Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

TechSoup Global

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Type
  
Nonprofit technology

Origins
  
CompuMentor Project

Founder
  
Daniel Ben-Horin

Headquarters
  
California, United States

Revenue
  
27.93 million USD (2011)

Location
  
San Francisco

Employees
  
203

Founded
  
1987

Assets
  
11.66 million USD (2011)

Focus
  
Technology Donations and Data Services

Key people
  
Founder and Chief Instigator: Daniel Ben-Horin CEO: Rebecca Masisak

Similar
  
Foundation Center, GuideStar, NTEN: The Nonprofit Technolo, Network for Good, Nonprofit Finance Fund

Profiles

TechSoup Global, founded in 1987 as CompuMentor, is a nonprofit international network of non-governmental organizations (NGOs) that provides technical support and technological tools to other nonprofits.

Contents

History

After discussing the technology needs of nonprofits with members of the The WELL, one of the first online communities, Daniel Ben-Horin founded CompuMentor (later TechSoup). His objective was to create a program in which those with technology skills (“mentors”) volunteered to assist nonprofit organizations in gaining a foothold with new information technologies. It also began soliciting donations of technological products, largely from tech magazines that had large stocks of unneeded software sent to them by companies seeking coverage of their products, which CompuMentor collected and then sold to nonprofits for a nominal fee, originally $5.

In 1997, CompuMentor received $350,000 in donations, tying it with the IT Resource Center as the largest Nonprofit Technology Assistance Provider in the U.S.

In 2008, the organization changed its name to TechSoup Global.

As of 2014, TechSoup reported $38.7 million in revenue. It provides technology assistance services and NGO validation services to nongovernmental organizations, foundations, libraries, and other civil society organizations worldwide in partnerships with companies like Microsoft, Adobe, Cisco and Symantec. In partnership with Microsoft, it formed the TechSoup Global Network to support increased distribution of services to nonprofits.

The TechSoup Global Network includes Fundacja TechSoup, a separately incorporated “regional hub” established by TechSoup Global. It is based in Warsaw, Poland, and supports activities in 16 European countries.

TechSoup.org

Launched in January 2002, TechSoup.org is a web site serving nonprofits that provides training webinars, community forums and other resources about the use of technology in nonprofit organizations and public libraries. TechSoup partners with Microsoft to distribute Microsoft's product donations globally, and helps to connect nonprofits and libraries to corporate donors such as Adobe, Symantec, Cisco and Intuit. TechSoup.org also verifies the nonprofit status of organizations seeking donations and matches them to the donated technology products they need.

GuideStar International

GuideStar International is a global service that provides open access to accurate NGO data. GSI was begun in 2010 when TechSoup Global and GuideStar International, a U.K.-registered charity that promotes transparency and civil society organization reporting, combined operations.

NGOsource

NGOsource, a project of the Council on Foundations and TechSoup Global, is an online service for U.S. grantmakers to receive equivalency determinations, which are legal certifications that a non-U.S. NGO is equivalent to a U.S. public charity, thereby reducing the cost and complexity of international grantmaking. Launched in March 2013, it helps U.S. grantmakers streamline their global philanthropy. According to its website, NGOsource was active in 81 countries as of 2015.

NetSquared

NetSquared organizes local actors to collaborate in open innovation challenges, as well as monthly face-to-face meetups. NetSquared brings together nonprofits and activists, tech leaders and funders, to use technology for social change. NetSquared is organized into local chapters that have monthly meetings. Chapters go by such names as Tech4Good or NetSquared Chicago. NetSquared’s “ReStart Slovakia” challenge provided recognition and seed funds to help launch the “Open Courts” project to promote transparency in Slovakia's judicial system.

References

TechSoup Global Wikipedia