Pledge Now

Three and a half years ago, we set out on a radical mission to change the healthcare industry. We had friends and family diagnosed with cancer told to wear tube socks over their PICC lines and felt that there had to be something better. We wouldn’t and couldn’t accept that using a tube sock was the norm for covering and protecting something so important. I mean, tube socks are meant for your feet and went out of style decades ago right?! There had to be something in the market that provided better quality and dignity yet we couldn’t find anything that came close. So we decided to change that.   We went to the community and shared our vision with nurses and patients. And what transpired was absolutely amazing. We were able to create our ultra-soft, antimicrobial PICC line cover in collaboration with leading nurses and doctors while also getting the input from patients and people from the design community. And through that – our comprehensive design process was born.

Being involved in the community was paramount for us and while we were building a for purpose company, we realized there was an incredible need to do something more than just creating absolutely amazing products. And so we decided to give a portion of our sales back to non-profits and today partner with some amazing organizations such as Stand Up 2 Cancer, the American Cancer Society, Global Lyme AllianceRock CFCancer Schmancer, MitoAction and The Oley Foundation. We’ve had the opportunity to partner with these phenomenal foundations to ensure that together we’re making a difference. So when Pledge 1% asked us to take the pledge – it was an absolute no-brainer. Giving back to the community is paramount to our brand and company and we’re honored and thrilled to have the opportunity to be working with such amazing partners.

So while we eat our leftover turkey and get to spend time with loved ones this holiday season, we wanted to say thank you to our community. You inspire us every day to do better and we wouldn’t be here without you. We’re excited to continue building great products and working together to help even more people on a daily basis.

-Chat, Susan and the Care+Wear team

Originally posted: November 28, 2017

By Jason Payne, CEO of Ada Diamonds, the world’s first custom fine jeweler exclusively using laboratory-grown diamonds.



 

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My wife and I founded Ada Diamonds in 2015 on the belief that diamond jewelry should brighten the entire world, not merely the recipient’s world. To achieve that goal, Ada Diamonds proudly utilizes real diamonds that are sustainably grown by mankind above the Earth, rather than mined diamonds that cost the Earth. In other words, we believe that powerful technology and new ideas can polish the diamond industry and create a more brilliant future for all.

Ada Diamonds is named in honor of Lady Ada Lovelace, the Enchantress of Numbers. She was an audacious and brilliant 19th century mathematician, mother, musician, socialite, and philanthropist who is widely credited as the world’s first computer programmer.

On Giving Tuesday 2017, Ada Diamonds is proudly joining Pledge 1% and committing to a donation of at least 1% of Ada’s profits every year as well as a donation of 1% of our equity to fund philanthropic causes upon an IPO or acquisition of Ada Diamonds, Inc.

We call our CSR efforts the Sixth Element Program in honor of carbon, the sixth element of the periodic table of elements. Ada Diamonds proud to support the following six organizations in their efforts to brighten the world:


Corporate and personal philanthropy are quite important to me. Before founding Ada Diamonds, I was the founder and leader of the Philanthropy Engineering Program at Palantir Technologies. In that role, I donated big data analysis software and forward deployed engineering resources to help data driven nonprofits better fulfill their missions. One my focus areas at Palantir, fighting modern day slavery, led me to start Ada Diamonds as there is still bonded and child labor involved in the cutting of diamonds into gemstones, as you can see in this AP report.

Many of the organizations Ada is supporting today are organizations that I had the pleasure of supporting while at Palantir. Here’s President Clinton discussing recovery efforts of Team Rubicon we supported after Hurricane Sandy, and here’s the CEO of Direct Relief discussing how they use data analysis to improve lives around the world.

On this Giving Tuesday, I encourage you to explore Guidestar or Charity Navigator to find a cause you believe in and support them with a donation of your time or resources.

Originally posted: November 28, 2017

By Kara Goldin, founder and CEO, hint, inc. 

 

Since creating hint® water to help myself and others break free from sugary and diet-sweetened drinks, I’ve heard from thousands of people who feel that drinking hint helps them live healthier lives. Their stories inspire us not only to continue our fight against the giant beverage companies but also to continue to support many health-related charities that are helping tear down the barriers to a healthier life.

 

From day one, we built support for charitable causes into hint’s company DNA, and that’s why I was so excited to hear about and support Pledge 1%, a global movement that challenges companies to make giving an integral part of their company culture. I believe that every company that aims to make this a better world can and should make giving back part of their company mission.

 

For hint, supporting charitable causes takes many forms, including donating product and time to help charities raise money; donating product for disaster relief efforts, such as the recent hurricane in Houston and wild fires in Northern California; and donating money to support causes like breast cancer screenings and cancer research. For example, on World Cancer Day we donated a portion of our profits to cancer research, celebrating the launch of our new hint sunscreen line, which is scented with hint fruit essences to make applying sunscreen a pleasing and uplifting experience that you’ll want to repeat.

 

I urge you to find one or more causes that resonate with your culture and to contribute in whatever way you can. We’re honored to be part of the Pledge 1% movement and look forward to hearing about the ways you find to give back as well. Together, we can make a real difference.

 

Originally posted: November 28, 2017

What makes your giving program stand out?  Have you done a unique combination of time + product donation (or another combination)? 

As a newer player in the corporate social impact space, we’re focusing heavily on learning and listening. Okta for Good is still fairly limited in breadth right now – and intentionally so. We’re in early stages of our defining our program, and we’ve been very deliberate about what we’ve chosen to incorporate at each stage of our growth.

For example, for employees, we don’t yet have donation matching or a company service day, and instead we center our quarterly impact efforts on thematic volunteer events with clear opportunities for employee education. We want to root our employees in an understanding of community issues and help them develop their own personal giving strategies so that they are poised to maximize their impact as we roll out more programs. This is also why we’ve worked closely with experienced partners like Tides Foundation to develop educational resources for our global teams.

For corporate giving, in lieu of a large-scale grant program out of the gates, we’ve started with a deep commitment to a single grantee: NetHope. Our work with NetHope offers us a way to wrap all of our resources (people, technology and funding) around one partner, and we hope the insights from this first partnership will help inform our long-term approach to strategic philanthropy through our recently announced Okta for Good Fund, a donor advised fund of Tides Foundation.

We are also constantly learning from our customers: on the product side, we offer nonprofits 25 free licenses for all Okta products, as long as they’ll share feedback on our offering. Their insights are a critical piece to growing Okta for Good.

How is Pledge 1% integrating into the core values of your business?  Is it impacting other areas of your work (such as sustainability programs/sourcing/green policy, etc) and/or shaping your internal employee culture?

Pledge 1% has given shape and structure to our social impact efforts and was an important catalyst in taking the work to the next level. It has also been helpful in thinking about the ways in which we build a sustainable social impact practice and enable the work to scale with our company. This pursuit of a sustainable business model (as opposed to relying on a perpetual company handout) is a priority for us at this stage along with many of our Pledge 1% peers.

Have you collaborated with other companies in your local community or within your ecosystem on giving back?  What about leveraging your technology and skills to tackle a shared issue?

We’re lucky that collaboration and connection is such a fundamental element of Okta’s business. This spirit translates directly to our social impact work, and we see tremendous potential to partner with like-minded companies and community partners to drive positive change together. In fact, we’re already engaged in many exciting efforts on this front.

From a global perspective, we’re working closely with NetHope as a founding partner of the Center for the Digital Nonprofit, which connects a strong community of technology and nonprofit leaders to enable large-scale digital transformation across NetHope’s global members. We’ve also joined forces with Box, Salesforce.org, DocuSign, Splunk, Tableau and Twilio as a part of ImpactCloud, a coalition of cloud vendors leveraging our technical savvy and business insights to help humanitarian organizations take advantage of the latest technologies.

Locally, we’ve teamed up with civic-minded companies in the San Francisco Bay Area to fight poverty through Tipping Point Community’s SF Gives initiative. We also recently partnered with Adobe, mentoring students as a part of the organization’s summer Girls Who Code program. And throughout the year, we’ve worked with a variety of other organizations in the areas where our teams live and work.

What is your advice to startups or companies that are waiting to give until after their IPO or reach profit?  What made your company decide to give, and when, and how has that shaped who you are?

One of the reasons I was proud to join Okta as the first social impact hire was the authentic commitment I saw from our leaders. Our co-founders Todd McKinnon and Frederic Kerrest were very intentional about committing Okta to giving back pre-IPO. Establishing Okta for Good was an important signal to employees, customers and the broader community about what kind of company we are. As Todd said when we first joined Pledge 1%: “Whether you work at a multinational corporation or a nonprofit with three employees, every organization deserves the opportunity to bridge the innovation gap and build the best experiences for their people.”

Social impact delivers value when it comes to recruiting talent, building trust with customers and partners, and connecting meaningfully to your communities – at any stage. Our best advice: just start!

Have you integrated a specific product or service based on a nonprofit’s needs?

Not yet, but we are looking closely at our nonprofit offering in the coming year to better understand needs and opportunities for us to deliver more relevant solutions. Stay tuned!

Originally posted: November 28, 2017

From day one, our mission at Postmates has been to help people unlock the best of their cities. While some companies try to build a warehouse outside of a city and funnel goods into it — we know that our cities, our towns and our communities are our warehouses. A big part of what we do is help local brick and mortar businesses better compete against retail goliaths. But as we’ve grown to operate in more than 250 cities, we now want to re-invest in building a more sustainable future for the communities we serve.

This past summer, we hosted a town hall meeting where we sat down with teams across the company to discuss our core values:


Be eccentric: Do things differently — and better, do them your way. Inspire others to experience a different point of view.


Create things that last: There is incredible value in infrastructure & utilities others can rely on. We liberate people by creating it.


Embrace the new, new: Dream up new ways to see and live the future. Once upon a time, all we do today sounded like science fiction.


Out of many, one: Be aware of the responsibility we have to look out for each other — both within our own Postmates team and the larger world we live in.

Now, we’re taking a big step in fully realizing that last value — “Out of Many, One.”

We’ve recently formed a new team — Civic Labs, a social impact team with the mission to tap into Postmates ingenuity to build a thriving, sustainable future that works for everyone. The team is focused on developing programs and partnerships to promote climate action, food security and local business and independent workforce advocacy.

In addition, we are also dedicating 1% of our collective workforce time to support the communities and causes we care most deeply about. Postmates has joined Pledge 1%, a movement spearheaded by Atlassian, Rally, Salesforce and Tides, which is dedicated to making the community a key stakeholder in every business.

As part of the Postmates Civic Labs efforts and Pledge 1% partnership, teammates can now choose the nonprofit of their choice, and we’ll pay them for their workday — up to 24 hours per year. Postmates full-time employees can use 1% of their workdays days to join one of our company volunteer events — such as our recent community garden harvest or our upcoming project with Open Hand; or employees can volunteer at the local nonprofit that they’re most passionate about.

To kick off our renewed focus on enabling the Postmates community to give back, we were proud to partner with TNDC Tenderloin People’s Garden harvest — to help harvest fresh food for low-income residents in the SF bay area. TNDC Volunteer and Corporate Partnerships Lead Haley Caldwell was equally heartened by the turnout. “I’ve never seen so many people out at that front table before… It was really fun to have Postmates here. It’s not always easy for some volunteers to be in the Tenderloin, but you guys fit right in.”

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Josh Phillips, Chief of Staff at Postmates and Civic Labs founder also echoed that sentiment. “Harvesting the Tenderloin People’s Garden was an incredibly rewarding way for our team to serve the community.”

“In addition to providing fresh food to low-income residents in a food desert less than a mile and a half from our office, we got to explore our complicated relationship with food. We spend our lives far removed from the production of what we eat. When you get even just an inch closer you naturally start to ask questions about our food system’s equitability, the impact it has on our health, the role it plays in climate change, and, ultimately, our dependence on others to feed ourselves.”

With Harvest Day down, there’s still more to come for Civic Labs and the volunteers at Postmates. You can find out more about the larger Pledge 1% effort here.

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Originally posted: November 28, 2017

An interview with Jill Harrison, Innovation Programs, Silverline CRM

How do you contribute to the non-profit community? *

2017 marked Silverline’s 7th consecutive year sending a team of volunteer consultants and technology experts to the annual New Orleans Entrepreneur Week conference in partnership with Salesforce. This team of ten spent a week in March donating hundreds of pro bono consulting hours to advise six fast-growing start-ups and non-profits on how they can leverage cloud technology to grow their businesses and to build apps to help them achieve greater impact in their communities. Also as part of the engagement with the festival, Salesforce Chief Philanthropic Officer Suzanne DiBianca delivered an inspiring keynote talk addressing local organizations looking for advice on how to build their own Pledge 1% programs, using our team’s engagement as a model example. As this amazing festival has grown like gangbusters over the last several years, NOEW now plays host to over 13,000+ entrepreneurs and 185 organizations each year. Silverline is humbled and grateful to be a part of this great tradition and can’t wait for next year.

Why should partners join the global Pledge 1% philanthropy movement? *

Pledge 1% is a movement that reaches beyond your business to connect your employees with the greater mission of community impact. This movement empowers your organization to reach out locally and globally, and find inspiration and meaning through volunteerism and giving. By working together and pledging 1%, we are all affecting positive change.

What’s new or in the pipeline for Silverline’s giving program?

Our participation each year at NOEW has been such a fun team-building experience that has had broad impact across Silverline. It led to the foundation of Silverline Cares, which is a program at the heart of the social events we do with our team and with our partners like Salesforce. We now incorporate volunteerism and philanthropy into each of our all-hands meetings with more than 200 teammates from all over the country. We’ve packed back to school supplies, created care packages for orphanages, built RC toy cars for kids in the hospital with new cancer diagnoses, and more. We’ve even started to extend these programs and share them with our new clients! Recently we hosted a big event in NYC with a brand new client to build bikes for local school kids. What an amazing experience to get to know each other and do good for the community!

NOEW also helped us realize a few years ago that we wanted to formally roll out a VTO program for all employees to make sure our teammates know that we value and encourage their contribution to local communities. Giving back to others is so important for our culture, and so important for our world.

Originally posted: November 28, 2017

It’s the season for sharing and service and for the last three years 97th Floor, along with thousands from around the globe, have shared ways a simple $20 dollar bill can serve others during this holiday season with our 20 Helps campaign. But whether it’s 20 dollars, 20 minutes, 20 acts of service or 20 days of mindfulness — #20Helps.

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This year, along with our Pledge 1% commitment and the Pledge 1% Gives Community, we are launching the biggest and newest feature in #20Helps history with the #20Helps Track Your Impact app.


Watch the video and learn more about the app here: http://20helps.com/

Available on the Apple Store and Google Play November 28, the app allows you to see the good you can do with a single bill as you watch it travel through the lives of others.

We encourage you to watch the video, download the app, and learn how you can lend a hand to someone who might otherwise go unnoticed. After all, even if this is the most charitable time of the year, a little bit more giving can do an entire world universe of good.

Get started now: http://20helps.com/

Originally posted: November 28, 2017

By the team at LoSoMo.

When our founder, Scott Romney, first heard of the 1% Pledge through a contact at Salesforce last year, it immediately resonated with his desire to make a difference as a business owner. He brought the idea back to our team, and we all jumped on board and took the pledge on May 25, 2016. Then, we began brainstorming ways to implement the 1% Model at LoSoMo Inc.

As a digital marketing agency that focuses on local businesses, we have a unique perspective on interacting with those around us, and we knew we wanted to incorporate our space, our skill set, and our local community into our pledge. When we decided to donate 1% of our profits to a local South Florida non-profit organization, we reached out to our community for nominations the best way we know how—on social media.

By calling out our community on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram, we reached over 19,000 community members and received over 250 nominations of South Florida nonprofits! It was a thrill to see so many interact, share, and nominate organizations that they felt deserved our 1% donation.

On December 15th, we put all the nominations into a random generator and selected a winner, on Facebook Live, of course! We were so pleased to donate 1% of our 2016 profits to Speak Up For Kids Palm Beach County, an organization that supports the Guardian Ad Litem Program to advocate for and protect the lives of children in the dependency (including foster care) system – facilitating their development, ensuring their right to a safe and permanent home, and building their future.

In addition to our pledge to Speak Up, we were also able to give away a brand new website to Redland Rock Pit Abandoned Dog Project, Inc. as 1% of our Product. While taking advantage of social media was an awesome and effective approach for one piece of our pledge, we wanted to involve our team and the causes they support too.


 

If you come to our office on any given day, there’s a good chance you’ll meet Lola, Theodore, Kota, or Ponce.

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No, they aren’t interns, they are a Pembroke Welsh Corgi, a Catahoula Leopard Dog, a Bichon, and a Chihuahua! That’s right, every day is bring your dog to work day at LoSoMo, and none of us are complaining. Animal rights are important to our team, so when the opportunity arose to giveaway a new website to a nonprofit dedicated to saving abandoned animals in South Florida, we said YES! It was a privilege to design a new site for an organization whose cause was so dear to our hearts.

We would like to thank the Pledge 1% organization for inspiring us to give back in a very tangible way and creating a platform that allows us to put our unique spin on making a difference. The entire LoSoMo team looks forward to finding more creative ways to donate our time, product, and profits for 2017.

Originally posted: November 28, 2017

SpringCM became a member of Pledge 1% in July 2017, and we’ve been hard at work giving back to our community since then. As a company, we’re proud of a lot of things, but two things in particular: our Chicago roots, and our team-focused culture. When we joined Pledge 1%, we wanted to make sure that we were supporting organizations that made a big impact on the city of Chicago as well as the people that make our company so strong.


Springers have cleaned up beaches with Alliance for the Great Lakes, donated food and clothing to children and families through the Cara Program and Cradles to Crayons, and volunteered in classrooms doing job shadowing and career day presentations with Junior Achievement and IC Stars.


 

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Employees have also contributed personal funds to two campaigns for United Mitochondrial Disease Foundation and the National Hemophilia Foundation. These initiatives were run by Springers’ whose family members are affected by these disorders, and the response was amazing. Watching the SpringCM family come together to support one another is truly inspiring and has led to a more tight-knit dynamic.

All of our efforts have been meaningful, but our favorite so far is #BenioffMeetJames. Leading up to Dreamforce 2017, we launched a campaign to help our Digital Media Guru, James Serra, meet Marc Benioff. Using the hashtag #BenioffMeetJames and a series of videos, we spread awareness across social media. If you missed the videos, you can find them here.


 

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While this campaign is one of our favorites because of how fun it was, the best thing about #BenioffMeetJames is the cause behind it. For each retweet of the hashtag, we planned to donate $1 to the UCSF Benioff Children’s Hospital. And, if Marc actually met James at Dreamforce, we’d double that donation (spoiler alert: it happened!) To top it off, for each booth scan at Dreamforce, we’d donate another $1. All in, SpringCM was proud to donate $10,000 to the Children’s Hospital.

“Marc Benioff and his team are extremely gracious to charities and nonprofits. SpringCM really wants to help and contribute to the culture of giving that they’ve started.” – Greg Buchholz, President and COO at SpringCM.



We were blown away by the support of this campaign, from Salesforce employees, Partner companies, and people we had never met before on social media.

If you’re a newer Pledge 1% member or a small startup, you don’t have to wait until you’re more established to start weaving in a culture of giving back at your company. #BenioffMeetJames has proven that the power of social media and a little creativity can go a long way, and do a lot for people in need!

Originally posted: November 28, 2017