MRG Foundation Justice Within Reach party

Saturday, April 14th, 2012

The McKenzie River Gathering Foundation is a wonderful Oregon funder that focuses on racial and economic justice, peace, environmental protection, and LGBTQ rights. Each year they have a fundraiser party, and it’s always quite a shindig. This year performers include Spoken Word artist Toni Hill and Afro-Cuban musician Virginia Lopez. More info here.

This year Blue Mouse Monkey is sponsoring a table of ten. The party’s at the Ambridge this Saturday April 21st, starting at 7:00. Get your ticket here and support an amazing local foundation. See you there!

The 2012 eNonprofit Benchmarks Study is out

Thursday, April 12th, 2012

This study, by M&R Research Labs and NTEN, is beautifully organized and elegantly laid out. It’s packed with the latest trends in online messaging, fundraising, advocacy, mobile communications, and social media. AND, IT’S FREE! Download the 2012 eNonprofit Benchmarks Study.

Some of the most interesting results include:

  • There was a 19% increase in online revenue from 2010 to 2011, driven almost entirely by a 20% increase in the number of gifts (average gifts held steady).
  • Advocacy response rates increased by a whopping 28% in the same time period.
  • Although one-time gifts are still the mainstay of nonprofit fundraising, monthly giving grew faster than one-time giving.
  • Facebook fan pages grew by 70% in 2011!

Points of View website launched

Wednesday, February 1st, 2012

nwhf_points_of_viewThe Northwest Health Foundation wanted a new website to support their work in public policy advocacy. Built on the concept of a video magazine, each issue of Points of View covers a topic germane to the work of the foundation, with a short introduction and a collection of videos that reflect the point of view of the NWHF, along with the many points of view represented by their diverse community partners.

A new face for The Conversation

Wednesday, January 11th, 2012

nwhf_conversation_blogFormerly the Community Health Priorities project, this site has been given a fresh new look as it has morphed into The Conversation, the blog of the Northwest Health Foundation. The blog encourages Oregonians to participate in surveys, share feedback, read news, peruse resources, and apply for grants. Since its inception 2008, participation has climbed steadily, and the site returns data that the Northwest Health Foundation can bring to the state legislature.

Parts Per Million website launched

Saturday, December 17th, 2011

Now it’s time to present a personal project! Parts Per Million is a novel about a group of Portland environmental and media activists. I’ve been working on it for a decade, finished it this year, and am in the process of seeking agent representation. Check out the site for photo galleries, excerpts, illustrations by Ryan Alexander-Tanner, and more.

The science and art of democratizing data

Saturday, March 19th, 2011

Data-visualization virtuosos Fernanda Viegas and Martin Wattenberg create a hybrid “artform” (for lack of a more inclusive term) out of data sets. Straddling the realms of science, design, art, and exploration, these graphics reveal interesting patterns in data.

“Data visualization has historically been accessible only to the elite in academia, business, and government. But in recent years web-based visualizations–ranging from political art projects to news stories–have reached audiences of millions. Unfortunately, while lay users can view many sophisticated visualizations, they have few ways to create them.

To “democratize” visualization, and experiment with new collaborative techniques, we built Many Eyes, a web site where people may upload their own data, create interactive visualizations, and carry on conversations. The goal is to foster a social style of data analysis in which visualizations serve not only as a discovery tool for individuals but also as a means to spur discussion and collaboration.”

Carbon footprint of a Big Mac, by Tim Fiddaman

Carbon footprint of a Big Mac, by Tim Fiddaman

Visualizing data that isn’t normally visualized, or is presented in a new way, tells us different stories about the world. From a kid counting all the socks in his household, to trends in editing wikipedia, to a “social network” of the characters in the bible, Many Eyes shows us new patterns that hadn’t been noticed before.

Wattenberg and Viegas now work with Google on a project called the Big Picture Visualization Group in Cambridge, MA, with the goal of making visualizations available to regular  people via Google.

A new interface for Urban Mamas

Sunday, January 9th, 2011

urban_mamasThe Urban Mamas redesign project has been rolling out incrementally for a while now, so it seems odd to announce it as a “launch”. But looking back at how much has changed on this dynamic online community for mamas who want to share tips, advice, reviews, ideas, fun, and challenges, I see it’s time to put out the announcement. The UrbanMamas team came to us with an already successful multi-page blog that needed its content restructured and a design facelift. A combination of owner- and user-generated content made for some interesting challenges as we shuffled the information around in this heavily-trafficked site. The new design reflects the hip mamas style of the site owners.

TOFCO Website Launched

Saturday, December 11th, 2010

tofco-2The Tobacco Free Coalition of Oregon (TOFCO) is revitalizing anti-tobacco advocacy in Oregon through a grassroots movement and outreach to communities most impacted by the harmful effects of tobacco use. Blue Mouse Monkey is proud to have worked with TOFCO to create a website that acts like a virtual staff member. The site provides relevant information to community advocates and decision makers, builds the tobacco-free movement support base, increases efficiency, and elevates TOFCO’s presence in the community at large.

Spirit Mountain Community Fund website launched

Friday, October 8th, 2010

smcfThe Spirit Mountain Community Fund is the philanthropic arm of the Confederated Tribes of the Grand Ronde, and is one of Oregon’s largest funders of non-profits. Their old website confused grant applicants, and Fund staff struggled with poorly constructed applications. Additionally, the Tribe’s distinctive spirit, its achievements, and its leadership role in social change in Oregon were obscured. To top it off, staff members had only minimal control over the content.

Blue Mouse Monkey tackled these problems with a complete reorganization and rewriting of content, total visual redesign, and a new, easy-to-use CMS (Content Management System). As one of the focus group participants said, “I’ve started the application process  twice before, and each time I gave up because I got so confused. You’ve laid it out all really clearly and I finally understand what to do!”

We were thrilled to work with SMCF, and help them help so many of Oregon’s non-profits do the great work they do.

Summer of Work

Sunday, July 11th, 2010

Why the 2 months of silence? Blue Mouse Monkey has been very busy with several new projects, and we are thrilled to be working with a collection of clients in the world of funders and non-profits.

nsfI’ve also been invited by the National Science Foundation to be participate in a panel to choose the winning proposal for a major online resource in Ethics in Science, Engineering, and Mathematics. It’s an honor to be invited, and it’s fascinating to read these proposals for such a ambitious and worthy project. However, the proposals are long, dense, and detailed, and reading them with the closeness required to make an informed comparison is time-consuming . . . but more about that later. For this post I wanted to write about our current website projects:

otrec_logo_webOTREC, the Oregon Transportation Research and Education Consortium, is one of the national UTCs (I didn’t know what that meant before this either). As such they disburse federal dollars to research projects in transportation at four Oregon Universities. OTREC’s themes (each UTC is different) are 1. Innovations in Sustainable Transportation through Advanced Technology, 2. Integration of Land Use and Transportation, and 3. Healthy Communities. What’s not to love?

The new Blue Mouse Monkey OTREC website will be launched in early September.

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spiritmountain1The Spirit Mountain Community Fund is the philanthropic arm of the Confederated Tribes of the Grande Ronde. The fund gives millions from the Tribe’s casino to Oregon non-profits. They also operate a fellowship program to send Native American youth to serve with Congressional Offices in Washington, D.C., and a tribal grant program to benefit development projects in other Oregon tribes.

Here’s something I didn’t know till I met the good folks at SMCF: “The Tribe” as it’s known is made up of the descendants of the many Oregon tribes that lived in the Willamette Valley and the Columbia Gorge until they were evicted by the US government in the winter of 1857. They were forcibly marched to a reservation in a move dubbed Oregon’s Trail of Tears. Adding insult to injury, the tribe lost its Federal recognition in 1954 and the reservation was reduced to 7½ acres. The tribe’s status was restored in 1983. Since then the Tribe has gotten back on its feet through an ambitious economic development program to achieve self-sufficiency.

The Confederated Tribes of Grand Ronde through the Spirit Mountain Community Fund fulfills their Native tradition of potlatch, a ceremony at which good fortune is distributed. The Spirit Mountain Community Fund’s focus is to improve the quality of life in Northwest Oregon through community investments that provide lasting benefits consistent with the Tribe’s culture and values.”

Coming from New Zealand where post-colonial issues are more top-of-mind with the general population than here, it’s been really interesting for me to meet folks from the Tribe and come to understand something about the journey they have taken as a people and a culture in order to adapt to circumstances that were forced upon them.

The new Blue Mouse Monkey Spirit Mountain Community Fund website will be launched in late September.

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playwrite_logo_largePlayWrite, Inc, is a Portland organization that uses “the power of performance in art to transform the lives of youth at the edge” They go into schools, particularly under-served schools, and do a two-week residency that brings young people together with coaches from the Portland performing arts community. Students work one-on-one with coaches, learning and honing the tools for creating a play.

“Each play in its entirety springs solely from the mind, feelings and heart of the young writer. At the end of the workshop, professional actors perform a staged reading of the plays before a live audience. This performance – the culmination of three weeks’ work – is a collaborative event involving author, actors and audience. The young writers glow with well-deserved pride as they witness their work being brought to life.”

The new Blue Mouse Monkey PlayWrite website, in all it’s dramatic, swirling, plum-colored glory, will roll out in late August.

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tofcoTOFCO is the Tobacco Free Coalition of Oregon, a not for profit organization that includes a coalition of businesses, organizations and individuals who advocate for programs and policies to decrease the toll of tobacco-use in Oregon. The new Blue Mouse Monkey version of their website, launching in October, will be a one-stop shop for anyone looking for information about tobacco use in Oregon, including science, policy, and community information, as well as an examination of the ironies inherent in linking tobacco use with being cool.

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We’re excited to be working with these diverse organizations to help them frame their issues, disseminate their value, and strengthen their voice in the community!