Refuge: The Helen Titchener (née Archer) Rescue Fund
- Exhibited by
- Louise McCathie, director of fundraising, Birmingham Children's Hospital
- Added
- March 09, 2017
- Medium of Communication
- Online
- Target Audience
- Individuals, Awareness
- Type of Charity
- Women, Domestic Violence, Social Change
- Country of Origin
- UK
- Date of first appearance
- February 2016
SOFII’s view
An unusual appeal that leveraged the plight of a fictional BBC Radio 4 soap opera character to raise money for the charity Refuge on behalf of real life women suffering from abuse. A great demonstration of a solo fundraiser's viral campaign with support and help by the charity.
Summary / objectives
A fan of Radio BBC 4’s popular programme The Archers created an online fundraising page for Refuge in response to a domestic violence storyline.
The much-debated storyline sparked a national debate about domestic violence and a flood of donations to the women's charity Refuge.
Background
An individual fundraiser created an online fundraising page for a fictional character in The Archers who was suffering from domestic abuse with all the money raised being donated to the charity Refuge because ‘for every fictional Helen, there are real ones’. The page reached £3,000 in just 18 hours and by April 2016 had raised £100,000.
Refuge worked closely with the fundraiser and integrated domestic violence prevention messages throughout, collectively making it a fantastic success, as well as raising awareness of the cause.
This exhibit is a great example of great storytelling and the use of digital.
Results
The original online fundraising page target was £1,000, within 24 hours it had reached over £22,000 and has now gone on to raise in excess of £170,000 (the largest single donation to Refuge ever).
Merits
More than 8,000 people have supported a JustGiving fundraising page for the women's charity Refuge set up by Archers fan Paul Trueman,
because for every fictional Helen, there are real ones.
With over £170,000 raised so far, Sandra Horley, chief executive of Refuge, said:
Never before in my 33-year career at Refuge have I seen such amazing public support for our work.
Other relevant information
The Archers: Verdict revealed in Helen Titchener trial
The Helen Titchener (nee Archer) Rescue Fund on JustGiving
To the edge of acceptability. SOFII has some more lessons in emotional messaging, from Helen's story, as told in BBC Radio 4's The Archers.
Creator / originator
Paul Trueman, head of social at Bray Leino
Special characteristics
The campaign reached a listenership of 4.2 million and, due to the viral nature of the campaign, a community of engaged fans of The Archers received instant updates and communication.
Refuge had to be reactive to their overnight success and seize the opportunity by complementing the fundraiser's promotion on Twitter with Refuge's social media channels to extend its reach. This campaign demonstrates the power of a story underpinned by great use of digital, which created a community that wished to be heard, take action and donate.
When a campaign has such momentum and media coverage it was imperative to keep people up-to-date on the milestones. Refuge and Paul repeatedly thanked supporters and a personalised journey for these supporters was then created to encourage long-term support.
The campaign really touched the public, many sharing their own personal stories online and through the use of digital media Refuge could contact users directly and signpost them to the helpline.
Influence / impact
In addition, Refuge reported that during the month of February the National Domestic Violence Helpline, which they run in partnership with Women’s Aid, received 17 per cent more calls than the same period last year.
Final notes
Louise McCathie,Director of Fundraising at Birmingham Children’s Hospital, presented this campaign at I Wish I'd Thought Of That IWITOT 2016.