A One Million Strong Facebook moneybomb (DRAFT)

revised and updated version to be published during the week of 10/6

One Million Strong's fundraising goal

It seems to me that it’s a pretty interesting story that One Million Strong now has fundraising potential on roughly the same level as well-known progressive blogs OpenLeft and myDD — especially in an election where there’s been so much focus on Obama supporters “looking like Facebook”, the campaign’s innovative use of the my.barackobama.com social network site, and Obama’s huge advantage with the youth vote. Hopefully some enterprising bloggers and journalists will cover it.  Campus newspapers are an obvious sweet spot; and so are Obama-supporting blogospheres like the black blogosphere and progressive blogosphere.

Read on for more …

The Barack Obama (One Million Strong for Barack) Facebook group is in the midst of its October moneybomb to scare McCain fundraising drive, with a goal of raising $15K by October 15th to push the group’s total to $40K.  It’s an ambitious goal; while the group has over 760,000 members (up 40,000 since the last time I checked a few weeks ago), nobody knows how many follow the discussion board actively.

As calibration, here’s how some well-know progressive blogs did with their September fundraising:

So yeah, One Million Strong’s group is indeed ambitious: if successful, it would be at #2 behind the Kossian juggernaut.

Things are off to a good start, with Tim Chambers doing a great job of keeping people informed in the $15K for the 15th thread: over 60 donations, and $2700 raised.   At $45/donation, this is higher than One Million Strong’s historical average of $30;*** my guess is that means that students, who usually make smaller contributions, were tapped out in September with school starting up and couldn’t give.  If a flood of them start tossing in $5/$10/$20 a pop over the next ten days, we’ll see the average decrease as the totals start to climb.

There are a couple of major challenges for One Million Strong’s fundraising.  First is that there are a lot of other ways for people to give money to Obama — many of which offer goodies like free t-shirts or a chance to meet famous people.  By contrast, there’s no economic reason for people to give via One Million Strong’s page.  On the other hand, as with the progressive blogosphere’s campaigns, there is a sense of being part of something bigger than yourself: the sense of shared accomplishment working with the people in your community to achieve a difficult goal.

An even bigger challenge, as anybody who’s ever been in a large Facebook group could probably guess, is communications.  Once a group reaches 5000 people, the admins can’t send a message to all members … so there’s no good way to alert everybody.  To catch people’s attention, it’s highlighted on the group’s Recent News at the top of the page, and the thread on the discussion board gets bumped pretty regularly … but very few first-time visitors don’t spend much time exploring, and most long-term members check back very rarely.

Fortunately, there are other options.  For one thing, there are a lot of groups of Obama supporters on Facebook with less than 5,000 people, and Tim’s been messaging the administrators and asking them to send out information to their members.  This needs to be timed judiciously — good admins are careful to message-all-members very infrequently — but with luck this will result in a lot of reminders in the next ten days.

Also, there’s the Million Strong Money Bomb event.  Events propagate very quickly on Facebook: it’s easy to invite 50 or more friends at a time.  So far, about 300 of the 650 people who have been invited have responded, with 51 accepting (presumably meaning they’ve given or plan to give), and while that may not doesn’t seem like a lot, the key is to think of them as the hubs of networks of friends. If I’ve done the math right, all we need is each person to respond to invite 50 friends, and we’ve got a good shot at beating the $15K goal.****  And if network effects start to kick in, and those friends start to invite their friends … oh baby.

And as with any online fundraising campaign, something else that would help a lot is attention from blogs and media.  It seems to me that it’s a pretty interesting story that One Million Strong now has fundraising potential on roughly the same level as well-known progressive blogs OpenLeft and myDD — especially in an election where there’s been so much focus on Obama supporters “looking like Facebook”, the campaign’s innovative use of the my.barackobama.com social network site, and Obama’s huge advantage with the youth vote. Hopefully some enterprising bloggers and journalists will cover it.

Who knows, maybe we’ll get lucky — for example, Campus Progress and pusback.org get excited about this, and the Afrosphere partner with historically black colleges and universities and their alumni networks to get the word out.  Or imagine if OpenLeft, myDD, and Daily Kos each devoted a front-page post to the One Million Strong Money Bomb … or, for that matter, if the large sites like TPM and ThinkProgress that didn’t do their own fundraising campaigns decided to highlight this one instead. The progressive blogosphere has almost completely ignored Obama activism on Facebook so far (although the mainstream media has paid some attention) … at some point they’ll wake up, and it might as well be now.  So if you know any journalists and bloggers, please pitch the story to them!

Realistically, though, it’s a mistake to rely on anything like that happening.   So like most fundraising campaigns, it’s going to take everybody rolling up their sleeves and getting to work: getting the word out and asking people to give via Facebook, email, and blog posts.

Like this one.

Please donate now. As the group’s Recent News says:

One KEY advantage Barack could have is a MONEY advantage. Money equals more commercials, more ground forces in more places, and a stronger message.

Even with the RNC getting HUGE checks from big donors, Barack has been out doing them on PEOPLE POWERED checks of 20 bucks or less. As we move towards what may be as close an election as Bush/Gore we need to give Barack every possible tool to win.

Let’s make ONE MORE BIG MONEY BOMB at the END OF THIS MONTH, and then FINALLY AT OCT 15th. In time to be of REAL USE for the last weeks.

So far this group has raised $25 thousand dollars for the campaign. That is pretty amazing. Our average donation was 30 bucks.

Give here to be counted in this group money bomb:
http://my.barackobama.com/page/outreach/view/main/millionstrong

jon

* I couldn’t find a reference for the exact amount raised by the end of September; current totals on their ActBlue page are 144 and $13,298.

** 268 donors, $26,598 as I write this

*** roughly $30/donation: 854 donors, $27,650.  The much smaller Troll Donation Fund, with $324 from 14 people has a slightly lower average, about $24/donation.

**** simplifying greatly, suppose the 300 people who have responded so far invite 15,000 people, of whom about 8% donate (1200) an average of $30 = $36K.  And that’s just with one round of invites; presumably a lot of the new people will also invite their friends.  It’s easy to imagine this reaching a million or more people over the course of a few weeks.  And a great thing about events is that Facebook tracks whether or not you’ve been invited, and doesn’t notify you each time a different friend of yours invites you — this helps keep inboxes from getting overwhelmed.


Comments

4 responses to “A One Million Strong Facebook moneybomb (DRAFT)”

  1. That was a really interesting post, and I agree that Obama facebook activism is something that the blogosphere really needs to focus on. I agree wholeheartedly that this is the sort of story that would go very well with pushback.org, in fact, I think we should try to organize a recurring feature where we discuss the evolution of facebook activism. However, pragmatically and in the short term, pushback is a very new blog and i’m not sure how much readership it has. My interest with them lies in the blog networking they are developing of interconnected student bloggers, but i’m not even sure if those students have much of a readership yet either. However, the readership these blogs do have are predominantly student activists, and as John Nichols says “you can’t measure the success of a blog in the number of readers, only in the size of its influence”. Essentially, my goal with pushback is to create a network of student activists to work on campaigns with us. And considering how plugged into facebook students are, I think they are exactly the audience we should be targeting for facebook campagins.

    However, I’m not sure that this is the sort of news thinkprogress covers. They didn’t cover the money bomb by Accountability Now PAC for the Strange Bedfellows campaign, and that was a campaign on an issue they specifically wrote a whole lot about by bloggers they were already working with often. They did highlight some of Obama’s crazier monthly fundraising numbers though, so maybe they’d be interested in reporting on the moneybomb if it is successful enough. But we certainly will want prominent blogs to help promote it before hand , and I just don’t see them being the kind of ally we want for that.

    Firedoglake is a blog that I think could be a particularly valuable ally for this project. They have set up a diary like feature that Open Left has that is called the Oxdown Gazette where any reader can post. Readers can rate the posts and the highly rated ones receive better coverage on their front page. Especially consdiering Firedoglake’s success with the Accountability Now money bomb, I bet their readership would be particularly interested in this initiative.

  2. Thanks for the detailed comment, Harry … good feedback. I agree with John Nichols that number of readers isn’t the only form of influence; OpenLeft is an example of a blog that “punches above its weight”, with a lot of deserved attention in New York/DC punditry despite the fact that its readership is a lot smaller than Americablog or dKos. Presidential 08 Watch’s map of the blogosphere presents a fascinating window on this.

    As for Think Progress, I just picked them as an example of one of the largest progressive blogs, and on further reflection a story like this is indeed a ways away from their usually policy focus. It seems to me that given their goal for the blog to “provide a forum that advances progressive ideas and policies” they might want to talk more about how to use social network sites to engage people to, y’know, advance progressive ideas and policies. But maybe the gap’s just too large

    Totally agreed on targetting students — and more generally, youth. The only information I know of about One Million Strong’s demographics is from a thread in June where 75% of the respondents were born in the 80s and 90s, so there are clearly a lot of them there. My guess is that this is a very different group than is getting reached by the progressive blogosphere, which tends to be rather dismissive of students and their concerns. Of course, there are plenty of non-students on Facebook as well; only 14% of No blank check for Wall Street‘s fans are 24 or younger.

    And good point on Firedoglake and Oxdown Gazette. Maybe I’ll cross-post the revised version of this over there and try to start some conversation …

  3. Interestingly enough, the much larger groups organizing against the “New Facebook” look are also using an event to bring people together: a call for a weekend-long boycott of Facebook. There are quite a few different groups — I found six that were over a million in size — and at least some of them seem to be working together on this; for example, the 2.7-million person 1,000,000 AGAINST THE NEW FACEBOOK LAYOUT! and the 1.65-million Petition against the new Facebook are both calling their event “Make an impact!”

    The event invite really highlight’s Facebook’s international aspects, with instructions in eight languages: Τις ημερες απο 17 μεχρι 20 οκτωβριου μην εισελθετε στο Facebook. Καλεστε ολους τους φιλους σας! The admin of the 1.5-million member 5,000,000 against the new version of Facebook ( Please Forward ) is based in Thailand, and a lot the members in the other groups seem to be international as well. From One Million Strong’s fundraising perspective, only American citizens are allowed to contribute … but everybody can help get the word out — an interesting way of leveraging Obama’s substantial edge in international support. So there’s a lot to learn here….

    As there is more generally. Right now, the 1,000,000 AGAINST THE NEW FACEBOOK LAYOUT! event has a little over 1600 confirmed guests and has reached about 10,000 people out of the 2.7M person group. Watching these numbers as they go forward is a good baseline for what One Million Strong can accomplish. And of course there’s potential great learning in both directions, if and when the people involved share there experiences …

    I’ll include this in a revised version of the post next week, and cross-post it on Oxdown Gazette. To prepare, I’m experimenting with a couple of other posts over there: Hiiiii (waves) and a cross-posting of Ask Facebook to de-friend Ted Ullyot!. So far, the software seems quite usable, and I like the layout … still no feel about the community aspects….

  4. […] posted an earlier draft of this on October […]

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