| EcoGeek of the Week: Jonathon Colman |
| Written by Hank Green | ||
| Tuesday, 31 July 2007 | ||
![]() Jonathon D. Colman is the Senior Manager of Digital Marketing at The Nature Conservancy. As such, it's kinda his job to understand the wild ways of the internet and then to harness it's raw power for the forces of awesome. Of course, The Nature Conservancy is one of the big players in the "International Alliance for Awesomeness." He'll be giving us his take on the web, digital media, and saving this world. We're excited to have Jonathon as this week's EcoGeek of the Week. EG: OK...lets get this out of the way...briefly, what do you actually do... JDC: Sure thing! As you know, the mission of The Nature Conservancy is to preserve the plants, animals and natural communities that represent the diversity of life on Earth by protecting the lands and waters they need to survive. So I help the Conservancy accomplish
that vision by leading the strategic management, marketing, and promotion
of our flagship web site, www.nature.org. That means that I’ve got my fingers
in a number of cookie jars every day: web development, web traffic recording
and analytics, blog and online community outreach, search engine optimization,
online ad placements, and posting our stories to online social networks
and other “web 2.0” sites. Not to mention organizing a redesign
of our web site, developing an RFP for a new web content management
system, implementing a new web analytics system, and chatting with my
coworkers about how great LOST and Battlestar Galactica
are. Now, if you’re like me –
and I am – then you’re a geek and would love all that stuff.
So I tend to think of my job as just a way of being paid to have fun
and work with the best and brightest.
EG: I've seen some resistance among big environmental organizations
to embracing online media. Do you run into that at The Nature Conservancy,
and, if so, how do you deal with it?
JDC: I think that we face similar challenges with online media as many other organizations: lots of great ideas and very little staff and budget. The way we’ve overcome this hurdle is to invest our efforts where they’ll have the biggest bang for the buck (like bidding on search engine keywords using Google AdWords) as well as using all of the great, free tools and networks that are now available, like Google Analytics, Google Video, Care2, and Gather.com. We’ve also found a great partner in the Public Radio Exchange, which produces our weekly Nature Stories podcast. I think that nonprofits
have been stymied by online communities, what they’re for, how to
build them, and how to engage them. Our guiding philosophy here
is to engage people where they’re already being active rather than
spending time in R&D building our own version of things that already
exist. For example, rather than building our own photo-sharing
application, the Conservancy ran a photo contest
on Flickr.
Rather than build our own GIS mapping system, we put together a Google Maps mashup with the locations of our nature preserves. Why try to reinvent the wheel
when a best-in-class web presence or tool already exists and has a huge
audience of millions of people? We’d much rather leverage the
expertise of existing communities to find new supporters and engage
our existing audiences with fun, exciting opportunities. A lot of nonprofits invest
heavily in program work – after all, that’s what the donations are
supposed to be supporting, right? And that’s what gets you a four-star rating
on Charity Navigator.
So having a nifty, helpful web site that establishes a strong, trustworthy,
credible brand is sometimes seen as an afterthought. What we’ve found at the Conservancy,
however, is that the web can bring in new supporters, new ideas and
resources for project work, and new passion and emotional investment
from existing members. Leveraging the strength of your offline,
“bricks-and-mortar” brand can help you reach new audiences online. The environmental movement isn’t suffering for falling behind; we’re embracing the online world and are catching up quickly. Look at the success of TreeHugger. Look at the Google Trends curve for searches on “global warming”. Look at how EcoGeek is getting dugg every few minutes. I’d say that green is bringing sexy back in a pretty big way. EG: We at EcoGeek love readers of sites like Digg and Reddit and
Slashdot. Has TNC had success with social news? We see these emerging web sites
and news venues as being important because they dictate, for a growing
amount of people, how news and information are now being discovered
online. There are a lot of good, engaging stories that end up
on the cutting room floor of the daily newspaper and nightly TV news,
even though they’re worthy of broadcast, solely for lack of space,
right? Well, social news networks don’t have to plan their layout
in picas, charge for home delivery, and never run out of space for breaking
news. And because they’re fairly democratic, our organization
has just as much chance at engaging people with our news and stories
as does anyone else. As far as demographics, my
sense of the folks using social media and “web 2.0” sites is that
they’re very advanced in their grasp of technology and the online
world. They have access to many sources of information and are
used to looking at multiple perspectives of issues. They’re
also not afraid to speak their minds where they see fault – or inspiration!
– and, indeed, expect to be able to share their thoughts directly
with the entities making the news. Me, I don’t want to play
it safe and only talk just to the folks who I know are going to agree
with my ideas about the importance of conservation… that’s way too
easy and it leads only to a lack of growth. I want to talk with
the ones who are skeptical, who aren’t so sure of the science, who
don’t believe everything that they’re told. Ultimately, if
I can help them to convince themselves to support the environment, then
they’ll be much more passionate about it and motivated to make a real
change than if I just spam them with e-mail day after day. In
reality, they’ll do all of the hard work of conversion; I’m just
helping them by making resources and information available. I love meeting new people on these networks and finding out what they’re interested in, so EcoGeek readers, please send me your connection requests! The bottom line is that The
Nature Conservancy is an organization that gets things done…or as
one of my colleagues often states, “Conservation plus adrenaline equals
100% job satisfaction!” To this end, the Conservancy
recently launched a carbon footprint
calculator to help
our visitors determine their impact on the climate. Our web application
helps you see that even little changes in our daily routines can make
a big difference when everyone works together. EcoGeek of the Week is a syndicated column from EcoGeek.org. If you would like to syndicate the column, or know an EcoGeek that proffiling, email our editor at This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it
Comments
(3)
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written by Joy Asato , August 01, 2007
TNC rocks
written by Marilyn Terrell , August 02, 2007
Colman's too modest. He didn't even mention TNC's huge victory in the Adirondacks recently, where they managed to buy the last big piece of privately owned timberland and save it for all time:
http://intelligenttravel.typep...html#more Congrats TNC, and thanks EcoGeek for a worthy interview. Keep 'em coming!
wmwebtr ödüllü seo yarışması
written by wmwebtr ödüllü seo yarismasi , December 25, 2007
thanks a lot..
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You've definitely picked an outstanding EcoGeek of the Week this week. As a former colleague of his, I've seen this amazing guy in action! Jonathon knows his stuff and does an excellent job of explaining web-related anything to the EcoGeek wannabes of the world. Not only is he an uber-EcoGeek, but also a genuinely compassionate, altruistic and caring human being. Damn funny as well!
-Joy