Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
DonorSee: A charity app that challenges ‘Big Aid’
DonorSee: A charity app that challenges ‘Big Aid’
Jul 1, 2025 1:37 AM

For far too long, Westerners have simply accepted the status quo of foreign aid, building ever-larger systems and programs for global charity even as they’re proven to squander resources and disempower the munities they intend to assist.

As films like Poverty, Inc.and thePovertyCureaptly demonstrate, when es to charity, we need a profound shift in our heads, hands, and hearts — “from aid to enterprise, from poverty alleviation to wealth creation, from paternalism to partnerships, from handouts to investments.”

Such a shift certainly demands a fuller appreciation for the power and potential of business and entrepreneurship. But in correcting that imbalance, let’s not forget that the same principles of partnership and personal exchange ought to also extend back to the charity itself. Even as we turn our focus to creating the conditions for longer-term flourishing and prosperity, how might we reform the ways in which we continue to meet severe and immediate needs as they arise?

For Gret Glyer, a young entrepreneur and humanitarian, such questions led him to develop DonorSee, a new app that seeks to bypass the bureaucratic bloat of Big Aid and bring efficiency, transparency, and accountability to global generosity.

“There are Peace Corps workers, aid workers, and missionaries living in every corner of the globe,” Glyer explains in the video below. “All of them live around vulnerable people who could use some help in meeting their basic needs. We’ve designed our app to make it easier than ever before to fund-raise for these needs.”

Through the app, workers and volunteers in any country can quickly post a need (e.g. mosquito nets, a surgery, a school) and upload a picture with a dollar amount, similar to crowdfunding. Donors browse and choose from posted needs and then get notifications and updates as funds are raised and the need is fulfilled. Rather than entrusting funds to layers of detached middle men and bureaucrats, donors can see and interact more directly with the actual people they hope to serve.

Glyer explains the approach and technology below (or watch the basic summary video here):

Glyer founded pany after doing extensive humanitarian work in Malawi and Haiti. Through his work, he continued to be frustrated by the ineffective use of foreign aid, which would often go to massive infrastructure projects or government priorities instead of meetingthe more direct individual needs.

Kevin Williamson recently profiled Glyer, and explains the backstory as follows:

Glyer can be pretty pointed on the subject of Big Aid. “They should be embarrassed of how ineffective they are, by how much they spend on infrastructure instead of projects,” he says. He tells of arriving in Haitian disaster areas well ahead of the Red Cross and other splendidly funded agencies. “I booked a ticket and took my phone and my app,” he says. After living on $600 a month in Malawi, Glyer paid $7,000 out of pocket – “my life’s savings, basically” — to develop a prototype version of DonorSee. The project is a for-profit enterprise, taking a small cut of the money that passes through in much the same way as GoFundMe and other crowdfunding services. The promise of profits allowed him to access venture-capital funding, which in turn allowed him to roll out DonorSee in 40 countries about four months ago.

…Sometimes, big projects and big infrastructure are needed. Glyer began his fund-raising career by gathering money to build houses at $800 a pop and has worked on big institution-building, notably a girls’ school in Malawi. But big institutions often e their own reason for existing: Buildings and employees and such create jobs, not only for front-line workers but for managers, senior managers, executives, human-resources officers, lawyers, public-relations and marketing personnel, and more.

The technology has already been banned by Peace Corps workers, due to the various rules and requirements their workers and volunteers are obligated to follow. not only that, but they have threatened to fire any employee who uses it. Similar roadblocks and obstacles exist with many of the other aid organizations, further demonstrating how Glyer’s technology is offering a healthy challenge to the system.

DonorSee is meeting real human needs and creating new efficiencies and mechanisms for generosity, bringing innovative ideaswe should all e. But it is also setting a great example for other organizations and institutions — not to mention consumers and givers — in the way it prioritizes diligence, accountability, and stewardship in the task of charity that actually uplifts.

Photo: Unsplash, Public Domain(modified)

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
The moral weight of taxation
Whether or not we view taxation as having moral downsides and bearing a moral weight has significant implications for the proper size of government and can make a world of difference in public policy decisions. Read More… As Congress works on a $6 trillion spending bill that would be funded by higher taxes and increasing the national debt, Americans should be asking themselves: When is taxation morally permissible? Taxation is justified only when the moral benefits of the programs these...
Society must balance the paradox of human nature
Ignoring either the inherent goodness or the fallenness of man leads us to either utopia or authoritarianism. If man is endowed with human dignity and also perfect, there is no need for laws. If man is corrupted and is not inherently valuable, then even the harshest laws have no downside. Read More… A debate is brewing over the thousands of inmates who were allowed to return home due to the health risks of the COVID-19 pandemic. They could soon be...
How fatherhood leads to flourishing
Changing the conversation about the value of settling down and pursuing a meaningful family can illuminate hard questions. Sacrificing one’s personal desires for a wife and children is a crucial step on the path to human flourishing. Read More… America reigns supreme in the number of single parent households. Every June, we gather with our friends and family to celebrate Father’s Day, yet one in four of children do not have a father. It’s a sobering statistic that deserves attention....
A country for old men: Why American communities need the elderly
For those in their twilight years, work has not reached its culmination, but its exaltation. munity life continues to decline, America needs the leadership of older generations. Read More… America is facing a crisis munity. The prevalence of social media is threatening human relationships. Religious detachment is leading to declining civic participation. Politicians and central planners are increasingly expanding their reach in munities. As the nation desperately searches for solutions to the problem, our leaders may be overlooking our nation’s...
How a Christian restauranteur navigated the pains of a pandemic
As “executive stewards,” Christian business owners are called to weigh market forces and seek a profit, but we are also tasked with stewarding much more. Read More… The pandemic-era lockdowns caused immeasurable pain to countless businesses, with restaurants experiencing disproportionate levels of pain and suffering. According to the National Restaurant Association, food-service industry sales “fell by $240 billion in 2020 from an expected level of $899 billion,” and by the end of 2020, “more than 110,000 eating and drinking places...
In celebrating American liberty, let’s not forget the role of religion
Religion is critical to a free society because it provides the moral and ethical structure to guide people to act as they ought in a state where the government allows them to act as they want. Read More… On July 4, 1776, the Continental Congress officially endorsed the Declaration of Independence. Parades, public readings, and bonfires ensued. These spontaneous celebrations developed into the Independence Day traditions that Americans still enjoy today. The United States has retained many of these festivities...
Government shouldn’t be the one leading our communities – we should
After a year of lockdowns, Americans have a unique opportunity to reclaim their freedom and promote a conservative ideal munity life and leadership. Read More… As our lives begin to crank back up after over a year of turmoil, we have to ask the question: es next for society? As usual, politicians have their own answer, eager to wade into new spheres during times of crisis. True to form, the federal government has already gleefully claimed the job of reorganizing...
Lessons from the Puritans for a post-COVID world
As we think about how to rebuild from the COVID-19 pandemic and all of the social ills it revealed and exacerbated, the Puritans offer a model for cultural renewal. Read More… America is still slowly reopening and recovering from the COVID-19 pandemic, lockdowns, and restrictions. Over the past year, our nation’s divisions were amplified. Polarization reared its ugly head, manifesting deep-seated hostilities across and among families, churches, and political parties. In the wake of such conflict, one wonders: How can...
Train a child, secure the future: Educating our kids about the free market
Train up a child in the way he should go; even when he is old he will not depart from it. – Proverbs 22:6 Read More… Like most children, I had training wheels when I first learned to ride my bike. Before riding without them, I needed to learn a few key fundamentals – how to peddle, how to steer, how to coordinate my hands and feet. Once I mastered the basics, I was ready to go. In many ways,...
Are billionaires evil?
Our attitudes about the ultra-rich largely depend on our views about wealth and how it’s created. By viewing the market through a lens of collaboration and growth, we can more clearly and accurately assess the contributions of the wealthy. Read More… Criticizing billionaires has e a popular cultural trend, based on anti-rich sentiment that was recently exacerbated by a ProPublica report that leaked the tax returns of the 25 wealthiest Americans. The report’s findings were interesting but not particularly surprising,...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved