Coach Cal-social media mogul?

Coach Calipari

John Calipari’s name in the basketball world is synonymous with a few things. The first of which would be winning: as the only coach to lead four teams to number one seeds, and a   career winning percentage just a hair under 77%, no one is going to argue with that. But social media giant? That, for most basketball fans, would be a bit of a surprise.

College basketball’s greatest recruiter has evolved into a networking mogul since laying his hat in the tall blue grass. Calipari has over 1.1 million followers on Twitter, over 130k on Facebook, and the top-selling paid sports app on the iPhone. Not bad for a gent who admittedly can barely type on his blackberry. But what makes the boisterous coach from Kentucky’s meteoric ascent in the pantheons of social media is not how he’s doing it, but what he’s doing with it. Calipari’s web of followers have been leveraged to raise awareness and funding for multiple charities and philanthropic causes. And he continues to grow his base, adding China into the mix which is sure to bolster those numbers even further.

This is just another worthy example of how even the most unlikely of characters can translate their personal brand and presence onto the web to do good for others. What will you do with your network?

Check out more about what Coach Cal is doing here: http://www.nytimes.com/2010/03/24/sports/ncaabasketball/24calipari.html?ref=sports

All my best,

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Jay Kubassek

How Social Media has changed Philanthropy.

This past December I received an email from a desperate mother whose daughter was attending Wheaton College on scholarship. She wrote to me, after a series of extremely unfortunate events destroyed the entire investment portfolio of the family that was personally providing the scholarship for her daughter. Tuition was now due, and her daughter would be sent home if the balance wasn’t paid immediately.

A quick post on my blog, and a couple of tweets later resulted in over $18,000 raised…in less than 12 hours! This was a powerful example of the leverage Twitter and Facebook provide us to connect and serve a cause.

I remember perusing Twitter the day of the Haitian earthquake. As soon as the news broke, people began Tweeting the latest developments. Within hours, Tweets were reporting prospective death tolls in the vicinity of 100,000 people. The AP and Times estimates were far more conservative at that point, but as we now know, the final toll was more than 200,000. On the tail of the death toll figures came the seemingly endless Tweets about how to donate $10 via text message to the Red Cross. In rapid succession Twitter provided: awareness of the event, a more accurate forecast of the destruction than the most major news organizations, and provided a simple way to directly aid the relief effort. Twitter, a relatively infant technology, was responsible for not only informing, but also then supporting the most immediate philanthropic response to a natural disaster. The outpouring of hundreds of thousands of dollars to the stricken people of Haiti could be directly attributed to the success of both Twitter and Facebook providing immediate awareness.

This is just one sterling example at how social media devices have become an undoubtedly effective philanthropic platform. Of course, nothing comes without it’s negative wares as well. George Packer, a foreign correspondent for the New Yorker, recently posted a scathing blog riposte to David Carr’s piece in the New York Times about why Twitter will endure. As Packer says, “…most people are already drowning in information, and [perhaps the last thing] we need is a never-ending, trivial-data stream to suck us under.” However through a different lens, Twitter is a site that instantly facilitates generous donations through viral fundraising. Sounds like a very welcome, even benevolent invention. It all depends on it’s use of course.

Even prior to Twitter’s explosion in ubiquity social networking sites have been revolutionizing the way people support worthy causes.
Sites like: Kickstarter.org, DoSomething.org, Kiva.org, Kivafriends.org, and DonorsChoose.org—have long fostered a much more interactive method of giving. A method that has done more than most admit to reinvent the blind donation and status-craving styles of philanthropy. The old model kept the effects of one’s donations vague; satisfaction coming only by assuring yourself that you were a generous person. Social media platforms have revolutionized the model. Charities now rely (and are held accountable for that matter) on specific goals and tangible results. Sites like Kickstarter.com, a funding platform for artists, journalists, musicians and the like, enabled people to promote and fund a documentary exposing Uganda’s recruitment of child soldiers, or a goofy TV pilot that looks promising with just the click of a mouse. DoSomething.org, who’ve partnered with MySpace and Facebook as well, allow people to fund and interact directly with teachers and students in under-funded urban school systems. The donor can simply pick out the particular student or teacher they want to support, and keep in touch with them, measuring the effect of their donation directly, while learning about a specific school system and creating a vested interest.

By aligning themselves with social media platforms people visit regularly, charities are exponentially increasing their visibility, and are more likely to engage with people, especially young people. Unlike those old Sally Struthers commercials on TV (you know exactly which ones I’m talking about), which were non-interactive and quickly followed by other attention-diverting commercials and programs, charities broadcast on Facebook and MySpace endure. That is, the pitch doesn’t disappear after 30 seconds.

It’s always been my thought that — to change the results, one must first change the process. Social Media, as a platform and communication phenomenon, has fundamentally brought change to the philanthropic process and landscape in ways still far from reaching their true potential. Moreover, it’s shown just how powerful a global community of like-minded people can be when gathered around a worthy cause.

How will you get involved?

All my best,

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Jay Kubassek

The New “Black Gold”

I have often said that the Internet is now the world’s most lucrative commodity. 1.5 billion (and growing) web users have turned the Internet into a modern alchemist. Each day, the web swallows another method of everyday commerce and turns it into a golden opportunity for business. Whether it’s books, contact lenses or movie tickets; everyday something moves online.

As we move further into this next decade, who and how Internet access is expanded, monetized and regulated will be of paramount importance to the world’s economic health. At the center of this evolution is bandwith, the “Black Gold” of the Internet age. Simply defined as the capacity to move information through a given channel; bandwith is hot becoming a growing source of contention as both private and government business representatives weigh in about the future of this scarce, but essential commodity.

What does this mean for the Internet entrepreneur? Well, definitely a few things. One, the global expansion of the Internet access is clearly without a plateau in sight. Two, the global expansion of Internet commerce is clearly without a plateau in sight. Will high powered servers supplant oil tankers as the treasure chests of global wealth? Unless we start running our laptops on crude oil, it sure looks like it.

Check out more information here: http://www.time.com/time/specials/packages/article/0,28804,1971133_1971110_1971125,00.html

All my best,

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Jay Kubassek

An Update From Jessica at Wheaton…

Towards the end of last year, we took on the challenge of helping out a very special person stay in school through the rest of the year… you can read the post here: “Do Something For Someone Today, With The KNOWING That There Is No Possible Way For Them To Repay You”

Here is an update from Jessica, made my day! I hope you enjoy it:)

Hi Jay,

I just wanted to take the time, now that there is a small pause in my hectic schedule, to thank you once again for everything you did for me a few months ago. It was just amazing how you got so many people to pitch in and help me out with the continuation of my education…it was truly one of the hugest if not the hugest blessing I have ever received! I am so grateful for the time I got this semester furthering my studies here at Wheaton College, and interestingly enough, along the way I have gotten facebook messages and emails from random strangers asking me if I was a real person and if you really helped me, and if I had anything good to say about CarbonCopyPRO. And boy did I ever! I told them that the company is chock-full of people who really have a heart for helping others. It was amazing to see the people who gave donations as low as $10, especially when my mum told me that she knew personally that a few of them just didn’t have a cent more to give. That really touched me, as people I have never met felt led to give me what they couldn’t even provide for themselves..what a wonderful, amazing feeling!

I wanted to let you know, Jay, that I believe all your work and effort to get me back to school is paying off. I am as busy as ever before, and loving it. I have come to value my education so much more, and the experience of having been given a free education has just made me want to do the same for others in worse situations than I was. I am currently taking a class called Economic Development and Growth, and though it may sound like a bore it has really opened my eyes to the evils of this world and the many different ways in which people suffer from absolute poverty, exploitation, and disease, and how trapped they are in their circumstances. I am so eager to learn more about topics such as these so I can figure out effective ways of helping these people. Strangely enough, my Spanish Conversation class deals with issues very similar to my Development class, so I am constantly thinking of what we can all do to help – bilingually haha.

I am also working part time at an on-campus cafe, and recently got promoted to be a student manager there. It’s a fun job, but working 12 hours a week with a full course load can be trying sometimes, especially when your boss keeps making long lists of new things to do each week that completely contradict tasks of prior weeks…oh the joys of working minimum wage at a college lol!

Outside of academics and work, I am the leader of a small Bible study group with a few of my friends on campus. We just get together and talk about issues we have been dealing with on a weekly basis, and we try to be there for each other and work on our accountability and encourage the growth of each other’s spirituality. It’s really interesting because it was started last year by one of my girlfriends, but as she graduated last year I decided to step up and lead. The interesting part is that I am now the only girl in the group with a bunch of guys, so sometimes I feel like we meet so I can give them girl advice hahaha!

With finals and a ton of projects, research papers and presentations coming up around the corner, I wanted to be sure to remind you of how grateful I am to you and all the people who gave me the chance to be so stressed out (before I wasn’t sure how I grateful I really was anymore – haha). This summer I plan on taking a Sales and Marketing course for my major and doing a type of work-study program, but I am currently trying to see if credits will transfer and whether I can get a work permit. For the fall, I am praying to God that He will once again put it on someone’s heart to help me as He has 4 times in a row now. I know that my testimony is huge and there is so much in store for my life and I can’t wait to see what it all is, but I am so grateful that I have had opportunities along the way such as this gift you have given me that have helped to mold me and remind me that I am loved, I am significant, but I am definitely not in control.

I hope this message finds you well, Jay, and I give you permission to post it on your website if you want, so that each donor may receive his/her thanks and hear what their kindness has done in my life.

God bless you always,

Jessica Phillibert

Addition by Subtraction

We are often conditioned to believe that the resolution, betterment or answer for a given problem is rooted in the addition of something. We search, seek and toil for the missing ingredient; that one thing that we need to have, or have more of ⎯ to achieve our goals or happiness.

Now, it could be argued that this is natural considering the overwhelming culture of consumerism, especially in the developed world. Everyday advertisements of every variety bombard us with messages about how much we need to have this given item, and no other. We are sold on the dream that all of our inner struggles, strife or disappointments will be absolved for only $19.95 plus shipping!

None of us are immune from this pattern of belief. (I personally have gone haywire with camera accessories lately, but hey I’ve got a little girl now!) However, I would argue that whether it be your business or your personal life, it’s often what you remove from the equation that makes the big difference. Outsourcing, minimizing, leverage, organization ⎯ each of these actions requires you to discard something in an effort to gain something else.

The next time your evaluating how to better your business, your time management or your relationships with your spouse or child, consider first what you could remove from the situation before you look to add anything.

“Everything should be as simple as possible, but not simpler…” Albert Einstein

All my Best,

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Jay Kubassek