Check out the Nonprofit Data Scorecard here.

We aim to change the culture of nonprofit data. To that end, we hope that the map we’ve created will kick off a conversation about the importance of quality, timely and transparent nonprofit record-keeping. After all, we can’t know much about today’s nonprofit landscape without a comprehensive public record.

We’re presenting the Nonprofit Data Scorecard to the public openly and for free because we think it can do good things for the nonprofit community at large. If you’re a journalist or blogger, you might see the map as a springboard for telling the story of transparency in government. If you’re a state government employee, maybe you’ll better understand how your state’s record-keeping stacks up against the rest of the nation. Or if you work in philanthropy, maybe you’ll value knowing where the most comprehensive records live and where improvements in access to information are warranted.

We think the map can be used to:

  • Spark a friendly competition between states for “Highest Quality Nonprofit Data”
  • Help make Government 2.0 a reality with greater transparency, freer flowing data, and better record keeping
  • Show journalists & bloggers that data, presented well, can tell stories
  • Show nonprofits that mapping & data visualization is an affordable, scalable way to tell their story

We believe that mixing open source culture with public data can help funders of all shapes and sizes collaborate more effectively toward a truly venture-style approach to project funding.

Keep in mind that all of this is offered as part 1 of what we hope will be a sustained and open conversation about data. We invite you, the public, to check out our work and methodologies for yourself, and to suggest, challenge, adjust and add to the data set. Learn how to do that here.

If you have any thoughts on the Scorecard, ideas for where we ought to go next, or innovative suggestions we haven’t thought of yet – please let us know! Leave a comment here, follow @nonprofitmap on Twitter, or shoot us an email at nonprofitmap@gmail.com.

Check out the Nonprofit Data Scorecard here.

The Nonprofit Data Scorecard has arrived! Before the big unveiling (cue the celebratory trumpets!) here’s a little backstory: In May 2009, our all-volunteer team of nonprofiteers, technologists, journalists and social entrepreneurs set out to tell the story of the nonprofit community as it rode out the bumps and shakes of the still-unfolding economic recession. We wanted to convey exactly what was happening to the sector, where, why, and to whom.

Around that time, interest began to grow around interactive mapping as a tool for visualizing complex data in easy-to-digest ways. Mapping was experiencing a popularity surge in the Bay Area, as smart, semi-informal collaborations began popping up everywhere: from Open Street Map to Urban Mapping to Map4Change. And many of these, we’d noticed, were taking advantage of the web’s open source, participatory culture to build impressive and transparent data sets.

Our project began to take on shape: we’d use maps, social media, and an open source strategy to build the first up-to-date map of nonprofit closures as they happen. We imagined a map of the US, covered by a series of growing red dots tracking the self-reported closures of nonprofits across the country – a bit like watching a forest fire sweep through the hills east of L.A. Where is the epicenter? Can it be contained? Is it slowing down or speeding up?

But before we could call in the army of citizen reporters, we’d have to pull together a base layer of geographic and other data about the nonprofit sector to inform our map. For a crack squad of volunteers, shelling out thousands of dollars for nonprofit statistics at the traditional go-to spots – like GuideStar and Charity Navigator – wasn’t an option. So we went to the public records.

Here’s where things got interesting. While public records of nonprofit data do exist, they’re not at all comprehensive. We’re talking about basic data: organization name, address, description – and whether they still exist. It became clear that if the nonprofit data ball was being dropped at both the federal and state levels, there was a) a new need presenting itself, and b) no way we’d be making that nonprofit closure map without finding a way to get the data.

A new plan emerged: create a map and Scorecard of the quality of nonprofit data records across each of the 50 states. That’s exactly what we’re unveiling today: the first up-to-date and open source map of public nonprofit data set quality, nationwide.

But the larger story at work has to do with data’s relationship with the public. We aim to change the culture of data in the nonprofit and philanthropic sector. That is, we want to help push forward the movement to make basic and essential philanthropic, nonprofit and public data open source, so it can stay up-to-date and be put to more effective use in response to urgent concerns like an economic downturn. We believe that journalists, bloggers, and media organizations are major players and partners in these efforts – and can act as the wise crowd, the agenda setters, the social entrepreneurs, and the flag bearers of the transparency movement all at once.

Please join us! Go here to peruse the map and Scorecard, go here to read about how you can use the map, and go here to lend your support to our application to the 2010 Knight News Challenge Grant.

Thanks for your support!

The Nonprofitmapping.org team

Ahhh, the smell of Thanksgiving dinner and…project deliverables.

Things have been picking up here at Nonprofitmapping.org, as the team has logged some serious volunteer hours gathering data, organizing, discussing and ranking said data, and making many phone calls. In fact, my right ear is sore just thinking about it.  All of this is in preparation for the Nonprofit Data Scorecard — our ranking system that you’ll hear much more about in the next few weeks. The Scorecard, in turn, will be the source data for our first map, which we aim to have published as soon as possible.

It’s been a lot of fun to watch a spectrum of interests, backgrounds, and personalities make sense of raw data pools in a way that helps to tell a compelling and useful story about the nonprofit community today, mid-recession. Stay tuned!!

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