, but massive blog coverage. That’s why blogs are important to philanthropy. That’s why understanding the “morphing media” is key for foundations and why foundation executives and other philanthropic leaders need to be engaging the blog community.

There are real risks to blogging. The article I linked to earlier about the role of bloggers at the California State Convention was not a glowing story about blogs. It cited a lot of trends in political blogging that I personally find to be negative. But blogging is happening, the media is morphing. There’s no stopping change. But if philanthropy ignores the morphing media, then it loses the chance to effect the new media that emerges. If philanthropy doesn’t wake up quickly to the changes being wrought by information technology, than blogs like Inside Foundations and Don’t Tell The Donor will be the ones setting the agenda. Wouldn’t it be better if leaders, new comers and everyone in between discussed the issues at hand out in the open and let the most vibrant, robust ideas rise to the surface?

Morphing Media: Philanthropy & New Media

The four panelists at the Morphing Media session were:

  • Arianna Huffington, Huffington Post
  • Dorothy Ridings, Former COF CEO
  • Ian Rowe, vice president, MTV
  • Jay Harris, COF Board Member
  • Maxwell King, The Heinz Endowments

All four of the panelists saw the value of New Media and the growing importance of its role in philanthropy. But there was wide disagreement on whether the New Media was a wonderful new opportunity (Huffington & Rowe) or if there was a more equal balance of risks and rewards (Harris & King).

Harris talked about the role of technology in encouraging public discourse and that while he had hesitations about the New Media’s current impact on philanthropy, he thought that in the end it would be good for the public discourse. He applauded the new networks of common interest that were developing (in the philanthropy arena, that is the readers of this and the other blogs on my blogroll.)

Huffington talked about the way that old media models have encouraged giving to established, well-known charitable entities. And also, by only talking about giving during Christmas and thanksgiving, failed to engage readers on philanthropy as part of their daily life. She mentioned how her teenage daughters would been transformed, for a week or two, by some sort of philanthropic experience, but that you needed constant engagement to spur true change. She joked that the mainstream media has ADD, while bloggers are obsessive compulsive and can bring the media back to an important story that they quickly moved on from. She used disasters as an example of how people irregularly engage philanthropically. Said that when Amazon changed their home page to a charitable giving button 7 hours after 9/11, they raised $70 million in three days. If we can engage people more regularly, the capacity to give is enormous.

Max King: The economic model of information distribution is broken. But “dramatically increasing complexity” is the dominate theme of our time. Under those circumstances, it is impossible to believe that there is not economic value to good information and analysis.

Ian Rowe: Talked about the joint ventures that MTV has done with various nonprofits to educate and engage young people on social issues. Pointed out that there can be more impact for the foundation by partnering with MTV than making a grant to a nonprofit. Gave as an example the idea that a $100k “grant” to MTV can spur the development of a 30 min show on an issue that reaches 400 million households and is designed specifically to connect with young people.

Harris speculated that journalism needs to be removed from the pure free market to preserve the important role it has in serving the public good. Huffington responded by saying that there has been no golden age of journalism serving the public good. She gave numerous examples of how the mainstream press failed during the run up to the Iraq war. She said all of this has created a disenchantment with the media that is there own fault and pointed to this disenchantment as the reason we’ve seen the rise of blogs.

Rowe: Said that the amount of time that senior leadership of any organization spends with young people is directly correlated with the innovation that comes out of that organization.

A question from the audience brought up the concept of the digital divide as an age related, not economically related issue. Huffington said it was important that we marry the best of the old with the best of the new and bring together wisdom and innovation, not just young and old.

Harris ended by telling the audience that we need to be sure that we do not ignore the power of things that are hard to measure and Huffington added that the concept of the Tipping Point is useful when trying to understand the role of New Media to Philanthropy.

These Cliff Notes are for readers to digest and comment back on. I’ll be writing up my analysis of the session soon. Let me know what you think and what the notes above stir up in your mind.

Philanthropy & Blogs

What exactly does it mean that the Council on Foundations has invited me and other bloggers to cover their conference under a press pass? As I discussed when I accepted the invitation, I had some hesitations:

I do not think of myself as a member of the press. I’m not a reporter. I think the role of bloggers in general is more one of commentator/analyst/columnist. But in talking with the Council it was clear to me that they “got” what my role should be.

This morning the San Francisco Chronicle ran an article about the role of bloggers at the Democratic California State Convention. The gist of the story is that five years ago, there was one blogger in attendance.

“This year, a record 50 Internet-publication bloggers will join the estimated 400 credentialed "mainstream" media in the press room to track the doings of seven Democratic presidential candidates and 2,100 California party delegates this weekend.

And those numbers don’t count the estimated dozens of mainstream media journalists who will be blogging for major newspapers or the unknown numbers of delegates who will be producing their own running commentary of the convention.”

To me, the best kind of blogging is informed, opinionated, personal and conversational – not just in tone, but in actually being part of a larger community of diverse opinions. The worst kind of blogging is ill-informed soapboxing. Political blogs have both types of bloggers. I hope that the philanthropy community can cultivate an online culture that revolves around my first set of standards. I think we’re on the way there.

In would be interesting to see the 2012 edition of the Chronicle on Philanthropy’s COF conference coverage. Maybe it will begin…

“A record 50 Internet-publication bloggers attended the Council on Foundations conference this week. And that number doesn’t include the dozens of foundation CEOs and philanthropic leaders who blogged their thoughts or the unknown number of attendees who reflected on their experiences in their personal blogs…”

 

Special Message: Sean Stannard-Stockton will be live blogging the Council on Foundations conference from Sunday April 29-Tuesday May 1. During that time, this blog will be an open portal for a lively debate around the conference topics. This is your opportunity to express your thoughts and be heard by the wider community. Email your thoughts by clicking here or leave a comment by clicking on the “comments” link in the lower right portion of this post.

This is the first time the Council on Foundations has invited bloggers. Take part in something special and make sure you participate.

Lucy Bernholz on Blogging Conferences

Lucy Bernholz, who’s currently blogging the Global Philanthropy Forum, has weighed in with her thoughts on blogging philanthropy conferences in general. Lucy will be blogging the Council on Foundation conference with me, so I’m intensely interested in her thoughts. Check her out.

Press Coverage of Philanthropy

Bruce Trachtenberg, the executive director of The Communications Network, stopped by to leave me a comment:

Hopefully the attention that blogging is bringing — and the many discussions and conversations it is spawning — will encourage traditional press to deepen its coverage of philanthropy. It’s not enough to simply report on the number and size of grants — which is what the Philanthropic Awareness Initiative found as typical of foundation news coverage in its recent study of reporting on philanthropy over a 15-year-period. As my co-author and I wrote in a Chronicle of Philanthropy op-ed last July (http://www.comnetwork.org/72006oped.htm), "When reporters cover the business world, they produce articles when new products or strategies are announced, when money is made or lost, and when companies grow or fail. And in between the coverage of those developments, enormous attention is paid to the types of businesses they are, what underlies the decisions companies make, and what they could do to become more successful. That same approach should guide philanthropy coverage . Reporters should be encouraged to provide in-depth and analytic coverage about the underlying problems in society that foundations are trying to solve, the likely results of their investments, and follow-up coverage about what did or didn’t happen."

Bruce’s co-author of the op-ed he refers to was Grant Oliphant, a vice president at the Heinz Endowments. Maxwell King, the president of the Heinz Endowments will be a speaker at the Foundations & The Morphing Media session that I referred to in my last post. You should read Bruce and Grant’s op-ed, it makes a critical point about the state of philanthropy press coverage.

So what can bloggers bring to the table to help enhance the media coverage? Cross-disciplinary perspectives. There are very few “philanthropy reporters” working in the media today. Most philanthropy related articles are written by reporters whose beats include either nonprofits or business. By today’s philanthropy stories often fall in between these neat categories. For instance, who should be covering the NetSquared Conference? To me, the NetSquared Conference represents a compelling media story. But who should cover it? The technology reporters, business reporters and nonprofit reporters with their distinct beats are unlikely to have the context to grasp the entire story. This is not meant to be a slight towards journalists in any way. But philanthropy is undergoing a transformation and evolving in new ways. As Susan Raymond said when Google.org was launched as a for profit “foundation”, we are at “The end of definitions”. When we can’t even define what philanthropy means, who should we ask to tell the story of philanthropy? I think the story is being told by the philanthropy blogs.

The authors of the philanthropy blogs include:

  • Foundation Consultants
  • Investment Managers
  • Nonprofit Employees
  • Nonprofit Consultants
  • Foundation Employees
  • Moral Tutors
  • Community Foundation Executives
  • Ex-Philosophy Professors
  • Social Entrepreneurs
  • Hedge Fund Employees
  • Philanthropic Consultants & Service Providers
  • Authors

The cross-disciplinary nature of this group is exactly why they are so well suited to telling this chapter of the story of philanthropy.

Council on Foundations Conference

Yesterday I accepted an invitation to attend this year’s Council on Foundations (CoF) conference from April 29-May 1 in Seattle. This is the first year that CoF has invited bloggers to attend the conference with a press pass.

As much as I was honored to be invited, I had some hesitation about attending. I do not think of myself as a member of the press. I’m not a reporter. I think the role of bloggers in general is more one of commentator/analyst/columnist. But in talking with the Council it was clear to me that they “got” what my role should be. In fact, one of the first Sessions is about new media:

Foundations & The Morphing Media: Why We No Longer “Read All About It” Room 204 9:00-10:30 a.m. Foundations and the media have always seen themselves as agents of social change, both working to serve the common good. But there has been a drastic change in the media landscape. Broadcast and cable news segments, accommodating waning attention spans, are becoming less detailed and more politically charged. Newspaper readership is down, Internet news is on the rise, and blogging is, well, moving in a direction of its own. This could be troublesome as philanthropy depends on the media to spearhead deep, thoughtful discussion of social issues—information that then guides philanthropy in its grantmaking. Listen to a thoughtful and provocative discussion of our own as a panel of experts, including former Council President/CEO Dot Ridings, also a former publisher with Knight-Ridder, and Max King, president of the Heinz Endowments and former editor of the Philadelphia Inquirer, reviews the challenges and opportunities foundations will face with the new mainstream media. Presenters:

  • Arianna Huffington, Speaker, Syndicated Journalist
  • Dorothy S. Ridings, Moderator
  • Ian Rowe, Speaker, Vice President, Strategic Partnerships and Public Affairs, MTV
  • Jay T. Harris, Speaker, Board Member
  • Maxwell King, Speaker, President, The Heinz Endowments

So what is the role of philanthropy bloggers on the broader philanthropic landscape? Are we fringe commentators or will the conversation that we are developing here be one that, as the Council states above, “guides philanthropy in its grantmaking”?

We don’t know for sure yet. But I can tell you that since I received the invitation from CoF, a number of employees of the world’s largest foundations have subscribed to my blog. My understanding is that there was a lot of internal debate at the Council on whether or not to invite bloggers to the conference. I’m sure that a segment of the members are still very wary about our participation. But if, again in the Council’s words from above, “philanthropy depends on the media to spearhead deep, thoughtful discussion of social issues” then I think they’re going to like what they find.

One parting thought I want to leave everyone with is that I do not believe that online and offline media should be viewed as being separate. It is the message, not the medium that is important. My hope is that as groups like Council on Foundations and the Chronicle of Philanthropy begin to embrace philanthropy bloggers, that we welcome them and work to integrate the online and offline conversation. That is the challenge that I am working on as I refine the Giving Carnival.

The Aspen Institute Philanthropy Letter

Phil Cubeta draws our attention to the most recent Aspen Philanthropy Letter, which discusses the growing influence of philanthropy blogs. The article (reposted in Phil’s post) about blogs is titled, “Internet, through blogs and message boards, increasingly used as vehicle for criticizing foundations”. The article mentions the Gates Foundation investment policy debate from earlier this year and calls the back and forth discussion between the philanthropy bloggers “unprecedented”. The Tactical Philanthropy Giving Carnival on the topic is mentioned as a focal point for the discussion.

I’ve posted about the growing influence of philanthropy blogs and I think that as esteemed an institution as the Aspen Institute noting the action is important. But I think that focusing on some blogs “criticizing foundations” is a dramatic example of missing the forest for the trees. The real story is about the internet being used as a vehicle for transforming philanthropy, not criticizing foundations.

Let’s look at the people behind some of the leading blogs:

Susan Herr, PhilanthroMedia, former managing director of Community Foundations of America. Her current clients include Community Foundations of America and the Association of Small Foundations.

Lucy Bernholz, Philanthropy 2173, founder and President of Blueprint Research & Design, Inc. a strategy consulting firm for philanthropic institutions and individuals. Clients include, Annie E. Casey Foundation, Association of Small Foundations, Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, Carnegie Corporation, Community Foundation Silicon Valley, David and Lucile Packard Foundation, Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation, J. Paul Getty Trust, and the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation.

Kevin Jones, Joy Anderson and Tim Freundlich at Xigi.net. These three also run Good Capital, which counts a number of well-known foundations as investors.

These people are not “outsiders”. They have every incentive to be in the good graces of the foundations that the Aspen Letter suggests are being targeted for criticism by the philanthropy blogs. Personally, I make my living as a professional advisor to philanthropic families. Helping create and run private foundations is a big part of my job.

I’m glad that the Aspen Letter is noticing all buzz around philanthropy blogs. But I think they’ve missed what the buzz is all about. The philanthropy blog community is a very diverse group of people. They should not be characterized as “critics”. Instead, I think that the philanthropy blog community is cultivating a conversation between citizens. A conversation about where philanthropy is going and how it is going to get there. This conversation is important. Some of it will, by its very nature, include criticisms of existing entities and practices. But the conversation at its heart is one of transformation. Of building up, not tearing down.

Benefit Magazine Online

Benefit Magazine has a slick new interface on their website where you can read all of the issues of their magazine. They haven’t just posted the stories, they actually have a viewing interface that lets you see the magazine as it appeared in print.

You can read an article called The Next Great Wave that I wrote for them on page 36 of the May/April 2007 issue.

Private Foundation Administration

The Financial Times does a lot of really excellent coverage of philanthropy. You can find an index of recent stories here. Last week they ran an article about outsourcing private foundation administrative services and quoted me in the lead:

Thinking of setting up a private foundation, but don’t want to be bogged down with ongoing administrative hassles? Several companies take care of the day-to-day management of a foundation while freeing donors to focus on what matters most: philanthropy.

“Private foundations are not the cumbersome, paperwork heavy entities they once were,” says Sean Stannard-Stockton, director of tactical philanthropy at Ensemble Capital Management. “While many advisers unfamiliar with philanthropy often assume that foundations are only appropriate for people who can put $3m-$5m or more into the foundation, the rise of the internet has reduced the cost and administration needed to operate a foundation.”

You can read the entire article here.

Philanthropy Blogs Growing Influence

I talked last week about the important turning point in the maturation of the Giving Blog community represented by the Chronicle on Philanthropy’s new Give & Take project. We have a second example of Giving Blogs gaining mainstream credibility; Good Capital’s new website. On the front page of the website, Good Capital links to media sources discussing their company. The three sources are Gift Hub, Tactical Philanthropy and Fast Company. I would guess this is the first time a financial company has highlighted comments from philanthropy bloggers on the front page of their website.

On a similar note, I recently received a phone call from a reporter at the Financial Times, asking about trends in private foundations. The reporter had discovered me via my blog, not through Ensemble Capital.

If you look at the maturation process of blogs covering politics, business, sports, etc, you see that initially the bloggers were doing it part time and that while they had opinions (often well informed opinions), they were not professionals in the topic they covered. Today however, many top bloggers in mature categories work full time and are professionals in their field. I wonder how long it will take for this process to play out with Giving Blogs?