Social Media Giving Day

Social Media Giving Day is an online holiday created by St. Louis-based technology and social philanthropy organization Givver.com . Givver.com was beta tested with the Obama for America campaign in 2012.[1] Givver spent 5 months working with elected officials around the country, charitable organizations and social media influencers to promote the day as a way to use social media for social good and to leverage social media as a means to #give to their favorite charity or cause. Governors and Mayors around America declared July 15th "Social Media Giving Day". The online holiday was trail-blazed by founder of Givver Chris Sommers [2] The inaugural celebration of Social Media Giving Day occurred on July 15, 2013 [3] This day was marked as the first social media giving day in the U.S. July 15th is also the anniversary date of the public launch of Twitter in 2006.

Mayoral and Gubernatorial Declarations

Mayoral and gubernatorial declarations establishing July 15 as Social Media Giving Day have been made by Governor Jay Nixon (Missouri), Mayor John Sorey (Naples, FL), Mayor Buddy Dyer (Orlando, FL), Mayor Nancy McFarlane (Raleigh, NC), Mayor Mark Mallory (Cincinnati, OH), Mayor Tom Barrett (politician) (Milwaukee, WI),[4] Mayor Jacques Roy (mayor) (Alexandria, LA), Mayor Sam Kooiker (Rapid City, SD), Mayor Francis Slay (St. Louis, MO), Mayor Dan Snarr (Murray, UT) and the entire City Council in Pittsburgh, PA.

Media Coverage

The inaugural Social Media Giving Day was covered in Forbes,[5][6] Techli,[7] the St. Louis Business Journal,[8] Social Media Explorer,[9] Fox 2 St. Louis[10] and various other national and local news outlets.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Tuesday, March 15, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.