I have been amazed at the response of the twitter community to the TweetsGiving campaign. The firehose of gratitude shared through the #tweetsgiving tag during those 48 hours was overwhelming. Now that TweetsGiving 2008 is over (and we’ve met our goal!!) I wanted to share some data about our efforts. This year during TweetsGiving…
- ~3,000 gratitude tweets were posted including the tweetsgiving tag. search.twitter.com only lets you go back 100 pages so that’s an estimate, but check out the awesome wordle visualization of these gratitude tweets below.
TweetsGiving was one of the top trending terms over the 48 hours of the campaign. The screenshot below from twitscoop gives a sense of the campaign as it spread in real time. Note the rise in activity in the first and last hours as word initially got out and as urgency built to help us reach the goal by the deadline.
- $11,021 were raised in 364 donations
- The TweetsGiving site had 15,830 Total Pageviews from 7,563 Unique Visitors in 101 different countries.

- TweetsGiving received over 100 press and blogger mentions (currently 107).
I had an amazing time putting together the TweetsGiving campaign with Stacey and the rest of our team. Thank you Stacey, Dave and Carrie, Matt, Vince, and Sarah. Thanks to Tori, Brian, and Mari for tweeting up a storm with us and feeling empowered to make this event their own. I can’t express my appreciation enough for everyone who tweeted thanks, donated, blogged, shared, or reflected with us to help make this Thanksgiving truly amazing.




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Judy 12.02.08 at 10:19 am
Yay! Kol ha’kavod (all the respect) for an amazing campaign!
frank 12.02.08 at 11:51 pm
The “TweetsGiving” idea and web site rocked! I was amazed by the idea and the execution! Using Twitter to fundraise like this is such a cool concept that opens new doors and gives nonprofits another avenue to be creative online.
Thanks for pulling together some stats and info to show the impact from the #’s standpoint.
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http://twitter.com/franswaa
Beth Kanter 12.03.08 at 8:45 am
This is a great compilation of statistics! What would be really valuable is social networking analysis of the flow of your donations — who were the influencers? (Perhaps an analysis of referrals? or just a basic or basic count of direct tweets versus re-tweets) How many were new donors versus existing donors? How many degrees of separation — friend, friend of friend, friend of friend?
Also, did you do an analysis of the gifts by amount? What were the percentage of $100 plus versus $10 gifts? Average gift size?
Did you learn any qualitative insights from donors and their motivations to give? This could be done by a content analysis of the guess book or comments you’ve received or reflections.
It would also be interesting to see a description of the various components of strategy and your assessment of worked, what didn’t and what you’d do differently next time around. For example, you did an aggressive blogger outreach campaign to support the twittering?
Erin 03.17.09 at 11:00 am
Hey I saw that you posted a blog about Tweetsgiving for Epic Change and I just wanted to drop you a note to let you know about TWEETLUCK! This time we are spreading luck and asking people to donate $7.77 for St. Patrick’s Day. Check out Tweetluck.org to see the new spin on Tweetsgiving!!
Julie M 03.26.09 at 5:39 pm
I saw your post and I am looking for advice on fundraising. I do a lot of volunteering / fundraising and asking for money comes along with it many times. This gets old and I HATE asking for money and my family and friends are probably sick of it, too. I am going on a mission trip w/ my church in June and I was looking to ask for donations. I put the idea on hold because of the economy. Is there a good way to do this on Twitter? Please e-mail me with ideas!! Thanks!!! Keep up the good work!!
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