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Jessica Wang Randy Cadenhead Sutherland Cox Communications
Social Networks And the Nonprofit Jessica Wang Randy Cadenhead Sutherland Cox Communications July 15, 2009
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Pro Bono Partnership of Atlanta:
Mission of Pro Bono Partnership of Atlanta: To provide free legal assistance to community-based nonprofits that serve low-income or disadvantaged individuals. We match eligible organizations with volunteer lawyers from the leading corporations and law firms in Atlanta who can assist nonprofits with their business law matters.
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Pro Bono Partnership of Atlanta Eligibility & Other Information
In order to be a client of Pro Bono Partnership of Atlanta, an organization must: Be a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization. Be located in or serve the greater Atlanta area. Serve low-income or disadvantaged individuals. Be unable to afford legal services. Visit us on the web at Host free monthly webinars on legal topics for nonprofits To view upcoming webinars or workshops, visit the Workshops Page on our website
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For More Information: If you would like more information about the services of Pro Bono Partnership of Atlanta, contact us at: Phone: Fax:
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Social Networks And the Nonprofit Agenda
About Social Networks Opportunities Issues Policies
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About Social Networks Yesterday - Online Social Networks date from 1995 Classmates.com – 1995 Myspace.com – 2003 Facebook – Yahoo Twitter
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Today – “Web 2.0” Facebook – 200 million users
MySpace – 60 million user visits/month Twitter – 1400% user growth LinkedIn – 36 million users
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Tomorrow – “Web 3.0 = Social Media”
“Viral” Growth Constant Change New Opportunities New Place for Old Issues
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Social Media – Communication Facebook, MySpace Collaboration
Multimedia Reviews Entertainment Facebook, MySpace Wikipedia, Digg Flickr, YouTube Epinions, Jobeehive Second Life
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Opportunities Agency Promotion Sites
Employee and Volunteer Personal Sites Client Location and Feedback from Social Networks Volunteer Recruiting Fund Raising Opportunities
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Agency Accounts – Advantages Issues Time costs Negative Comments
Positive PR Low cost communications Fundraising Issues Time costs Negative Comments Monitoring Supervision Privacy/Confidentiality Hacking/Impersonation
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Employees and Volunteer Personal Posts
Unsponsored References by Others Valuable PR Expanding your circle of contacts But Issues Include Quality of messaging Posting of personal opinions Confidentiality/Privacy Defamation
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Friends and Clients Word of Mouth “viral” buzz Issues Include
Lack of control Defamation
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Client Identification and Feedback
Virtual “cries for help” Testimonials But Issues Include Confidentiality Negative PR
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Volunteer Recruiting Fundraising Opportunities
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Issues Employment Issues: Employers can vet potential employees
A non-decisionmaker should first filter out sensitive information like age or religion
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Issues, continued Potential liability for employers
Some courts have found employers liable for online actions of employees Defamation, harassment Should employers terminate or discipline employees for their online activity? Little case law to guide us—but watch out for discrimination or anti-retaliation allegations Consider the effect on PR and workplace morale
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Issues, continued Intellectual Property Issues
Copyright or trademark infringement Loss of protection of trade secrets
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Policy Pointers Control the statements that might be attributed to the non-profit Monitor and police the online activity that you require of your employees Consider public perception, legal repercussions, and business repercussions
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Policy Pointers, continued
Many employer policies prohibit the following: Directly making defamatory statements Lashing out at supervisors or coworkers Making harassing statements about coworkers Discussing controversial topics while disclosing a connection with the employer Disclosing trade secrets
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Policy Pointers, continued
Key aspects of a good policy: Cover all postings and sites (Twitter, Facebook, blogs, etc.) Be specific about expectations Provide contact person for questions Employee is responsible for own posts and may be liable Employee should respect copyright laws, harassment laws, and so on
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For More Information: If you would like more information about the services of Pro Bono Partnership of Atlanta, contact us at: Phone: Fax:
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