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Charity Drives Gifts by Showing Donors Where Their Money Will Go

December 18, 2013 | Read Time: 2 minutes

The Chronicle is highlighting a number of organizations that have come up with innovative approaches to year-end fundraising. Hereโ€™s one of them:

The nonprofit Read Global is hoping to raise thousands of dollars with its โ€œEmpowerโ€ campaign, which shows donors where their gifts will go whether theyโ€™re helping one person, one family, or many people at a time.

The literacy and economic-development charity sends appeals that feature a woman, a family, and a village in the developing world. Donors are then invited to โ€œchoose your impactโ€ by selecting whom they want to help.

For instance, to help one woman, it takes $50 to pay for a year of leadership training, $100 to teach her how to read, or $250 to buy educational materials on womenโ€™s rights.


In the family category, $500 would provide job training to parents, and $1,000 would enroll 40 parents in a health workshop so they can take better care of their families.

A $2,500 donation for one village would stock bookshelves in a Read Global library, and $5,000 would finance educational training programs for a year for anybody who needs them.

In addition, Read Global is using a year-end direct-mail letter to alert its supporters to a $50,000 matching gift for their donations. Itโ€™s also sending supporters a series of four emails this month with a video about the campaign included in the first message. In addition, people who make a gift or tell their social-network followers about the campaign receive a thank-you video.

So far, Read Global has raised $19,100 of the campaignโ€™s $50,000 goal. The charity usually gets most of the donations for its year-end drives in the last week of the year, so its officials are confident about hitting the goal.

But things could move even faster now: The campaign has gotten a boost from UpWorthy, a site that aggregates viral content and boasts a viewership of 5 million, which pointed users to the video.


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