Excuse Me, My Cause is Calling
Since I last wrote about YouthNoise in June, the social activism networking site for teens has continued to innovate new ways to appeal to youth. The Wall Street Journal (online subscribers' access only) on Saturday describes a new partnership between YouthNoise and Virgin Mobile USA to send a text novella in 160-character installments to cellphone users who sign up. The story is aimed at raising awareness of teenage homelessness, and was written by copywriters rather than a published author. Here's how they describe it:
The characters from the story each have a profile and blog on youthnoise.com, interacting with readers and each other in the comments. They also each have a MySpace page.
In the past week about 10,000 people have read the beginning of this text-message fiction. It's not free, though, costing anywhere from $.025-.05 per message (depending on the messaging plan they have); those who sign up will receive two text messages a day for five weeks.
This is a novel way of getting the message out (yes, pun intended), and I expect that we will be seeing more of this type of text messaging and/or interactive fiction directed at teens through the media they use most.
And while we're on the subject of social activism via mobile phones, I just read at Strategic Public Relations about a line of mobile phone personalization products called Just Cause from Airborne Entertainment. These products include "socially-relevant, environmentally-concerned and politically attuned ringtones, ringbacks and wallpapers."
Kids love to be able to personalize their phones, and this presents an opportunity for nonprofits to be able to give their teen supporters a way to express their affinity for the cause. YouthNoise knows this too, and they just had a contest to design a phone charm that embodies the site's philosophy. If you are working with youth, how can you make their mobile phone -- one of their main methods of communication -- into a way of getting your message out?
Technorati Tags: phones, youthnoise, homelessness, virgin, social activism, marketing