Kiva Gets it Right

Yesterday I gave an example about how one NGO got it all wrong in the social media space. Today I’ve got an example of a group that has it 95% correct. Kiva.org is a micro-finance institution that partners individual donors from around the world (people like you and me) with localized lending institutions who provide small loans to people in developing countries that want to take out small loans (usually less than $2,000). Their general UI and the service that their site provides is an exceptional example of how to make social media also offer utility.

Kiva.org

Now Kiva is partnering with Facebook and a start-up group called Involver to run a marketing campaign targeted towards spurring interest and attracting new lenders.

kiva involver

Involver does this by distributing what is essentially a widget that runs a commercial about Kiva and by showing footage of the people who are actually benefiting from these loans. There’s also a buttons to “SignUp”, “Lend”, or to “Invite” your friends and acquaintances. Most of these options take you off Facebook to Kiva, which is a shame. They should have wrapped this tool around an API that allows you to sign up to Kiva with your existing Facebook account. That would result in a higher viewer to new member conversion rate and would have been a great example of how to leverage Facebook’s new data portability platform.

Regardless, this is a great move by Kiva.org and a smart move to use the dominance of Facebook to serve their altruistic motives.

Comments
One Response to “Kiva Gets it Right”
  1. jouni says:

    Cool review. I do volunteer work (design and software development) for a Latin America focused charity and have been looking at using facebook recently.

    I think Involver looks promising, but there is no information about their pricing. Also, aside from tracking, and links from within the Flash video, wouldn’t I be able to do the same things with simply by creating a facebook group and adding video to it?

    You mention facebook data portability and a new API to reduce new windows and aiding conversion – sounds good, how does this work in technical terms? any links?

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