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Contributors to Nonprofit Online News
Our Team of Active Contributors Includes:
Michael Gilbert |
Eli Malinsky |
Put Barber |
Samantha Moscheck
Michael B. Soper |
Ali Woolwich |
List of Articles by Author
Editor, Contributing Writer, Research Director

Michael Gilbert is an internationally known consultant to foundations and nonprofits, an innovator and researcher in the field of nonprofit communication, and a social entrepreneur.
He is the author of The Guide to Nonprofit Email, author and editor to all the publications we offer here, and also The Campaign Cookbook. He is the Publisher and Editor of Nonprofit Online News, which he started in 1997 as a means to keep himself and his colleagues informed and which has since become a premier newsletter of the field. He is often credited with helping ignite a revolution in nonprofit communication with his Email Manifesto and he is well known for his provocative and incise commentary.
Mr. Gilbert is equally well known for his challenging and inspiring speeches. He delivered the Keynote Address at the very first Silicon Valley Conference on Nonprofits and Technology. He has been a popular speaker with many organizations including the Association of Fundraising Professionals, Planned Parenthood, and the Corporation for Public Broadcasting.
Mr. Gilbert was the Founding President of the Nonprofit Technology Enterprise Network, which has grown into a successful professional association. He was the CEO of Social Ecology, a bleeding edge nonprofit software company.
Mr. Gilbert has directed several influential research projects; including the Nonprofit SiteAnalyzer Reports, the first Nonprofit Email Survey, and the Nonprofit Email Study, as well as numerous private studies.
Mr. Gilbert has served as Executive Director of three organizations, as a board member or officer of more than thirty, and as a communication and management consultant to nearly 700 organizations in over 20 countries over the last 20 years. He was born in Sweden, lives and works in Seattle, and counts San Francisco, Berlin, and Yelapa as his homes away from home.
Eli Malinsky
Contributing Writer

Eli Malinsky has spent the past seven years exploring collaboration and networks within civil society. His interest in the sector began with a four-year stint at Imagine Canada, the countryÌs pre-imminent research institute on the nonprofit and voluntary sector. In 2005, Eli joined the Centre for Social Innovation to help fulfill the organizationÌs strategic and programming vision. The Centre for Social Innovation is a hub for TorontoÌs social mission sector, providing shared space and services to over 80 organizations, as well as a variety of capacity building programs and incubation services. Connecting the Dots is based on EliÌs graduate research in the York University and Ryerson University Communication and Culture Program in Toronto, Canada. For more information on EliÌs current adventures, visit: http://www.socialinnovation.ca/
Contributing Writer

Putnam Barber is a visionary social entrepreneur, a wise observer of nonprofits, and one of the most respected voices in the world of public benefit organizations.
His is a senior consultant to Executive Alliance, an association of nonprofit executive directors and supporters of the field. He is also the Chief Editor of the Nonprofit FAQ, which has been a widely cited encyclopedia of nonprofit knowledge since its inception in 1994. He is on the Editorial Board of Nonprofit and Voluntary Sector Quarterly. He is a Visiting Professor in Seattle University's Not for Profit Leadership program. In 1990, he was the founding Executive Director of The Evergreen State Society, a nonprofit association of Washington State.
He was a columnist for the Chronicle of Philanthropy and is the author of numerous influential articles on the sector. He was a Senior Advisor to Social Ecology, a past Director of the Washington State Office of Voluntary Action, and a past Executive Director of Cityclub.
Samantha Moscheck
Contributing Writer

Samantha has spent the past eight years working to build the technology capacity of social justice organizations, and has worked closely with more than fifty organizations throughout the Pacific Northwest in the past four years. She focuses on strategic technology planning, staff and leader development, and web/database planning and development. She is a technologist, a historian, and an activist raised in the southern US and currently living in Seattle.
She worked as the program manager for Project Alchemy, a nonprofit devoted to social justice technology, until its closure in 2004, at which time she co-founded DigitalAid and became its director of communication technology. DigitalAid provides technology consulting for progressive nonprofits, small businesses, and people working for social justice and innovation.
Prior to her focus on technology, she worked as fundraiser, organizer and educator for a wide range of economic, social, and environmental organizations ranging from Tennessee Industrial Renewal Network (a community-labor-faith coalition for economic justice), Heartwood (a forest-protection network) and Citizens Acting Together for Cooperative Housing (a member-owned cooperative working to slow the pace of gentrification through home ownership).
Contributing Writer

Michael Soper, President & CEO, TeamSoper.Com and the Development & Marketing Management Corporation. Formerly, he was Sr. VP, Development at PBS and WETA. Soper consults with nonprofit's leadership, management, marketing, and fundraising professionals. His virtual consulting teams bring together nationally recognized experts to provide total marketing solutions, strategy / campaign development, relationship building email, direct mail copywriting, list segmentation, design, and production.
Soper has thirty years of nonprofit leadership and fundraising experience. His client list includes the NAACP / Baltimore; WQED / Pittsburgh; World Wildlife Fund - International (WWF); Gland, Switzerland, Society of Women Engineers / Chicago; The Children's Inn at NIH (National Institute of Health), Bethesda; WNPT / Nashville; KWBU / Waco, CPB, PBS, and; the ALS Foundation / Los Angeles.
While at PBS, Soper managed all fundraising support services supplied to PBS member stations nationwide, including the development of the "TV Worth Watching ... TV Worth Paying For" and "Funded by the Annual Financial Support of Viewers Like You" themes / campaigns. More recently, Soper conducted three national research studies for PBS stations (Image, Brand Resonance, and Member Attitudes). He is now unveiling "The Soper Manifesto," an entirely new approach to securing lower level support for nonprofit institutions. His occasional "TeamSoper eBulletins" are available at no cost by request.
Soper received his Master's Degree in Journalism with a minor in Advertising from the University of Illinois, Champaign-Urbana, IL in May 1998, where, in 1973, he also earned a Bachelor of Science Degree in Electrical Engineering (BSEE).
Contributing Writer

Ali Woolwich is a community organizer, communication consultant, and dancer. She has been a Contact Improvisation instructor since 1996 and her dance company, Humility Swim, is pushing the edges of dance, organizing, and social commentary.
Ali was one of the founding employees of Social Ecology, an innovative ASP in the field of communication technology for nonprofit organizations. She has also consulted with dozens of community groups.
Copyright 1997-2008. All rights reserved.
Nonprofit Online News is a program of The Gilbert Center.
Opinions and observations by Michael Gilbert unless otherwise noted.
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