Posts Tagged ‘Flash mob’

Join the NCVS Cause Mob!

Friday, June 25th, 2010

by Jared Paul, Founder, A Good Idea

NCVS “Volunteering is…” Cause Mob
June 30th, 2010
New York City
53rd Street between 6th & 7th
Gather at 12:50p.m.
Flash Mob at 1:00 – 1:20 p.m.

My name is Jared Paul and I’m the founder of a San Francisco nonprofit called A Good Idea (AGI).

For the past two years, AGI has served as a vehicle for positive social change ideas that connect people in need with people who want to help in our community.

Many of the ways that we connect people is through creative service events that empower and inspire individuals to get involved in a way that matters to them.

With service and volunteerism being at the very core of AGI, I believe a conference such as the 2010 National Conference on Volunteering & Service, where volunteers and nonprofits alike come together to learn about effective best practices in social service and to connect with one another is a wonderful and much needed event for our sector.

Upon hearing about the conference, I started thinking about creative “Goods Ideas” that AGI could host that would shake things up a bit in NYC.

I reached out to my friend and co-founder of Open Action, John Brennan, to gauge his interest in putting together a flash mob, or more appropriately for this conference, a cause mob.

If you aren’t familiar with a flash mob, it is when a large group of people assemble suddenly in a public place, perform an unusual and pointless act for a brief time, and then quickly disperse.

They’ve been done in , on the , and then there’s the .

While flash mobs are usually “pointless”, cause mobs are exactly the opposite.

A cause mob still provides the space for people to come together for an unusual event, but unlike the flash mob, these events have a point and as the name suggests, usually support a cause.

Having hosted successful similar events in San Francisco such as our Intentional Acts of Kindness event, where volunteers come together to simply do nice things for random strangers, I believe NYC and this conference are a perfect setting for a cause mob.

So after doing some brainstorming with John and members of our respective teams, we’ve decided to host our own cause mob/freeze out at the official end of the conference on Wednesday, June 30th.

On Tuesday and Wednesday during the conference, you will see a few folks wearing white t-shirts with “Volunteering is ______” written on the shirts.

Next to the word “is” will be a list of adjectives that represent our feelings about volunteering.

To me, volunteering is “sexy”, “smart”, and “fun”…but what does volunteering mean to you?

Well, you’ll have a chance to tell the world as we’ll be handing out sheets of paper with the “Volunteering is ______” written on it and each participant will fill in the blank with their own adjective.

Then, from 1:00 – 1:20p.m. on Wednesday, June 30th, we’ll all come together and freeze, holding up our signs for people to read.

We hope everyone joins us for what should be a fun, unique event in the name of volunteerism!

Click on the map below to enlarge it and see where we’ll be.

Can A Spontaneous Mob of Strangers Change The World?

Tuesday, April 13th, 2010

If the power of the internet is enough to persuade , I wonder if it could mobilize people to make a spontaneous and meaningful difference.

I am intrigued by the current flash mob trend where people, who have never met, come together for an impromptu dance, prank, stunt or performance.

(You may remember hearing about Improv Everywhere’s flash mob where .)

Out of the flash mob culture, Carrotmob was born, a network of consumers working together to reward businesses that make the most socially responsible decisions.

In the first ever Carrotmob event, a liquor store agreed to invest in upgrades that made their store more energy-efficient.

To reward their efforts, hundreds of Carrotmobbers showed up at once to support the winning store.

The line of carrot mobbers extended out the door and around the corner.  (And consequently attracted other shoppers.)

Last weekend, my colleague Catherine participated in a local crop mob.

A crop mob is sometimes a group of young, landless, and wannabe farmers and sometimes  experienced farmers and gardeners, who organize help sustaining small, organic farms on the fly.

The crop mobbers believe that working together builds and empowers communities.

It sounds a lot like a community volunteer project, right?

In her recent post called Mobbin‘, Marcia Stepanek of Cause Global asked if Cause Mobs are next.

I’m interested in the idea of Cause Mobs, but also a little conflicted.

On one hand, I am intrigued.

It could be phenomenally inspiring to those participating, and those who witness, to see hundreds or thousands of people spontaneously contribute to the social good.

At the same time, the seasoned volunteer manager in me furrows her brow and skips right to the details of implementation.

“How can we make sure the Cause Mob meets a real, unmet need?” my inner volunteer manager asks skeptically?

“How will we know we if we are going to have too many or too few Cause Mobbers?”

“What if too many or too few makes the project ineffective, or worse, what if too much or too little participation causes the project fail?”

[My inner volunteer manager can be a bit of  a curmudgeon.]

Assuming the details could be worked out, what types of Cause Mobs might work?

If we organized a Cause Mob food drive could we set a record for the largest amount of food collected in the shortest period of time?

Could we create a park out of a reclaimed brown field in a single afternoon?

What ideas do you have?

How would you ask a spontaneously assembled crowd of strangers to change the world?