man and woman shaking hands

  

     

Lessons for 2014:

  • Waiting is Not an Option
  • Reuse Great Ideas
  • Make Innovation Sustainable
  • Collaboration Is A Must

These are four key findings from a comprehensive report called Technology for Good: Innovative Use of Technology by Charities.

 

These four lessons translate nicely to our philosophy at The Batten Group.

1.  Don't leave a key leadership position open.  Your organization loses money, relationships and credibility every day that it remains empty.

2.  When something works, you stick with it.  Our clients reuse our services whenever they have a need.  We produce guaranteed result within 30 days.

3.  Making a great hire will sustain your team and help them grow stronger and more productive.

4.  Collaborating with The Batten Group on talent acquisition is one of the best decisions you can make in 2014.

 

Don't delay.  Call us to learn how nonprofits are positioning themselves to build the best winning team possible for 2014 and beyond.

 

Sincerely,

 

 Jim Batten  

 

The Batten Group
(704) 841-2099

 

Ten Technologies Used by Charitable Organizations in Innovative Ways:

  

Technology for Good identifies ten technologies being used by charitable organizations in innovative ways. The report briefly introduces each technology and provides examples of how those technologies are being used.

 

In determining the top ten trends, we chose technology that has the potential for wide reach, deep impact, and ease of use. 

 

The top ten technologies selected are:

  1. Mobile Technology:  mobile devices that range from low end talk and text phones to smartphones or tablets.
  2. Tracking Technology:  GPS or other monitoring systems that track people and goods
  3. Mapping Technology:  tools that organize geographic data and feed data sets into a digital map
  4. Social Media and Crowdsourcing:  data collection through open sources
  5. Data Management Technologies tools for processing large amounts of data or improving administrative functions
  6. Radio/TV:  new uses of these important mass communication mediums in the developing world
  7. Translation Tools: quick or immediate translations using a combination of technology and crowdsourcing
  8. Cloud Technology:  computing that allows access to software and information via the Internet instead of a hard drive or computer network
  9. Portable Networks: movable devises that can create instant Internet connectivity or telecommunication networks
  10. Drone Technology:  unmanned aerial vehicles used to leapfrog infrastructural deficits 

What You Can Learn

For nonprofits and other charitable organizations, the report offers many examples of how technology can help organizations achieve their missions, even with modest means.  For funders, the report compiles a variety of successful projects, demonstrating the deep impact of funding technology innovation.  Finally, for everyone interested in creating positive social change, the projects described in Technology for Good offer a number of interesting lessons.

 

Lesson 1: Waiting Is Not an Option

The barriers to positive social change are significant. One billion people currently don't have access to adequate year-round roads, and 1.2 billion do not have a regular supply of electricity. Worldwide Internet penetration rates are under 40 percent, with some regions as low as 15.6 percent.

 

Creating this infrastructure would take years, if not decades. And even in regions with stable infrastructure, a war or natural disaster can render transportation and communication difficult or impossible.  Because there are urgent needs that must be addressed, charitable organizations have

found ingenious ways to continue doing their good work, regardless of infrastructure challenges.

 

Sometimes the barriers to positive change are social rather than infrastructural. The report includes a number of examples of how technology can help disseminate health and other information, despite social barriers.

 

Lesson 2: Reuse Great Ideas

Technology for Good is more than a list of interesting technologies. Many of these technology innovations can be applied beyond the region or service sector for which they were initially developed.

 

Innovation also isn't always about creating something completely new. Technology for Good also demonstrates the power of deploying existing widely adopted technology in new ways.

 

Lesson 3: Make Innovation Sustainable

The best tech idea in the world can't have a lasting impact if it isn't sustainable. Technology for Good describes a variety of interesting ways that technology projects have been kept running long-term.

 

Lesson 4: Collaboration Is a Must

Most of the technology innovations in Technology for Good weren't created, implemented, or sustained by just one organization or individual. Many of these technologies required ongoing collaboration between charities, the public sector, and the private sector.

 

Source: The report was created by TechSoup Global in collaboration with The Guardian.

 

 

 

  

Testimonial
 

 

 

 

We recently used the Batten Group to assist us in recruiting and hiring an Executive Director position in an extremely difficult market.  Jim and his team were able to identify a group of candidates for us and we were able to rapidly interview and select a candidate that has joined our team and is already making a significant impact.  

 

They assisted throughout the process and we had a very successful outcome.  I would recommend The Batten Group to any non-profit organization needing to quickly fill a vacant senior level development position.

 

Curtis Pollen

Senior Director Talent Recruitment

American Heart Association

 

 

 

  



 

1122 Sam Newell Road
Matthews, NC  28105 
 
 (704) 841-2099 office
(704) 651-7858 cell
(704) 849-2582 fax