Social Media and (Counter) Terrorist Finance: A Fund-Raising and Disruption Tool

2018 ◽  
Vol 42 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 178-205 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tom Keatinge ◽  
Florence Keen
2020 ◽  
Vol 3 (2) ◽  
pp. 130-137
Author(s):  
Egie E. Yusadhi ◽  
Alvanov Zpalanzani Mansoor

The cases of protecting endangered animals around the world are difficult to solve. Lack of public awareness of the survival of these animals become one of the contributing factors. Given the importance of the survival of these animals, World Wildlife Fund as a global fund-raising agency invitesDanish and turkey advertising agencies to create a social campaign where they invited millennials to donate their money to help the survival of endangered animals and comes up with #LastSelfie. It is social media based campaign using Snapchat which then integrated with other social media. This campaign generated 40,000 tweets in a week and meets donation goal in just three days. This is a descriptive explanative research which itspurpose is to find out whether #LastSelfie campaign through breaking the structure of campaign materials and depict its relationship with the aim of campaign based on copywriting and target audience Engagement Process in social media theory. Through the application of this concept which encompasses various aspects of the campaign, at the end of this writing, the authors concludes that #LastSelfie campaign corresponds to the process sequence of Engagement in social media — consuming, curation, creation, collaboration, through meticulous campaign naming, copywriting strategy, sharing among peers, and collaborative donation to help preserve endangered animals.


2020 ◽  
Vol 4 (2) ◽  
pp. 28-37
Author(s):  
Girish G P ◽  
Seeboli Ghosh

Digital visibility through social media marketing has played a colossal role in the realm of entrepreneurship and fund-raising. Strong positive dynamics between social media marketing and crowd-funding has the impending to decipher demand-supply gap of fundraising at the pre-seed stage. In this study, we explore the relationship between usage of social media and awareness of crowd-funding as a viable option for raising pre-seed capital in an emerging market of India which has witnessed the exponential growth of start-up companies and entrepreneurship in the past few years. The results of the study suggest that awareness of different options of crowdfunding for raising pre-seed capital is strongly correlated with the effective usage of social media platforms by the organizations. From an organization’s perspective, it has been found that effective use of Social Media platforms increases with the duration involved in social media platforms. The results of the study give a perspective for all entrepreneurs, fundraisers, and start-up companies that how digital visibility through social media marketing can unravel the problem of crowd-funding. With a growing trend of today’s youth using social media marketing worldwide, the strong dynamics between crowd-funding and social media marketing is expected to breed exponentially in terms of their contribution to the economy, wealth generation, and job creation.


Author(s):  
Kiru Pillay ◽  
Manoj Maharaj

Online advocacy is big business. Online advocacy organisations need to structure themselves along business lines for fund raising, and to strategically utilise their online and traditional resources to achieve their goals. The growing influence of civil society organisations has been fuelled largely by an increase and ubiquity of emerging technologies. There is no evidence of a detailed analysis of social media led advocacy campaigns in the literature. The global environmental justice organisation, Greenpeace is used as a case study. The rise of online social media has provided the organisation with an alternative to traditional mass media. There have been some notable successes for Greenpeace. The most recent of which has been its efforts to halt the drilling for oil in the Arctic. Equally the Greenpeace campaigns have sometimes provoked the public ire, for example in their miscalculation of the fallout over their recent Nazca plains intrusion. It is clear that to attain any level of success the organisation needs to structure itself on sound business principles and strategies.


2016 ◽  
Vol 29 (2) ◽  
pp. 60-66 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joyce Garczynski

Purpose The purpose of this study is to examine the extent to which academic libraries are using social media to fundraise, what tactics they are using to fundraise on social media and how academic libraries’ social networks are responding to their fund-raising efforts. Design/methodology/approach This research is a content analysis of 276 posts from 2015 on the Facebook, Twitter and Instagram accounts of 16 academic libraries. Findings This study found that academic libraries are just beginning to use social media for fund-raising with many adopting non-profit best practices that brought significantly more likes and shares/retweets to their accounts. Originality/value This research is one of the few systematic examinations of how libraries use social media to discuss fund-raising, and the findings suggest tactics for libraries to adopt in their fund-raising posts to generate more likes and shares/retweets.


2017 ◽  
Vol 8 (2) ◽  
pp. 161-180 ◽  
Author(s):  
Song Yang ◽  
Ron Berger

Purpose The purpose of this study is to examine the emergences of social media such as Facebook, Twitter and Instagram have changed the way human beings communicate and interact. In the past few years, this has become crucial in the context of business, especially in start-up fund raising. Access to venture capital financing is a crucial issue in the entrepreneurial finance literature. To further explore the use of social media for entrepreneurs, the authors have explored how entrepreneurs use social media for fund-raising purposes. The authors have used Application Programming Interfaces (APIs) to collect entrepreneurs’ funding data from Crunchbase and entrepreneurs’ social media data from Facebook and Twitter. The results show that social media is significant for start-ups in their success or failure in fund raising. Investing energy into utilizing online social media and exhausting these platforms consciously contributes to the financial success of start-ups. Therefore, start-ups which are popular among online fans and followers can manage to raise larger amounts of funding in the early stages. Design/methodology/approach This research relies on a wide range of quantitative data, which was obtained from three different online sources which includes Facebook, Twitter and CrunchBase. The use of a variety of internet technologies have been linked to increases in individuals’ social network diversity, which likely increases access to social capital at the individual level (Hampton and Wellman, 2003). The dataset was retrieved by using APIs, which enables the collection of novel metrics, from various sources that provide a well-structured dataset (Priem and Hemminger, 2010). Hypotheses were tested on a longitudinal dataset from 2000 to 2013, comprising general and investment data and social media metrics of start-ups. First, a sample from the database was selected to ensure data availability and reliability. After sampling, all the selected companies’ Twitter and Facebook activities were observed and metrics were analysed. SPSS was used to conduct correlation and regression analyses. Findings This study analysed whether start-ups’ social media convention is able to influence investors’ choices, especially the amount of total funding given. The paper showed that innovative start-up companies were able to benefit from communicating on social media platforms. Start-ups, which were using Facebook and Twitter effectively, focusing on valuable social media metrics, received larger amount of funding in total. Furthermore, it was observed that as their business grew, they intended to put more effort into online social networking. It confirmed the idea that businesses are using social media consciously. Originality/value This is the only paper that the authors could find that examines the relationship between fundraising and activity on social networks.


ASHA Leader ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 20 (7) ◽  
Author(s):  
Vicki Clarke
Keyword(s):  

ASHA Leader ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 18 (5) ◽  

As professionals who recognize and value the power and important of communications, audiologists and speech-language pathologists are perfectly positioned to leverage social media for public relations.


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