Show HN: My weekend project to connect coders with non-profits
After a weekend of coding, last night I launched a very early-version MVP of Coders Who Care. - The goal of the site is to connect nonprofits with developers willing to donate time to a good cause.
Right now, it's simply a directory, but in the future I'll be adding more tools for devs and organizations, including ways for charities to post projects and tools to notify developers when a project is posted that matches their interests, etc. I'll also introduce some social components, like recommendations/endorsements, and I have plans for eventually adding a software distribution system that open source developers can use as a means of stirring up support/donations for their favorite organizations.
Anyway, big plans, tiny beginning. I thought HN might be interested.
http://coderswhocare.org
9 comments
[ 14.7 ms ] story [ 1262 ms ] threadAlso the black on white and white on black on the homepage is hard on my eyes.
In the end he told me that I could probably make a living doing consulting like that strictly for non-profits. There is definitely a need for that sort of guidance.
I think that's where orgs like NTEN can help, and maybe this site could also act as an information clearing house and community for those on the non-profit side to learn about what sort of technologies are available, what they need, what's possible, and how to get it done.
This is a chicken and the egg problem and it seems like you need developers. But developers might need to see non-profits that inspire them before getting involved.
I agree about the chicken/egg problem. I had considered adding a sort of nonprofit showcase, or case studies to the site, or even just covering them on an associated blog, something. I think one of the first things I'll add next is a "tell us your story" type page where nonprofits can submit info on what they're up to and I can start building up a database of interested organizations and details about them.
I'm attending a couple of big-ish charity events soon and primarily wanted to get the site up and hopefully get a few people signed on board prior to that, work out a solid plan going forward, add what I can in the mean time, and start doing some serious promotion in about a month.
It's a bit of a catch-22 on the promotion end of things, as well. You don't want to promote an empty site, but you need to get users somehow - which is a problem I'm sure everyone on HN who's ever launched a member-based site has face, and I'd love some tips on dealing with it. Right now, I'm mostly pushing it among friends.
The development part is easy.
What happens before (identifying what the group really needs) and after (maintenance, hosting, back-ups, training, support) is the hard part. Too many well-meaning groups put together stellar software that non-profits don't get enough use out of due to lack of attention to the before-and-after pictures.