Posts tagged Media
Five Pay It Forward stories
Feb 15th
As you know, we love stories about people committing selfless acts of goodwill. Unfortunately not all of these stories ends up on our website, foyble.com. For your reading pleasure we have collected a few good ones from around the internet below. These will go over on the Start the GIVE resource page as well. Enjoy!
A feel for skiing, sight not necessary: Nancy Stevens, an Oregonian who has been blind since birth, teaches instructors to teach other blind people how to downhill ski.
Mystery couple starts ‘magical’ chain reaction: A couple bought another table breakfast in a Philly diner. This started a chain reaction that lasted for five hours! Sound familiar? More >
Social Media for Charities: five people we love to follow on Twitter and why
Oct 27th
We here at foyble HQ really like Twitter. At first we really didn’t know what to make of it. Once we found some people to follow who really get it though, it clicked for us. Twitter can be a fantastic tool for finding articles and news on subjects and topics that interest you. It’s also great for finding content you don’t normally gravitate to in the other media formats you typically consume. Foyble uses Twitter to tell all of our friends about great new foybles that our users have posted, to alert followers on new blog posts, and to find out what is going on with our favorite charities, users, and social media personalities.
Since we spend a lot of time looking for people to follow on Twitter, we thought we share with you a few of our favorite ‘Tweeps’. We’ll do a post like this from time to time to give you some ideas on more folks we find interesting. Got a suggestion? Leave it in the comments!
1) Mashable (Pete Cashmore): Mashable (twitter.com/mashable) is a social media news site that gives tips on the most popular social media tools and sites. Mashable also provides lots of content on how to use social media. There is an incredible amount of useful content on the site. Anyone charged with creating a social media strategy for their organization needs to be checking mashable.com out. Same goes for their Twitter feed. Get the latest on breaking social-media and tech related news. Also get links to the most popular and useful content on their site. Mashable has plenty of content aimed for those of you needing advice on your non-profit or charity.
2) Deepak Chopra (twitter.com/deepak_chopra): If you fill your Twitter feed with nothing but social media aggregators and news services, you’ll quickly become inundated with tweets that have content that you’ll never be able to get through. So you need to throw some personalities in their for good measure. Folks who don’t tweet too much, but enough to be useful, and tweet the types of things that you can consume right there in the moment without having to click a link. Dr. Chopra is a physician, an extremely prolific author (over 50 books), professor, scientist, and as far as we can tell, a big thinker. He uses his Twitter feed to tell fans where he is, to pitch his latest titles (rarely, and respecfully), and to tell us profound things through quotes of his and others. You get the sense that the man in constantly in motion but that he is at ease with this lifestyle. Definitely inspirational and worthy of a follow from you.
3) Charity navigator (twitter.com/charitynav): Charitynavigator.com is a useful website that provides visitors a ‘guide to intelligent giving’. Charity navigator empowers users with information on charities so they can make informed decisions on where to donate their money. The site claims to evaluate the financial health of the largest 5400 charities in the country. Their twitter feed is an extension of this service. They typically post interesting articles they have found or written on their blog, link to some of their top ten lists, or post clever advice for those interested in finding a charity to donate to. A useful service for potential donators, those with organizations that need donations, or those that are just learning how to use Twitter!
4) Tim Feriss (twitter.com/tferriss): This is a personal favorite of mine. I have read Tim’s book “the four hour work week” and swear by it. It is an excellent book for anyone who must spend time doing anything they wouldn’t normally do if they didn’t need to do it. If you work in a corporation it’s a must read. If you are trying to run a business or a non-profit or charity, the time management tips he offers are invaluable. Tim is fun to follow on Twitter too. He isn’t too obtrusive, meaning he doesn’t over-tweet. He is an interesting person so his tweets will often be about his travels or his experiences learning new languages, or the things he is reading online or in print. This can be useful because he can challenge you to think a little differently or expose you to things you wouldn’t normally get exposed to. Read Tim’s book and follow him on Twitter. You won’t be sorry!
5) Michael Hyatt (twitter.com/michaelhyatt): Michael is the CEO of Thomas Nelson Publishers. I have to admit, I didn’t find Michael. I poked around on my friend Dan’s Twitter profile (@dstummer) because I knew he’d be following people foyble would like too, and found him. As far as I can tell, Mr. Hyatt doesn’t have any obvious connection to charities or starting the give. He definitely goes to an insane amount of conferences. He seems like a really interesting and good man. He does tweet from time to time about being stuck in traffic or what he is having for breakfast, but he balances that inanity out with solid posts on the conferences he is at and the blog posts he writes- both useful bits of information for anyone trying to develop a presence for themselves or their organization online.
So there you go. Five folks we like on Twitter. We think these people are using Twitter in a good way, that their updates are meaningful and/or useful. We like their updates and the services these folks provide outside of Twitter. If you are working with an organization that has a strategy for social media we think these are some pretty good examples of ways that using Twitter is functional and entertaining. Leave your suggestions in the comments!
Happy Tweeting!
Posted by Brian
@name, full name, who they are, why we like following them.
Foyble, Canadian Style.
Sep 26th
I read this story by Chris Parry of the Vancouver Sun on the world wide interweb today and it’s a prime time example of foybles in action! School kids at Cindrich Elementary School in Surrey, British Columbia, Canada, were charged with the task of spreading random acts of kindness (that’s what a foyble is, but you knew that!). Teachers inspired the kids and “Quietly, unobtrusively, these children began to weave their magic. ”
Kids passed out homemade cookies, helped kids on the playground, and wrote kind notes for kids’ school bags. Asking only that the goodwill be passed on (foyble-riffic!), the movement became contagious. The small acts like cookies lead to bigger ones like sponsoring Make a Wish Foundation kids. One class created “30 Random Acts of Kindness Cards” that asked recipients to pay it forward.
You should read the rest of the article. It’s uplifting, relevant, and will put a smile on your face and warm your heart. No doubt. I hope those kids, teachers, and the ones they touched find their way to foyble.com and share all of their amazing stories of the GIVE with us here in foyble-land!
Posted by Jerry
foyble gettin’ noticed in Columbus Local News
Sep 22nd
We’ll keep this one short. The Columbus local news (the guys who do those awesome papers catered to your local communities in the ‘Bus) did a great profile on how we thought of this whole deal. Read it HERE.
Thank you Donavon Campbell!
Posted by Brian
Of the GIVE and the internet economy
Sep 16th
Breaking News: using the internet to cultivate the GIVE was not invented by foyble.
Ok, that’s not breaking news. But you knew that. Just how IS the internet being used to start the GIVE though? Or, more importantly (and for the sake of time), how is the internet being used in interesting ways to start the GIVE? More >
Foyble in the News!
Sep 14th
Columbus Alive did a story on foyble through the eyes of one of the founders. Read the story in this week’s Columbus Alive by picking up a copy if you’re in the neighborhood, or just click here.
And Remember:
facebook.com/foyble.give
twitter: @foyble_org











