Best Practices for Donating Product for Disaster Recovery Efforts

Similar documents
Volunteer and Donations Strategies and Management

Disaster Relief & Preparedness, Part 1: Corporate Collaboration for Haiti August 3, 2010

Local Chamber Recovery

Chapter 1 - History and Current Status of Emergency Management

Nonprofit 911: In Case of Emergency Attend Webinar How to plan a disaster response and recovery campaign

Enhancing resilience in the face of disaster

Local Chamber Preparedness

International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies

Unit One. Introduction To Disaster Relief Voluntary Agencies

State Emergency Management and Homeland Security: A Changing Dynamic By Trina R. Sheets

HOUSE OF WORSHIP Mitigation & Preparedness

BEST PRACTICES AND LESSONS LEARNED IN DEPLOYING PRIVATE SECTOR AND VOLUNTEER RESOURCES THROUGH EMAC

Emergency Support Function #6 Mass Care, Housing, and Human Services Annex

District Captain Role and Responsibilities

I S Y O U R P R O G R A M R E A D Y T O K E E P K I D S S A F E?

Disaster Relief: Applying the Lessons Learned By: Jennifer Ahern Lammers

Hunger Challenge. Guidebook

Colorado Division of Emergency Management (DEM)

State of Utah Emergency Operations Plan. SUPPORT ANNEX D Volunteer and Donations Management

Emergency Management Performance Grants Providing Returns on a Nation s Investment

Emergency Support Function (ESF) 6 Mass Care

Response Protocols July 26,

What U.S. Habitat affiliates and state support organizations need to know

Disaster Preparedness, Response and Recovery. Charles Craig. Voluntary Agency Liaison DHS FEMA

Emergency Management Performance Grants Providing Returns on a Nation s Investment Edition

Disaster Chaplaincy Services Inc

A CASE STUDY: PARTNERING WITH COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS TO INCREASE CAPACITY AND SUPPORT GROWTH March 14, 2017

employee hurricane preparedness guide

To a Successful Planned Giving Program Thursday, May 22

Hunger Challenge. Guidebook

Preparedness Must Permeate Health Care

PREPARATION GUIDE WHAT TO DO BEFORE, DURING AND AFTER A NATURAL DISASTER STRIKES

Organizing Best Practices: Existing LTRGs or VOADs Help Quicken Recovery Efforts Staying connected with groups in the area, even if there is more

Learning from the Hurricane Harvey Relief Fund: Considerations for the Future August 2018

Naperville Community Meeting August 31, 2017

RESILIENT & HEALTHY COUNTIES LUNCH: Strengthening Counties Resilience by Addressing the Public Health Impacts of Natural Disasters

International Health Relief Assistance Recommendations Approved at the Meeting of International Health Relief Assistance in Latin America

John R. Harrald, Ph.D. Director, Institute for Crisis, Disaster, and Risk Management The George Washington University.

Introduction to the. Strategy

Insurance & Federal Claims Services (IFCS)

EMERGENCY PREPAREDNESS FOR NEIGHBORHOOD ORGANIZATIONS

PRESIDENTIAL POLICY DIRECTIVE/PPD-8 WORKING DRAFT NATIONAL RESPONSE FRAMEWORK REVIEW PACKAGE

Coordinator/Keyworker Reference Guide

Draft 2016 Emergency Management Standard Release for Public Comment March 2015

The Blackbaud Index. Overall Giving, Online Giving, and Foundation Index Trends

CHATHAM COUNTY EMERGENCY OPERATIONS PLAN

Sponsored by Russ Reid and the American Red Cross WCAI Research Opportunity 8 December 2011

CORPORATE ADVISORY SERVICES

10 TIPS TO IMPROVE HCC PERFORMANCE

The LSU Multi-Hazard Mitigation Plan and Disaster Science 101 at Baton Rouge Community College

Homebound Health and Disaster Planning

February 1, Dear Mr. Chairman:

The All Hazards Consortium 501c3

This award honors a corporation or its corporate

Lessons Learned: Presented by: Elliott Gion, Med Sled Evacuation

Kansas Disaster Training Institute Course Descriptions *Denotes Red Cross Specific Training

NATIONAL INCIDENT MANAGEMENT SYSTEM (NIMS) BASIC GUIDANCE FOR PUBLIC INFORMATION OFFICERS (PIOs) 20 August 2007

Chapter 5 Becoming an Emergency Management Professional

Support Annex Volunteers & Donations Management

Wall St. Training Valuation Case Competition Competition Guide

Florida Division of Emergency Management Field Operations Standard Operating Procedure

Handbook Disaster Services

Relating to Community Recovery after the Tragedy at Umpqua Community College Recovery Framework and Support-to-Date

2010 HOLIDAY GIVING. Research and Insights into the Most Charitable Time of the Year THIS RESEARCH INDICATES:

2018 Progress Report

JPMorgan Chase Giving Tuesday Program Rules

O. APPENDIX XV: EMERGENCY SUPPORT FUNCTION 15 - VOLUNTEERS AND DONATIONS

OUTSOURCING IN THE UNITED STATES MARKET

The Basics of Disaster Response

Catastrophic Incident Search and Rescue Lessons from the 2013 Colorado Floods

But We re Not DuPont How All In-House Departments Can Add Value Through Business Discipline

Tanjung Pinang, Indonesia

TIME PRESENTER TOPIC DESCRIPTION ROOM

TAKE A GLIMPSE INSIDE...

Small Business, Nonprofit & Church Services and Solutions. Partner Program. BizCentral USA

A COMMUNITY BASED DNP LEADERSHIP CURRICULUM FOR INTERDISCIPLINARY GLOBAL DISASTER PREPAREDNESS

NYS Emergency Management Training Program. Emergency Management in New York State

Institute of Medicine Home Healthcare Workers Use Of PPE. Ruth Ann Ellison BSN MBA Vice President Clinical Regulatory Compliance

Memorandum of Understanding. between. The American National Red Cross. and. National Council on Independent Living

Citizen Corps. Skip to content. Uniting Communities - Preparing the Nation. Contact Locate Your Council Council Login

The Value of a COAD (Community Organizations Active in Disaster) in Your Emergency Management Programming

GLOBAL PHILANTHROPY LEADERSHIP INITIATIVE

UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST LOCAL CHURCH DISASTER PREPAREDNESS AND RESPONSE PLANNING GUIDELINES

NOTICE OF FUNDING OPPORTUNITY Texas Disaster Volunteer Generation Initiative

Emergency Support Function 14. Community Recovery and Mitigation

Community Emergency Response Teams (CERT)

Emergency Preparedness Challenges Facing Long Term Care

Emergency Support Function (ESF) 16 Law Enforcement

Fundraiser. Mattress. The Original 10 % BOOSTER BEDS Program. How Many People in YOUR Community. WILL Buy a Mattress This Year!

What Is CAN? How it Works

Monica Miller, Local Capacity Development Manager Chris Garner, NIP Coordinator Lara Lawson, LCD

Maximizing Giving Days and Ensuring a Successful Year End Giving Initiative

United Way of Thurston County

Hurricane Harvey After Action Report San Antonio VOAD and Texas Crisis Resiliency Team (TCRT) Disaster Spiritual Care October 12, 2017

ASPR TRACIE: Resources to Help Build Resilience for the Expected and Unexpected

Guidelines for Disaster Response and Recovery Programs

History & Current Status of Emergency Management

Stoke-on-Trent, United Kingdom

Mississippi Emergency Support Function #6 Mass Care, Housing, and Human Services Annex

ANNEX V Donations Management

Transcription:

Best Practices for Donating Product for Disaster Recovery Efforts June 20, 2012 Co-hosted by the Business Civic Leadership Center

ABOUT GOOD360 Nonprofit leader in product philanthropy since 1983. Consistently ranked by Forbes as one of the top 10 most efficient charities in America. RECOGNIZED BY: Distributed more than $7 billion in product donations to nonprofits around the globe since inception. Operates at less than 2% of the value of products donated. Handles product distribution for 125 of the Fortune 500. Distributes more than 50 truckloads of product donations monthly in the United States. Serves nearly 30,000 pre-qualified charities of all shapes, sizes and causes in the Good360 global network. Creating the world s largest online product donation marketplace.

GOOD360 ACTIVITIES Road to Recovery Journey This fall Good360 will work with UPS to organize the first of ongoing service projects that will allow us to create personal care kits for people who are recovering from disaster. Partnership with National VOAD Good360 is thrilled to partner with National VOAD.

WEBINAR SERIES Month March 21 2PM EST Session Topic & Speakers Product Philanthropy 101 April 16 2PM EST The Business Case for Product Giving Guest Speaker: Justin Ross, Associate Professor, Indiana University School of Public and Environmental Affairs June 20 2PM EST September 6 2PM EST September 26 2PM EST October 17 2PM EST December 12 2PM EST Best Practices for Donating Product for Disaster Relief Efforts Guest Speaker: Ollie Davidson, Senior Disaster Response Advisor, US Chamber of Commerce Leveraging Slow-moving Merchandise to Spark Cause and Point-of- Sale Campaigns Guest Speaker: Joe Waters, Founder & Blogger, Selfishgiving.com Boosting Corporate Sustainability Results Through Product Giving Innovative Ways to Engage Your Employees Through Product Giving Programs Guest Speaker: Marlon Evans, Office of Global Social Innovation, HP Creative Year-End Inventory Solutions Guest Speaker: Matt Connelly, VP of Network Operations, UPS

TODAY S PANEL Introductions: Melissa Trumpower, Good360 EVP, Marketing, Communications & Strategic Partnerships Moderator Panelists Ollie Davidson Senior Disaster Response Advisor, Business Civic Leadership Center James McGowan Associate Executive Director of Partnership, National Voluntary Organizations Active in Disaster Charles Zdrojowy Program Manager, Tempur-Pedic

INTRODUCTION Product Donations Valuable In-kind Contributions Lost emphasis in the Cash is King message Complexity of doing it right a constraint Now is the Time The Hurricane Season Companies review giving policies and product availability Identify partnering opportunities NGOs - sharpen the list of useful products Negotiate partner agreements with companies

INTRODUCTION Plan Now, Review Lessons, Seek Guidance Timing of the offer and projected arrival on scene is often critical Enhance the value of a product offer, pay for its transportation In-kind offers nothing is free, product donations have costs Planning for disasters in the U.S. or internationally? In-country local donations are one key to success Cultural sensitivities are one consideration Many organizations have experience No need to reinvent the wheel

CORPORATE DISASTER DONATIONS Business Benefits of Donating Products Give back in communities where you do business Help members of the community - neighbors are customers! Introduce a new product (test with new market) Expand or enhance market share Engage employees to volunteer or help Enlist CEOs who want to help Take advantage of a tax deduction opportunity Solves slow-moving inventory/reverse logistics challenges

STAGES OF DISASTER Preparedness Planning phase Prepare plans/forms that are needed in event of a disaster Response Emergency phase Evacuation, sheltering, feeding and caring for victims Recovery Reconstruction phase Psychological, financial and emotional support Test

RECOVERY CYCLE Preparedness Incident Mitigation Emergency Management Cycle Response Long-term recovery begins about here Recovery

PLANNING & PREPARATION Corporate Strategies for Successful Product Giving Company policy, fast decision making Partnering agreements before the crisis (in-kind and cash) Timing of the offer, coincides with an identified need Cash helps move product offers Review Lessons and Seek Expertise Expertise: Contacts for guidance (Good360, NVOAD, BCLC) International Guidance (CIDI.Org, InterAction.org) Transportation a key resource (ALANAid.org, Good360)

LONG-TERM STRATEGIES NGO Strategies for Enhanced Product Solicitation and Use Identify exactly what is needed and when Plan with partners who have those products/services Stay in touch all year, engage companies in planning Explain timing/don t accept what you can t use Single POC for each disaster Say thank you Provide stories and pictures

GOVERNMENT FACILITATION Tips Don t buy what is being donated Transport high-priority donated goods Troubleshoot state policies (weigh stations) Use NDMN and be equitable in referrals Seek guidance on International Disasters

POTENTIAL CHALLENGES Common Issues Hazardous materials/potentially hazardous Logical offer, wrong timing or wrong partner Last-minute arrangements, too busy Collecting before needs are assessed Publicity driven offer (PR too early) Political engagement - often counterproductive Military transport - used rarely, $$$ Offer products for recovery, not relief

SPONTANEOUS COLLECTIONS Private citizens have the best intentions, however, spontaneous collections can be problematic. Solutions? Social Media can be a valuable resource Firm message first - then a resolution Turn collections into cash Yard Sale! Donate it locally - many local needs Repurpose it - CIDI.Org has suggestions

RELIEF PHASE PRODUCT OFFERS Most Cost-effective Product Offers Disaster 50 miles 200 miles 500 miles Less Costeffective Product Donations PRODUCT MUST BE MOVED INTO THE DISASTER AREA FROM: 1 50 Miles from the Disaster Easiest and most cost-effective to move products to affected area. (Offers of requested products usually accepted. Must note arrival time/storage options.) 50 150 miles Cost-effective product donations; reasonable transport cost. 200 miles Cut-off point for bulky and heavy relief supplies; can be purchased closer to affected area. 500 miles In most cases, can only accept offers of high-value items in scarce supply. * An Offer is a Product or Service that a company is willing to donate. ** A Donation is an offer that has been accepted by an organization. *** Recovery Products are useful and can be cost-effective during reconstruction.

Welcome

MISSION National VOAD is the forum where organizations share knowledge and resources throughout the disaster cycle preparation, response and recovery to help disaster survivors and their communities.

The National Donations Management Network was developed in 2007 as a national response to the influx of unsolicited, undesignated donations experienced during the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina; Previously, there was no central mechanism in use each state utilized their own unique tool. The National Portal exists for interstate, nationwide distribution of donations. Each state maintains an individual State Portal, administered by state emergency management personnel/state donations coordination team.

ABOUT TEMPUR-PEDIC NASA and the Swedish scientists In the early 1970s, NASA developed a pressure-absorbing material to help cushion and support astronauts during lift-off. The material was temperature-sensitive and it evenly distributed body weight. A group of Swedish scientists then spent nearly a decade and millions of research dollars to perfect TEMPUR material for use in mattresses. Next up: better sleep comes to the U.S. In 1992, Lexington, Kentucky resident Bob Trussell visited Denmark and met the scientists at Dan-Foam. Realizing the opportunity to improve sleep for people in the U.S., he started Tempur-Pedic and a revolution in sleep was born.

TEMPUR-PEDIC S GIVING Tempur-Pedic is focused on donating truck loads of in-kind product, primarily mattresses in support of the disadvantaged, infirmed and children. Tempur-Pedic donated over 16K mattresses in 2011 with a goal of 31K for 2012. Test

GOOD360 & TEMPUR-PEDIC In 2007, Good360 and Tempur-Pedic partnered together to donate mattresses to qualified nonprofit across the country. Quick Facts Tempur-Pedic Product Donation Program: 78 Truckloads were placed to 66 different nonprofits More than 33,000 individuals were served by Tempur-Pedic mattresses in 2011 So far in 2012, we have distributed 31 truckloads, 3901 mattresses to 29 groups. Total FMV of products donated in 2011 equals approximately $8.7 million We thank you for the gift of Tempur-Pedic mattresses for use in the Oak Street Residence Hall. As you might imagine, sleep is a valuable commodity for our students and we have had nothing but good feedback. Thank you for making this possible. Leo E. Morton, Chancellor University of Missouri-Kansas City

DONATION DISTRIBUTION

RECOVERY EFFORTS 2011 Texas Wild Fires Tempur-Pedic worked with two retail partners in Texas in concert with the Red Cross of central Texas to provide beds to victims of the Texas wild fires in 2011. 1,000 mattresses were distributed to wild fire victims when they returned to their permanent residence.

RECOVERY EFFORTS Joplin, Missouri Tempur-Pedic partnered with Good360 to distribute four truckloads of mattresses and bedding (comforters, mattress pads, sheets, bed skirts, blankets, etc.). Received by Joplin Area Long Term Recovery Committee coalition of groups that are assisting in the recovery efforts. It has lessened the burden for families who may only need a bed in order to get their lives back to some semblance of normal. It has lessened the burden on case managers who have one less item they have to find bids to fulfill. And, as individual donations have declined, it has lessened the burden on the community. - Stephanie Brady, Director of Programs, The Independent Living Center, Inc.

ONE J0PLIN RECIPIENT This young woman lost everything in last year s tornadoes. She has severe rheumatoid arthritis, so the donated mattress she received is especially helpful for her. Test

JOPLIN DONATIONS Test

DISCUSSION HIGHLIGHTS Product donations are needed and desired NGOs are partners who can access disaster sites Right product at the right time requires planning Recovery Phase has more opportunities Transportation cost is one key to acceptance Donating products for international use is difficult Excellent guidance and expertise are available

USEFUL RESOURCES Business-NGO Disaster Information Portal The Business Civic Leadership Center (BCLC), has created a Portal in cooperation with the National Voluntary Organizations Active In Disaster (NVOAD) to share information about the NGOs active in U.S. disasters. http://bclc.uschamber.com/site-page/business-nonprofit-disaster-portal Voluntary Organizations and State VOADS, NVOAD.org National Donation Management Network, Aidmatrixnetwork.org/FEMA/ American Logistics Aid Network, ALANAid.org Center for International Disaster Information, CIDI.org International NGOs, InterAction.org Product Donations, Good360.org Supply Chain/Partners, AidMatrix.org

Questions & Answers Please submit your questions in the box to the right, and let us know if you would like it directed to a specific person. Ollie Davidson, Business Civic Leadership Center James McGowan, National Voluntary Organizations Active in Disaster (National VOAD) Charles Zdrojowy, Tempur-Pedic Questions about Good360 or today s presentation? Please contact Melissa Trumpower at mel@good360.org

JOIN US NEXT TIME Month March 21 2PM EST Session Topic & Speakers Product Philanthropy 101 April 16 2PM EST The Business Case for Product Giving Guest Speaker: Justin Ross, Associate Professor, Indiana University School of Public and Environmental Affairs June 20 2PM EST September 6 2PM EST September 26 2PM EST October 17 2PM EST December 12 2PM EST Best Practices for Donating Product for Disaster Relief Efforts Guest Speaker: Ollie Davidson, Senior Disaster Response Advisor, US Chamber of Commerce Leveraging Slow-moving Merchandise to Spark Cause and Point-of- Sale Campaigns Guest Speaker: Joe Waters, Founder & Blogger, Selfishgiving.com Boosting Corporate Sustainability Results Through Product Giving Innovative Ways to Engage Your Employees Through Product Giving Programs Guest Speaker: Marlon Evans, Office of Global Social Innovation, HP Creative Year-End Inventory Solutions Guest Speaker: Matt Connelly, VP of Network Operations, UPS Visit us at http://about.good360.org