Footprints Network

The Footprints Network
Founded 2004
Founder Simion Monk, worldnomads.com[1]
Location
Area served
Global
Method Micro-donations
Key people
Simon Monk, founder and Executive director
Christy McCarthy, Secretary and Partnerships Director
Aine Leonard, Treasurer
Kristi Mansfiield, Philanthropy Consultant[1]
Website http://www.footprintsnetwork.org/

The Footprints Network is a non-profit Australian organisation that operates an online charity payment aggregator. It raises money from micro-donations collected as part of other e-commerce transactions.[2] Founded by Worldnomads.com in 2005, it derives its operational funding from corporate social responsibility programs.[3]

History

Following the 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, the original developers at Worldnomads created a program with a checkbox on a single web site, which invited customers to add two Australian dollars donation a charity during the purchase of a travel insurance policy. Within a few months this had raised $50,000. The program was later re-engineered so that people could donate to location-specific, project based initiatives, which improved collections.[4] As of 2008 the group claimed to have raised more than $500,000.[5][6]

An application programming interface (API) was developed making, the technology freely available for e-businesses to integrate the program into their web sites. The group has set itself the goal to raise $1 billion by 2018.[7]

The optional donations are made specifically to projects for which the customer chooses to donate, and the customers are sent optional updates about the progress of the projects following the transaction.[8] The primary charities collected for include Oxfam Australia, The Fred Hollows Foundation, and Water Aid Australia.[8]

As of January 2015, the group had completed 104 projects since inception,[9] and had eleven open projects.[10] Open projects, once completely funded are put into the category of funded projects, for which the funding process has been completed and are ready to become operational. As of January 2015, eleven projects had been completely funded by the organization and were on the verge of being operational.[11]

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 1/7/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.