Great Fundraising Organizations, by Alan Clayton. Book cover.

2013 Social Charity Study reveals growth in social business in UK charities

Howard Lake | 19 September 2013 | Blogs

The 2013 Social Charity Study is released today. Looking back at the social media landscape from two years ago, it's clear to see exactly how phenomenal and substantial the growth of social and digital media has become.

Activity on Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn YouTube and Google+ over the last two years has grown between 210%-480% per platform. In the last year alone, the amount of 'likes', 'follows' and subscribers garnered by the top 100 charities in our Index has gone up by 193% on Twitter, 83% on Facebook, 356% on LinkedIn, 293% on YouTube and 289% on Google+. That is staggering, and far outweighs any increases of engagement created by conventional media.

Top 100 social charities

Our Top 100 social charities this year collectively have a combined income of £9.1bn between them. This is a drop in income of 26% from 2011. Social sharing has bucked that trend, however, and the amount of social sharing on Facebook has increased by 152% over the last year.

Advertisement

Great Fundraising Organizations, by Alan Clayton. Buy now.

Smaller charities

Small charities have emerged out of the study as having something of an edge, potentially. Digital media creates a more level playing field and they have an advantage in tending to have tight communities and more intimate relationships that come from a personal touch. Social business is, above all else, human business. 

We’ve found in our study that smaller charities also tend to have higher levels of authenticity amongst their social followings, and a tighter relationship between the amount of supporters to revenue raised, what we are calling 'networked power'.

The White Ribbon Alliance and Animal Aid in fact now have one follower on Twitter and Facebook for every £1 of revenue they raise. With social media now generating nearly 20 million follows and likes for our top 100 charities just on Twitter and Facebook alone, there’s good reason to pay attention to this.

View larger version

Does this suggest a tipping point for the charity industrial complex? We may well have arrived at the point. Only time will tell, but evidencing the journey from the five pound note in the supporter's pocket to making a difference on the ground is something supporters want to see happening more and more. The shorter lines of management in small charities makes that possible. Supporters seem to be connecting to charities that can offer this level of transparency and involvement in the overall experience through the engaging stories they can tell.

Beyond user generated content?

The majority of charities have been quick to incorporate user generated content into their promotional material but less so in developing more collaborative relationships with supporters. There has not been much of a shift this year in integrating social media with crm. Only 27% of the 60 charities that participated in our survey are using social business to innovate around working processes or reduce costs.

The majority of charities are still reporting on the impact they're making primarily through the Annual Report. Only 4% of them have at the moment an open data strategy and only 16% are describing themselves as 'mobile by default'. In terms of adapting to social business, there has been only a moderate shift in how much HR departments have a strategy for social business or in how much networking technology is being adopted internally.

Commercial partnerships have become increasingly vital, and they offer the opportunity to take a fresh look at how philanthropy and charitable giving gets embedded into everyday life. Data strategies and networked information flows can open up innovation opportunities and new business models here.

A more hieroglyphic language

Social media has generated a greater emphasis on experiential marketing during the last year. Charities are increasingly telling their stories through a new narrative – a more hieroglyphic language made of hashtags, infographics and visual media with the rise of Vine, Instagram and Storify, for example. The whole social brand now includes networked opportunities both internally and externally, and new business processes, working together as part of a coherent strategy.

Charities to need to adapt to this. Our YouGov poll suggests 61% of people we spoke to are likely to give to charities in the next year but even with the rapid rise of the smartphone, there is some indifference in terms of whether charities' use social media is particularly effective. Given the nature of organisation itself is becoming more dispersed, both across supporters and partners, it is crucial charities can articulate the very essence of what they’re about with absolute clarity, making it possible to stand out in a crowded digital market.

New charity in top spot

Save the Children takes over the top spot as the No 1 Social Charity this year. Overall, there has been a significant amount of mobility in this year's Index, reflecting perhaps the more dynamic nature of social business.

The full list of the top 100 Social Charities in this year’s Index is now available from the Visceral Business website, free of charge. You can download the full 2013 Social Charity study here.

Anne McCrossan is founding part of Visceral Business. She is a social business specialist and TEDx speaker on the subject of reinventing organisation.

Loading

Mastodon