Click, Click, Give: Charity Startup Goes Mobile
A new app allows PocketChange to reach more people than ever before
The first time Christian Dooley met Reyn Aubrey, he figured he could help his classmate鈥檚 startup with some Twitter posts. That day, he helped create an account for a company determined to make philanthropy easy and accessible.
Never could he have anticipated that, a few years later, PocketChange would have its own mobile app, which would help it raise more than $3,100 for charities on a
鈥淭he fulfilling part is not about 鈥榦h we did it,鈥欌 says Dooley, a senior at the and now head of operations at PocketChange. 鈥淸It鈥檚] the ability to see how long [it takes] and hard it is to get something to where you want it to go. And having that moment of satisfaction but also that hunger of, 鈥業magine what we can do this year.鈥欌
PocketChange courts people who are scrolling through social media, reading the news and looking to make a difference. With a few taps of the app, users are linked to vetted charities that are working to tackle an issue discussed in a particular article. Donations ranging from 25 cents to $2 鈥 hence the company鈥檚 name 鈥 go directly and fully to the charity of choice. Those 鈥渄rops in the bucket,鈥 the thinking goes, eventually add up.
Aubrey鈥檚 idea was good enough to his freshman year. Slowly, over the last three years, what was once an extension on the Google Chrome browser has evolved into a newly released smartphone app.
鈥淚t鈥檚 at a place where we鈥檙e really happy to get it out there,鈥 Dooley says. 鈥淧eople are signing up as total strangers, seeing it, using it. Now we can start to build more of the platform vision we鈥檝e always had.鈥
Thanks, in part, to a social media app, more people than ever before are learning about the PocketChange vision and embracing its mission of easy, accessible giving.
On a special Giving Tuesday during the worst of the coronavirus pandemic, PocketChange facilitated philanthropy from 1,217 people, more than doubling its goal and securing matching funds from private donors.
鈥淓mpathy and kindness are how we鈥檙e going to be able to get through this pandemic,鈥 says Reese Arthur, the company鈥檚 head of charity and a senior at the 鈥淔inding ways to allow people to take action in more accessible ways through PocketChange is what it鈥檚 all about. You don鈥檛 have to have a huge amount of money. It鈥檚 all about intentional acts of good.鈥
As Arthur has ascended the PocketChange ladder over recent years, she鈥檚 watched the company grow. The startup routinely offers internship opportunities for students on campus and employs a team almost exclusively composed of 91桃色 students. On-campus resources from incubators like have helped the venture mature.
鈥淚鈥檝e been able to learn about the business side of things and how to apply that to any idea that anyone has,鈥 Arthur says. 鈥淚鈥檓 doing the things I鈥檇 like to do as a working adult in the future, but I鈥檝e been able to do it during my four years at 91桃色.鈥
Both Arthur and Dooley plan to continue their work at PocketChange after they graduate in June. Now that the app has launched, the startup is working to give it more of a social media feel. Ideally, the app can be a place to see where friends are contributing their cash and learn about other important causes that warrant attention.
鈥淲e don鈥檛 want to guilt people into fundraising,鈥 Dooley says. 鈥淭he beauty of what we鈥檙e doing is it鈥檚 not a fundraiser. You鈥檙e permanently empowered to take the actions you want on your own terms. Now more than ever people want to be supporting these types of things, whether it鈥檚 COVID or natural disasters. Startups kind of go obsolete during these times, but this is what we鈥檙e meant to do.鈥