Look Familiar?
Fundraising & Online Gaming Mariko Kojima
So how can gaming help not for profit organizations?
Literacy games to help World Food Programme end hunger
Donates 10 grains of rice for every correct answer
Literacy games to help World Food Programme end hunger Donates 10 grains of rice for every correct answer In its first month, the game raised enough rice to feed over 50,000 people for a day.
Literacy games to help World Food Programme end hunger Donates 10 grains of rice for every correct answer In its first month, the game raised enough rice to feed over 50,000 people for a day. Since it started, FreeRice has generated enough rice to feed millions of people
Fun games to learn about Greenpeace’s initiatives
PETA’s games to raise awareness Super Chick Sisters Save Princess Pamela Anderson from the evil Ronald McDonald who plans on making her part of his “happy meals”
Super Chick Sisters
PETA’s games to raise awareness Peta’s Holiday Snowball Fight Throw snowballs at fur wearing celebrities 10 points for Madonna, 25 for Donna Karan, 50 for the “Trollson” twins.
Pros?
Pros Raise money Raise awareness Encourage people to take action Potential to gather information on new prospective donors Easily accessible and fun!
Too complicated?
Consider this: Farmville was created in five weeks and was made purely from free and off-the-shelf components.
Consider this: FreeRice was created by John Breen, who started it to help his teenage sons prepare for their exams. This game had no official marketing campaign and was created at no cost to the UN World Food Programme (WFP). Breen donated the website to WFP in 2009.
Consider this: An American not for profit, Game for Change, offers workshops on making “social impact games” at their annual festival.
Sources My New Obsession – Online Gaming Web Game Provides Rice for the Hungry Hunger-Fighting Word Game FreeRice Is Now Social! change/ change/