2016 on Chuffed.org

As 2016 came to an end, all my social media feeds were flooded with doom. Status updates breathed a heavy sighs of relief, ‘Thank God 2016 is over’. The posts pointed to Trump, Brexit, David Bowie, Carrie Fischer, George Michael, Prince… as a sort of doomsday list, dredging out a feeling of hopelessness.

But those lists miss a lot of amazing things that happened in 2016. They skip over the people who witnessed misfortunes and still had the courage to act. They miss the people who did the right thing, even when the odds were stacked against them. You weren’t on those list.

2016 was a huge year of hope on Chuffed.org. It was a year where communities banded together and started to build the foundations for a society that we can be.

In 2016, you supported these wonderful women

You created the first Aboriginal women’s health retreat based on Indigenous medicineYou supported our best female scientists to become our future leaders in Antarctica

In 2016, you supported refugees stuck in the crisis

In 2016, you supported the lives of our animal friends

In 2016, you supported 2,600 campaigns

And that’s not even scratching the bottom of the barrel! In 2016 you supported nearly 2,600 campaigns because they appealed to your sense of justice and vision for a better world.

It is with absolute certainty that I predict (I admit, that’s a bit of an oxymoron) that this community, our community, will make 2017 a year in which the world moves forward in the right direction.

Because we know, that whatever happens, you’ll band together as a community and help each other.

We’re hiring: Front-End Developer (Growth Team, London)

Chuffed.org Workshops

Front-end Developer (Growth Team, London)

tl;dr

Front-end developer job in rapidly-growing, funded, social-cause startup, changing the world.

Who is Chuffed.org?

We’re a purpose-led company that’s transforming how people think about charities around the world. Instead of thinking of the charity muggers harassing you on your way to work, we’re making the face of charity awesome, exciting projects that people want to be part of.

Since launching in October 2013, we’ve raised over $10M/£6M for 3,000 projects in 20 countries. We’ve reunited a Somali refugee mother with her son that she hadn’t seen in 23 years; we’ve helped legalise medicinal marijuana for the terminally ill; we’ve transformed how the Vanuatu Government does disaster relief… and a lot more.

What you’ll be doing?

You’ll be joining our new Growth team in London whose main goal is to get our product from thousands of campaigners to hundreds of thousands. You’ll be responsible for:

  • implementing the experiments and new products that the Growth team wants to test – this will be a mixture of front-end/design work as well as building back end features:
    • Possible activities include: creating landing pages, changing user flows, improving email designs, improving tracking, creating adaptive education in our campaign editor and more
  • instrumenting our app to collect the right data to measure the impact of experiments, gain deeper insights on how users are engaging with our product and where they’re leaking out. We use Segment, Mixpanel and Google Analytics, but are open to others
  • working with the engineering team to ship code every day

As you get more familiar with the product and our customers, you’ll be providing input on what growth initiatives we should pursue too.

In addition to this, we expect the entire team to do customer support at different periods of the year as we believe that this is the best way to understand the needs of our customers and the issues that they have in their lives.

What we’re looking for

Culture

  • You care: we’re a purpose-led company and we love working with people who care about the world around them
  • You learn: because there’s always another JS framework around the corner and a better way of creative value for our customers
  • You play nice: because we all love coming to work and we want you to too

Technical

  • Expert knowledge of JS/HTML/CSS (5 years+), and be familiar with PHP (Laravel)
  • Experience with Angular, React or other modern JS frameworks
  • Design and UX sensibilities and can play around in Photoshop
  • Awareness of cross-browser compatibility issues and client-side performance considerations

Bonus points

  • You’re data driven, curious about what customers value and why they behave in certain ways
  • You understand A/B testing, cohort analysis, AARRR, high tempo testing and have implemented them previously
  • You’ve worked with the non-profit/charity/advocacy sector before

The details

  • Based in London, UK: Shoreditch or Hackney area
  • Competitive salary package: we’ll normally pay a mix of cash salary and equity
  • You’ll report to the CEO (London), and work closely with our Growth Marketer (London) and Customer Advocate (Melbourne). You’ll also interface in with the Engineering Team (Melbourne, Sydney).

 

Why work for us

People come for the social mission, they stay for the team. We’re a fast-growing social enterprise, that’s backed by some amazing tech investors (Blackbird VC and Bevan Clark) but retains our social mission at our core. We even created our own legal structure over in Australia – the Social Benefit Company – to let us do that. We’ve worked in the social sector for years and changing how it raises money for the amazing work that it does is something that we deeply care about. We’re the place where you can do work that you care about and be part of a fast-moving company at the same time.

You can read more here:

 

How to apply

Send us an email to careers@chuffed.org with the subject line: “Front-end Developer (Growth): Your Name” with your CV, any links you have to apps you’ve built, github repos, portfolios. If you feel comfortable including your current salary too, that’d help. We’ll generally pay a combined salary + equity package.

A Crowdfunding Platform that Makes You A Better Campaigner

A few months ago, I was talking to one of our investors, Bevan Clarke, about the need for educating non-profits about crowdfunding and how to run the best campaigns. While many, many non-profits, charities, community groups really wanted to branch away from traditional fundraising, there was just a lot to learn about how to construct an effective campaign page and how to market it.

Our approach had been 1-on-1 coaching sessions, the conferences, the workshops, content, but Bevan made a remark in that conversation though that stuck in my head:

The best products teach a customer how to use them through the process of using them

For us, the idea of a crowdfunding platform that taught non-profits how to be better crowdfunders as they were creating their campaign has always been the holy grail.

There’s only so many customers we can reach through 1-on-1 coaching sessions, conferences, workshops. But every customer uses our editor. And if that editor can show them what the best campaigners like them have done, and how they can improve their campaign, not only would our campaigners raise more money, we would be delivering our social mission better.

So that’s what we set out to do. Figure out how to condense all the learnings from 3,000 campaigns into 1 editor.

Welcome to Chuffed.org version Banksia.

We started the process with:

  • a set of usability tests (thanks to our testers – your brutal feedback was awesome);
  • the experience of 1000s of collective hours providing support, coaching and guidance to our customers; and
  • a bunch of data on what successful campaigns look like

While the data told us the endpoint that we wanted to get campaigners to, the cumulative sum of individual customer interactions told us where they were starting from, what they cared about, and where they got stuck.

The changes

We made a heap of small usability and stability changes, took out every unnecessary field that we could, upgraded the password-free login system but the biggest change we made is Tippy.

Tippy the Tip Bot

As you type, Tippy – our advice bot – will come up to help guide you on each element of your campaign page. We’ll also link you to resources if you need to read a bit more on the topic. As we progress on this, the advice will adapt contextually to the type of campaign you’re running. It’ll also link you to campaigns that are like yours that you can be inspired by (read: copy). No more searching the internet for successful campaigns like yours or top 10 crowdfunding tip lists – it’s all in the editor.

We’ve still got a lot more that we want to do to make the experience even better, but we’re releasing this version now into beta testing to get your feedback first. We’ve selected a number of people to trial it – if you’d like be added to the list, just email us at info@chuffed.org with the subject line ‘Add me to Banksia’.

 

Thanks for your support.

– Prashan, Seb, Dave, Bec and the Chuffed.org Family.

 

 

 

 

We’re hiring a Customer Advocate (London, Sydney, Melbourne)

Chuffed.org Workshops

THIS POSITION IS NOW FILLED. STAY TUNED FOR MORE OPEN ROLES.

 

After supporting over 2,500 amazing social cause organisations in 19 countries to raise $8M, we’ve realised that our role in the non-profit sector isn’t just as another transactional crowdfunding platform – we want to help transform how the sector does fundraising; from harassing people on the street to an experience people enjoy and want back to come to again and again.

So we’re hiring a Customer Advocate to help our campaigners become better fundraisers. You’ll be supporting some of the best social change organisations in the world and will be working with a wonderful team across our Sydney, Melbourne and London offices.

About the role

We think the best way we can support our customers starts with a deep understanding of their world and what job they’re trying to get done. With that understanding, we then create content and experiences that help them do that job better. Our approach therefore is a mix of quality one-on-one customer assistance and publishing outstanding content that supports our customers to rally their supporters and get their projects funded.

In the role you will focus on:

1. Marketing – Creating content to support our customers (70%):

  • Create, write and design blog posts, case studies, emails, podcasts, webinars and other content that introduces our campaigners to ways they can improve their campaigns
  • Use a data-driven approach to figure out which content our campaigners find useful at which stage of their learning process and how best to distribute it to them
  • Conduct customer development interviews to understand how our customers use our product and educate themselves
  • Run offline events that bring our community together and provide in-person learning opportunities

 

2. Support – Understanding our customers (20%):

  • Help customers with their support queries
  • Identify patterns in support queries
  • Generate different ways we can better support our customer
  • Provide one-on-one campaign coaching to some customers

 

3. Operations – Making the organisation tick (10%):

  • Support the team with a few of our internal processes, particularly payments

 

Location

This role can be based in one of our three locations: in London (office opening late July), Sydney (Circular Quay) or Melbourne (Collingwood)

What we look for

We’re a small team, it’s important that you enjoy working with us. We like people who are smart, positive, humble, get stuff done and can express ideas well. You’ll also need to be happy working in a startup environment where things change all the time. In this role, you’ll be the closest person to our customers, so we’re looking for someone with a high degree of empathy and EQ – that ability to realise what people are really saying, when they might actually be saying something else.

Bonus points for:

  • having run a crowdfunding campaign yourself
  • having worked in, or been on the board of, a non-profit or social enterprise environment
  • being handy in Canva, Illustrator or Photoshop

Why work for us

People come for the social mission, they stay for the team. We’re a fast-growing social enterprise, that’s backed by some amazing tech investors (Blackbird VC and Bevan Clark) but retains our social mission at our core. We even created our own legal structure – the Social Benefit Company – to let us do that. We’ve worked in the social sector for years and changing how it raises money for the amazing work that it does is something that we deeply care about. We’re the place where you can do work that you care about and be part of a fast-moving company at the same time.

How to apply

Send us an email to careers@chuffed.org with the subject line: “Customer Advocate: [Your Name]” with your CV, as well as any writing samples you’ve done. If you feel comfortable including your current salary too, that’d help. We’ll generally pay a combined salary + equity package.

Chuffed.org Campaigner Survey

Chuffed.org Workshops

Just a quick reminder that you have to go all the way through the survey and hit Submit before we’ll get your responses. Thank you so much for your help

 

Chuffed.org Just Raised A $1.1M Seed Round

Today, we’re so happy – chuffed, one might say – to announce that we’ve just closed a $1.1M seed investment round in Chuffed.org led by Blackbird Ventures, Bevan Clark (RetailMeNot, LIFX) and the Telstra Foundation. As part of the round, Blackbird and Startmate co-Founder Niki Scevak will be joining the Chuffed.org Board.

Where it all started

I first met Niki back in late 2014. Susan Wu from Stripe had introduced us and somehow between the two of them, they decided to put me on stage at a Startmate/Stripe event. The line up included John Collison (who was running a billion dollar startup), Jake Lawton (co-Founder of LIFX that had just raised $12M from Sequoia), Y-Combinator alumna, Lauren McLeod… and me. If you want to know what Imposter Syndrome feels like, that’s the line up for it. At the time, I had no idea why I was up there, and no idea why they were being so nice to me. I’d only later realise that that was just the type of people they were.

Over the next year, I went back to Niki several times for advice. Each time, I walked away buzzing with thoughts that I wanted to share with the team – that I knew would make our product better. I remember saying to Liv that if we could just find a way of bringing the collective brain of Blackbird into the organisation, it could really take us to the next level.

Rejection

So when we first pitched to Blackbird, and they said no, it was pretty devastating. The next 85 pitch decks, and the next dozen or so no’s we got from various VCs and Impact Investors didn’t really do much for our collective self-esteem either (aside: thanks partners for putting up with us through this).

In a strange way though, we were probably lucky. Had any of those other funds said yes, the emotional toll that fundraising takes, could’ve just pushed us to take money that we knew in our heart of hearts wasn’t the right money to take.

By the second Blackbird pitch, our international business had boomed, our unit economics were looking healthy and well, we had a slightly better clue what a pitch was. Oh, and this happened:

Chuffed.org just raised a $1.1m seed round

Social Benefit Company + VC = ?

Of course, money isn’t just money. It isn’t neutral. It changes an organisation. And to be honest, we were worried about how taking commercial money might change Chuffed.org. How it might corrupt our social mission.

Truth be told, it has changed us. But not at all in the way that I was worried about.

It’s made us more focused on how best to deliver on our mission. Because if you believe that delivering on your social mission is the thing that will deliver better financial outcomes (which we all do), what we do becomes really simple – figure out how to best deliver on our social mission of transforming the nature of non-profit fundraising.

This is where we’re starting.

  1. Fundraiser education: we’re going to play a much bigger role in educating the charity sector about how they can transform their fundraising and take advantage of the opportunities that crowdfunding presents.
  2. Donor movements: we’re going to play a much more active role in educating donors about the issues that effect our society through stories told by crowdfunders
  3. Grow: we want to support way more campaigners around the world to build their own audiences and to access ours

In short, the investment lets us play a much bigger role than just a transactional platform. It lets us help more non-profits transform the way that they do fundraising. It lets us help more donors engage, understand and act on the issues they care about. Simply, it lets us get a huge step down the path of delivering on our mission.

Thank you for helping us get this far. We can’t wait to build something with you that’s even better.

– Prashan, Liv, Seb, Dave and entire Chuffed.org family. 

A couple of notes

While this round is exciting for us, we’re also excited for what this means for the social enterprise sector. As far as we can tell, this is the first time that a major Australian tech venture capital firm has invested into a social enterprise. We’re hoping that this is a sign of things to come, rather than an anomaly. If we can open up the four (yes, 4) $200M tech VC funds in Australia (and the many more commercial angel, VC and non-tech funds in Australia and around the world) to investing in enterprises that make the world a better place, we could radically transform outcomes for so many people. If you think that’s a pipe dream, you should check out Collabfund and Social Capital.

Also, we’ll always reserve a special place in our hearts for our friends at the Telstra Foundation, who backed us when we weren’t much more than a Powerpoint presentation. They’ve led the way in how corporate philanthropy should support the social enterprise sector – derisk early stage social enterprises using philanthropic grants with the view of growing them to a stage where external investors would invest in them. Unlike so many Foundations that do crazy things like only support social enterprises with DGR/tax-deductibility status, or use social enterprises as mentoring opportunities for their middle managers, Telstra have unrelentingly acted in our best interests. They’ve continued to back us, and others, regardless of our legal structure, they’ve always taken the attitude of being there to serve us – not assess us, and they’ve been willing to give us feedback when we didn’t realise we needed it. I think in time, the rest of corporate philanthropy will follow the lead that Jackie and Nat at Telstra have set.

How to crowdfund forever with Infinity Mode

The basics: Infinity Mode is a new type of campaign at Chuffed.org for all of you that have awesome campaigns that don’t fit into the traditional <90 day crowdfunding format. It lets you keep on fundraising past the 90 day limit, collecting money as it comes in.

It’s perfect for:

  • Larger, long-term campaigns, where you know you’re going to need many months to crowdfund;
  • Event crowdfunders, where the event is more than 3 months in the future; and
  • Selling crowdfunding perks ongoing, without the hassle of setting up an online shop

How Infinity Mode works

  • Submit and launch a normal campaign at chuffed.org/start
  • Once your campaign is live, login to your account, click on ‘More Options’ on your dashboard, and then on ‘Setup Infinity Mode’ (see the image below)

Crowdfunding Infinity Mode Chuffed.org

  • If you haven’t already, follow the instructions to connect a Stripe.com account (which will be required to accept ongoing payments) and switch on Infinity Mode. Stripe is our payment provider and setting up an account takes less than 5 minutes.
  • At this stage you can choose to switch to Infinity Mode immediately, or wait until your main campaign is over. If you switch over immediately, your main campaign will end within the hour and it will automatically transition to Infinity Mode.
  • Alternatively, you can choose to wait until your main campaign ends, when you’ll automatically get switched over to Infinity Mode (there’s no downtime).
  • For Australian campaigns only: We’ll pay out any credit card payments from your main campaign period in one lump sum, and then any payments via credit card will be transferred to your bank account on a 2-day rolling cycle. PayPal payments will continue to be paid into your PayPal account.
  • When your campaign switches to Infinity Mode, it’ll look exactly the same as it did previously, except that there won’t be a ‘Days left’ indicator and there’ll be a ‘This campaign is currently on Infinity Mode’ under the donation box on the right.

The rest is up to you! When you’re ready to finish, just log in and switch off Infinity Mode and you’re done.

Introducing the Social Benefit Company – a new legal structure for Australian Social Enterprises

Background

Chuffed.org was launched in October 2013. At the time, we decided to incorporate it as a (non-DGR) charity – formally as a Company Limited by Guarantee. This decision wasn’t straightforward. We thought of ourselves as a ‘social enterprise’ and neither the ‘charity’ structure nor the ‘for-profit’ Pty Ltd structure really seemed to feel comfortable. If you had asked us at the time, why we chose the charity structure, we would’ve probably said something like “it’s the right thing to do; we’re not in it to make money; we’re here to change the world”. My gut feeling though is that we chose it because, having worked in the charity sector for the previous 5 years, we were more comfortable with how it worked, and where charities got money from. The structure also allowed us to raise philanthropic capital from the Telstra Foundation to kick start the business.

As we scaled though, to raising $5.1m in 2 years through the platform, it became very clear that we had a commercially-viable business – a business that could become the best in the world at supporting our community.

To do that though, we needed money. And this is where the charity model breaks.

Philanthropy is great at funding shiny things to get from $0 to $5m. It’s not great in helping a successful venture get from $5m to $50m and pretty much non-existant in helping you get from $50m to $500m. And so we knew we had to change the type of capital we were raising – in order to grow, we would need to raise equity.

Unfortunately, that’s not possible in a charity model, so we needed to convert our structure.

The goal

We wanted our new structure to allow us to raise equity while embedding our purpose into our DNA. Practically what ’embedding our purpose’ means to us is:

  • that everyone (i.e. shareholders and directors) is clear on what the purpose of the organisation is; and
  • that they are required and permitted to act to further the purpose; and
  • that shareholders (in particular founders) have a way of ensuring that the purpose is followed even with ownership changes

 

Enter the Social Benefit Company

The solution we came up with was the Social Benefit Company. It’s a model based off the US Public Benefit Corporation model (in particular the Delaware and Californian models).

It consists of three tenets:

  1. A clear statement of a specific public benefit that the organisation is set up to deliver (the “Purpose”) which we put into our Constitution.
  2. Directors of the Social Benefit Company are permitted and required to deliver the Purpose and to consider the wider impacts of their decisions as part of their duties as a Director of that Company (“Directors Duties”) – again we put this into our Constitution.
  3. A requirement that changing the Purpose or Directors Duties requires a 100% shareholder vote (“Mission Lock”). This was put into our Shareholders’ Agreement.

That’s it. This structure sets out a clear purpose for the organisation, and ensures that the purpose can’t be changed without Founders agreeing to it.

What do I need to do to become a Social Benefit Company?

Regardless of your situation, you’ll need to get legal and accounting advice. We’re not lawyers, but we’ve spent a considerable amount of time and money on thinking about this, so here’s our lay advice:

If you’re currently not incorporated:

Incorporate a Pty Ltd company and adopt a Social Benefit Company Constitution and Shareholders’ Agreement. You’ll also need to figure out what your purpose is – sounds easy, but this took a lot of iterations for us.

If you’re incorporated as a Pty Ltd company:

As above, but no need to incorporate a new company. Depending on your existing Constitution/ Shareholders Agreement, you may need a certain number of Shareholders and/or Directors to agree to the changes.

If you’re incorporated as a charity:

This is much trickier. We’d advise seeking legal and accounting advice. You’ll need to move your social enterprise into a Pty Ltd structure before you can adopt a Social Benefit Company structure.

In order to foster the growth of the Social Benefit Company structure in Australia, we’re publishing the relevant clauses from our Constitution here. Hopefully, they’ll be a useful starting point for your lawyers.

The Social Benefit Company Constitution

2. Purpose

2.1 Company’s Purpose

The purpose of the Company is to [insert purpose here] (Purpose). In the pursuit of the Purpose, the Company may do all lawful things, including, but not limited to engaging in activities that directly or indirectly support the Purpose. From time to time, the Board may by unanimous resolution determine any specific purposes of the Company in the best interests of the Company.

2.2 The Company’s best interests

In discharging its duties, and in determining what is in the “best interests” of the Company and its members, the Board shall be considered to be acting in the best interests:

(a) when it is directly delivering on the Purpose; and

(b) when it considers factors including, but not limited to, the long-term interests of the Company, the effects of any decision related to the current employees, the suppliers and customers of the Company or its subsidiaries, the environment and the communities in which the Company or its subsidiaries operate, (collectively, with the members, the “Stakeholders”).

In determining what is in the best interests, the Board is not required to regard any interest, or the interests of any particular group affected by a decision made by the Board, as a dominant or controlling interest or factor.

2.3 Director’s discretion in determining best interests

Notwithstanding the foregoing, any Director can rely upon the definition of “best interests” as set out in rule 2.2, in performing their duties under applicable law, and such reliance will not be construed as a breach of a Director’s fiduciary duty of care, absent another breach, even in the context of a change in control transaction where, as a result of weighing other Stakeholders’ interests, the Board determines to accept an offer, between two competing offers, which has a lower price per unit.

2.4 No cause of action

Nothing in this rule 2, express or implied, is intended to create or will create or grant any ancillary legal right in or for any member or Director, nor any cause of action by or for any Member, Director or person in relation to the application of this rule 2.

The Social Benefit Shareholders’ Agreement

Definitions

Unanimous Resolution means a resolution:

(a) approved by the holders of 100% or more of the issued Shares held by those Shareholders present (by any means) or voting by proxy or representative and entitled to vote; or

(b) identified in a document where all those persons entitled to vote on the resolution sign a statement that they are in favour of the resolution set out in the document.

 

Matters to be determined by Unanimous Resolution of Shareholders

Matters to be determined by Unanimous Resolution of the Shareholders are:

(a)         (Constitution) amend Rule 2 – the Purpose clause of the constitution of the Company.

 


FAQs

For those of you who want the really nitty gritty, here’s some of the issues that we thought through. We leaned heavily on previous work done by Clayton Utz and Social Impact Hub and we’ve tried to reference where we’ve directly quoted them (see references at the bottom).

WARNING: This isn’t legal advice and there’s very little to no case law in this area that really provides a huge amount of clarity on how the courts would act. It’s our lay opinion, albeit based on a lot of research.

But, don’t the Directors have to “maximises profits to shareholders” according to the Corporations Act?

At common law, Directors are required to act in the interests “of the Company as a whole” [1]. Over the years, the “company as a whole” has been taken to be interpreted as being the financial wellbeing of the shareholders as a general body.

However, the consitution can be modified to define the best interests of a company in such a way as to affect the obligations of directors. That is, a constitution can define the consideration of non-shareholder stakeholders interests (eg. employees, the environment, suppliers) to be in the best interests of the company.

This is a view supported by both the Ford’s Principles of Corporations Law as well as the former Government body, CAMAC [1].

For Chuffed.org, we make it clear in our constitution that acting in the best interests of the Company involves directly delivering on the Purpose and considering all Stakeholders that our decisions effect (in particular, employees, suppliers, customers, the environment and the communities in which we operate).

How does the ‘mission-lock’ actually work?

In practice, the people who set up social enterprises are the ones who believe most in the Purpose and are the ones who want to see it protected. The purpose of the mission lock, therefore, is to ensure that the Purpose and the Directors’ obligation to follow the Purpose can’t be changed without the founders’ permission (regardless of how diluted their shareholding may be and regardless of whether the founders remain as Directors). The requirement of a 100% Shareholder vote to change these elements of the Constitution creates what we call the ‘mission-lock’.

The ‘mission-lock’ also comes with an enforcement mechanism, albeit one that hasn’t been tested in case law.

If Directors’ act wilfully against the Purpose or with disregard to their Duties, shareholders (acting on their own behalf or on behalf of the company) could theoretically seek an injunction to force Directors to act according to the Purpose. This has not been tested in case law but our hope is that action could either be taken for breach of the Company’s Constitution (under Section 140(1) of the Corporations Act) or for breach of Director’s Duties (under section 1324 of the Corporations Act) [1]. Again, this is a very untested area of the law – and hopefully we’ll never have to test it – but our belief is that the current Corporations Act allows for an enforcement mechanism which is about enforcing the Purpose, rather that any damage claims which we believe is the right balance.

Why don’t you have a ‘General Public Benefit’ statement like the US Public Benefit Corporations?

One of the key principles we were solving for is that Directors understand what their duties are and that conversations at a Board level are aided by the Purpose statement, not confused. Our feeling was that General Public Benefit statements actually confuse the conversation because they are so broad that you have no real idea when you’re not delivering on them.

Doesn’t this risk Directors being sued by non-shareholder Stakeholders for not delivering on the stated Public Benefit?

While non-shareholder stakeholders could take action under section 1324 of the Corporations Act for non-delivery of the stated public benefit [1], it’s incredibly unlikely and there’s very little basis for any action.

Why a ‘mission-lock’ not an ‘asset-lock’ like the UK Community Interest Companies?

While asset-locks theoretically seem like they protect the Purpose, we don’t believe that asset-locks are an effective mechanism because they’re so easy to get out of. Also, and arguably more importantly, no equity investor – even impact investors – will invest in an entity with an asset lock, which basically means that you can raise debt or grants.. which is the same as a charity, which gets us back to where we started.

Disclaimer

Everything contained in this post is a lay opinion and should not be relied upon as a legal opinion. We’d advise getting in touch with your lawyers who can step you through the details of creating a Social Benefit Company in Australia.

References

[1] We’ve relied heavily on the Clayton Utz Opinion prepared for Small Giants and the Social Impact Hub’s excellent report available here. We don’t however share the opinion that’s promoted in both of these documents that extra legislation is required, however we do believe it’d be useful.

Does anyone really care about Asylum Seekers?

Very few of these illegal boat people would not get into the country by legal means, they bring violence to them which is obvious from the start in the detention centres.They cost us millions in education, accommodation, health & security.

– Linda

Sometimes when you read the comments section on any‪ news.com.au article on refugees, you could be forgiven for thinking that you’re all alone in being compassionate towards people fleeing for their lives.

You’re not. There are millions of others who feel the same way.

And now, thanks to Jason Koh and his ‘People Just Like Us’ campaign, people like you can buy a banner like this one, to show your colours and show your compassion.

It’s a really simple way to remind our community, that we’re here to‪ #‎AdvanceAustraliaFair‬ – not to ‪#‎ReclaimAustralia‬

https://www.chuffed.org/project/people-just-like-us

(This photo is from Alex B’s house – thanks for sending it through!)

New feature: Collect your donors’ addresses

Chuffed.org Workshops

We’ve just released a new feature on Chuffed.org to save you time and to help you get those fantastic perks to your donors even quicker.

After talking to a number of campaigners, we realised pretty quickly that while getting hundreds of donors is great, it becomes not-so-great when you have to collect hundreds of postal addresses to deliver them perks.

Some campaigners told us they spent several days just following up with people to make sure they had the right details.

So, we decided to find a way to make that whole process even simpler for you. Now, in your Chuffed.org campaign backend, you can choose to collect addresses from your donors.

 

Collect addresses from your Chuffed.org donors

We’ve even put in some smart internationalisation features to make sure addresses format correctly for your international donors.

This feature is now available to all our campaigners, and it’s up to you to decide whether or not you want to turn it on.

 

Some common questions

 

1. Will I be forced to collect addresses?

Definitely not. Our default setting is not to collect addresses, and that will remain so. If you don’t collect addresses, everything on the payment form will look exactly like it does right now.

 

2. I’m running a political fundraiser and need to collect addresses for compliance reasons. Can I use this feature?

Yep. This is definitely the way to do it if you need to meet your compliance requirements.

 

3. Should I collect addresses just to put into our CRM?

We are against collecting information that you don’t really need or intend on using. We think you should only collect addresses if there’s a good, clear reason to do so.