Charity Technology Trust
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Charity Technology Trust | |
---|---|
Type | Charitable trust |
Headquarters | 2nd Floor Downstream Building |
Website | http://www.ctt.org |
Charity Technology Trust is a United Kingdom charity which was formed in 2001 with the aim of helping charities improve their use of Information Technology. Many charities face problems making effective use of IT. This may be because of issues with budget, resources, or change management, or simply through a poor understanding of how technology can improve their marketing, communications, fundraising, service delivery and administration.
Over the past five years CTT has:
- Stimulated thinking on use of new media
- Demonstrated an effective approach to technology partnering
- Delivered real benefits to the sector
- Sent 19m+ e-mail messages, saving over £10m on DM and at lower cost than commercial e-mail providers
- Raised over £4m from our raffles & lotteries systems and stimulating thinking in this emerging area
- Generated £000’s direct savings from use of CTT’s payment services
- Provided trusted and valued advice to a broad range of charities
[edit] External links
CTT - Charity Technology Trust Official site.
[edit] References
- The Guardian, Tuesday July 2, 2002 – Charity Technology Trust]
- The Sunday Times, December 18, 2005 – The Andrew Davidson Interview: Hedge fund man makes charity an art. Harvey McGrath, chairman of Man, is the respectable face of the hedge fund industry. How long before his firm becomes part of the establishment?
- Lessons in good cyber communications The Guardian, Wednesday October 16, 2002 – The Royal National Institute for the Deaf offers a recommendation for CTT.