The Guide to Major Trusts 2025-26. DSC (Directory of Social Change)

Comic Relief helped by someone else's viral e-mail

Howard Lake | 30 November 1999 | News

Comic Relief admitted that part of their success was due to a viral e-mail message – and it wasn’t one of theirs.

Comic Relief have admitted that their stunning success raising £400,000 online in March this year was helped by someone else’s viral e-mail campaign. Sarah Heseltine told Internet magazine: “We conduct offline press and PR, yet the thing that generated the most interest was an e-mail started by someone else.”

She added: “someone took content from the site and e-mailed round to a massive amount of people. We were getting calls about this e-mail and we were saying “What e-mail?” It shows what we could have achieved if we’d sent out that e-mail ourselves.”

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While there are alarming elements to such a campaign – no charity wants to be associated with spamming – it is good to see that a major online fundraising charity has now woken up to the significance of e-mail as a fundraising tool. E-mail can work effectively both as a direct communication tool to supporters and donors, and those very same supporters can be encouraged to spread the word legitimately by way of so-called viral e-mail.

Perhaps the 2001 Comic Relief campaign will act on this lesson and employ e-mail more extensively. It will by then be the fourth Comic Relief campaign which will have used the Web. With any luck they will deploy e-mail, that other essential element of Internet fundraising, and move away from a focus solely on the Web.

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