Challenging food poverty in the digital age by Mary Jane Edwards

The launch last week of the Feeding Britain report propelled food poverty and the role of food banks back into the political and public spotlight. The report provided a thorough, non-partisan reframing of the debate, and sensibly highlighted many underlying causes and areas for further investigation.

However, other than noting that access to mobile phones and the Internet are important to families in poverty, the potential role of technology in alleviating food poverty was otherwise overlooked.

New approaches

Over the past couple of years, though, a number of exciting new digital platforms have begun to emerge that help to move food from those who have it to those who don’t. They may point to new ways of significantly helping this cause.

For example, with the Feeding Britain report putting the big supermarkets in the line of fire for only redistributing 2% of their edible surplus food, it is useful to consider how FoodCloud, a small start-up based in Ireland, is tackling that problem.

Local retailers sign up to the platform, and at the end of the day enter into the system the food that they’d like to distribute. The platform then automatically texts local charities what is available, and they do the rest. Simple. And perhaps the most encouraging aspect is that – with Tesco signed up as a partner – the platform has the chance of ‘scaling up’, the holy grail of every tech start-up.

But that’s just one approach. Many more are emerging across the globe.

In the USA, Food Cowboy provides a similar service to FoodCloud, routing surplus produce to food banks and soup kitchens, thus countering (as they say on their site) “the terrible irony of food companies paying to have nutritious fruits and vegetables hauled away to landfills even while charities just a few miles away pay good money to purchase the very same foods.”

PareUp (New York City) adds a commercial incentive for retailers, by allowing them to advertise their nearly-out-of-date produce at discounted rates. No more sharp elbows needed around the discount bays after 7pm, and far better – for both consumer and retailer – than just throwing the goods away.

ZeroPercent (USA) provides a similar service for restaurants, allowing them to list their leftover food and send text alerts to food pantries about what's available.

These innovations aren’t just for retailers, though; some also bring the general public into play. LeftoverSwap (again in the USA) goes a step further in utilising the capabilities of mobile phones, in that it allows you to take a photo of your food and see if anyone in the area would like to have it.

Over here in the UK, Casserole Club pushes the agenda from afterthought (i.e. ‘what do I do with these leftovers?’) to proactive and intended sharing. It pairs up those who could do with a good, hot meal with those who are happy to cook one. As a contributor, all you have to do is make an extra portion of a dish you may well have been cooking anyway, and deliver it at the agreed time to someone in your neighbourhood.

The power of platform thinking

Most of these interesting innovations harness what is known as ‘platform thinking’ – using the Internet (in these cases sometimes aided by app functionality) to make valuable connections that would be more difficult to make in the offline world (would you knock on your neighbour’s door to offer them a third of a pizza?). If there really is enough food in the world to feed everyone, new platforms do their best to connect available resources (in this case, food) to those who need or want them.

What may be most promising about these approaches, however, might be how they can combine forces with existing food bank and food distribution networks, or how each side – tech and non-tech – might learn from each other. That’s at the heart of a programme we have just begun with Dr Giles Hindle and Professor Richard Vidgen at Hull University Business School, funded by Surrey University’sNew Economic Models in the Digital Economy programme.

We will work with a number of food banks to examine their operational models. At the same time, we will find and analyse new digital approaches and investigate how technology can provide benefits over and above traditional, on-the-ground models. The project will investigate business-to-business (B2B) cooperation in the food bank supply chain (e.g. FoodCloud) and peer-to-peer (P2P) models, such as LeftoverSwap. There are also opportunities for connecting with Government agencies to build a better-connected approach to food allocation and consumption.

Collaborative potential

However, experience in other sectors has shown that those on the sharp end of front-line delivery can struggle to find time to consider the potential for new digital approaches. Conversely, tech start-ups may benefit from deeper exposure to traditional approaches, to strengthen their understanding of where the greatest help is needed. By bringing both sides together in workshops we hope to identify new ways of operating and build understanding of how digital approaches can re-imagine the food bank supply chain.

While it seems as if food banks may well still continue to increase in number as austerity continues to bite in the next few years, it is encouraging that some more tech-based cavalry has the potential to bolster traditional methods.

Of course, like many digitally-driven innovations, what really powers these platforms isn’t really the technology, it’s human kindness – of shop owners wanting to help, of neighbours wanting to do their bit; the tech just connects them with those who need their help.

Please get in touch if you want to collaborate with us to explore this area further.

Andy Hamflett

On Our Radar: from data do’s and dont’s for charities to traffic light ping pong by Mary Jane Edwards

Data

Data do’s and do not’s for nonprofits (via Techsoup.org) 

A good introductory article on the increasing importance of data, and how charities can start to get a handle on it. 

Spotify year in music (via Spotify)

Spotify mined their year in data and shared some fascinating facts about customer listening habits and interesting correlations.

Digital culture 

‘Design is more than cute chairs’ (via Science Friday)

Senior Design Curator at MoMA, Paola Antonelli talks about how the museum has embraced all aspects of digital culture.

Apps

Bringing the Museum to your mobile (via Google policy Europe)

Google Cultural Institute has created a platform, which allows museums to create a simple but powerful mobile app, based on Google's technology including Street View and YouTube.

16 Best startups that launched in 2014 (via businessinsider.com)

Lots of interesting apps in here, in particular DWNLD, which is to apps what Wordpress is to websites.

“Driving While Black” App Emerges to Educate Public on Rights (via nonprofitquarterly.com)

Two Portland lawyers have produced a topical and timely app, Driving While Black to educate citizens of their rights when they are stopped by a police officer.

Gaming

Traffic Light that lets you play pong (via thisiscolossal.com)

We like this clever, gamified way of dissuading impatient pedestrians from darting across traffic in Germany. 

Mobile commerce

Starbucks, Asda use proximity targeting on mobile to drive in-store traffic (via Mobile Commerce Daily)

Could leisure centres, museums and art galleries use this technology? 

On Our Radar – Merkel talks tech, finding data nerds and the problem with the Internet of Things by Mary Jane Edwards

Digitising Europe

The meat on the bones of Germany’s digital policy: Merkel at Digitising Europe (via Silicon Allee)

We were in Berlin this week for the Vodafone Institute’s Digitising Europe conference. Chancellor Merkel’s keynote speech was assured – optimistic yet pragmatic. Some excerpts and analysis here.

Could a robot do my job better than I? (via digitising-europe.eu)

At the same conference, Michael Osborne, Associate Professor in Machine Learning at the University of Oxford, was excellent in analysing the digital threats to and opportunities within the employment market. Low-skill jobs are most at risk from machine learning, it seems.

Big Data

Find local data nerds, build a local data hub: Tips from Beth Kanter (via Knight Digital Media Center)

Beth Kanter suggests ways for non-profits to get round their data analysis skills gap.

The Internet of Things

The problem with the Internet of Things (via TechCrunch)

Dan Conlon questions current IOT evangelism by highlighting major weaknesses in user experience

Coding

Apple to host ‘Hour of Code’ at retail stores worldwide (via AppleInsider.com)

Java with your coffee, madam?

Data Privacy

When data gets creepy: the secrets we don’t realise we’re giving away (via The Guardian)

Ben Goldacre questions our apathy in relation to external uses of our personal data.

With Big Data comes big responsibility (via Harvard Business Review)

And MIT’s Alex Pentland addresses some of strategic and regulatory issues related to this agenda. Can we find a New Deal for opting in or out of personal data sharing?

On Our Radar – from data-toting cops to the unstoppable rise of mobile payments by Mary Jane Edwards

 

Big Data

Can Big Data measure the political mood? (via the World Economic Forum blog)

What can 100 million tweets tell you about citizens’ views of state institutions? The World Bank aims to find out.

Data-toting cops (via MIT Technology Review)

Big Brother watching you or intelligent policing to protect communities? Whatever you think, this trend is set to continue.

Twitter "Exhaust" Reveals Patterns of Unemployment (via MIT Technology Review)

Can Twitter data mining reduce the costs of mass-scale socio-economic analysis?

Mobile payments

Dunkin’ Donuts’ app reaches 10M downloads as loyalty, payments ascend (via Mobile Commerce Daily)

The pace of mobile payment adoption in the States is fascinating, with Dunkin’ Donuts hot on the heels of Starbucks. All sectors should be watching.

Gaming for good

Xbox controller pulls actual blood out of players’ arms when they’re shot (via The Independent)

Kickstarter project radically rethinks the blood donation impetus.

Crowdfunding

Crowdfunding hub could help Liverpool entrepreneurs (via The Liverpool Echo)

New crowdfunding hubs are coming to a handful of Northern and Scottish cities, Liverpool included.

Social innovation

The Dawn of System Leadership (via Stanford Social Innovation Review)

We’re tracking the systems leadership and collective impact agenda with great interest, and found this article questioning what type of leadership is required to tackle society’s most intractable problems really insightful.

On Our Radar – from democratising fashion design to creating an “innovation engine” by Mary Jane Edwards

Fashion and Retail

When knitwear meets the internet (via The Crafts Council)

The future of fashion comes to Somerset House.

What shops and shopping will look like in the future (via PSFK)

The trends and insight agency PSFK sets out a number of developments shaping the future of retail.

Arts

How do you promote a contemporary art exhibition in the age of social media? (via Quartz)

Los Angeles County Museum of Art invites popular Instagram users to preview the show.

The internet is good for both the producers and consumers of music (via The Guardian)

Legendary record producer Steve Albini makes the case for the internet being a positive force for musicians in a great keynote speech at the Face the Music conference.

Business

Innovation made easy (via Harvard Business Review)

Harvard Business Review on how to set up an “innovation engine” in 90 days.

Just how important is LinkedIn becoming? (via entrepreneur.com)

A new US bank is using LinkedIn as part of their online credit check process.

Mobile

The future of mobile browsing? (via TechCrunch)

A new “card” based browser designed for mobile phones is being launched by Wildcard.

On Our Radar - from the use of predictive analytics in cities to a user experience of the dark net by Mary Jane Edwards

on our radar 17.11.jpeg

Cities

Essay: Clockwork City, Responsive City, Predictive City and Adjacent Incumbents (via cityofsound.com)

An insightful piece by Dan Hill on how data is being used to predict behaviour and manage our cities.

Design

The NY.gov (via codeandtheory.com)

How New York State is rethinking the way government communicates with its citizens.

Crowdfunding

How to be an online busker (via the independent)

We’re huge advocates of the ‘art of asking’, and there is lots to learn from Amanda Palmer for creatives and charities alike. 

Supporting the Arts With a New Kind of Access (via the NYTimes.com) 

This innovative cultural subscription service caught our eye in Amsterdam. The business model doesn’t just rely on a straightforward ticketing service, but sees fifty percent of membership fees going directly to participating cultural groups. One for the UK cultural sector to watch.

Apps

Medical Students train on new app game (via The Irish Times)

The Royal College of Surgeons turning passive learning into something fun and competitive. This new gaming app for iPhone and iPad is aimed at testing and improving people’s medical knowledge.

The Apps changing the way we spend money every day (via Business Insider)

What with new mobile payment laws likely to be announced by the EU this year here are five mobile options that are already changing traditional credit usage and our interactions with banks.

The Net

Jamie Barlett on the dark net (via The Guardian) 

We really enjoyed this podcast on the dark net by Jamie Barlett and the moral ambiguity on the net’s outliers.